A Tree in the Forest by Ajahn Chah

"We have to talk about the Dhamma like this, using similes,
because the Dhamma has no form.
Is it square or is it round?
You can’t say.
The only way to talk about it is through similes like these."


foret_arbre

Similes by Ajahn Chah
part 1

Aimless Wanderer

  • When we have no real home, we’re like an aimless wanderer out on the road, going this way for a while and then that way, stopping for a while and then setting off again. Until we return to our real home, whatever we do we feel ill at ease, just like somebody who’s left his village to go on a journey. Only when he gets home again can he really relax and be comfortable. Nowhere in the world is any real peace to be found. That’s the nature of the world. Look within yourself and find it there instead. When we think of the Buddha and how truly he spoke, we feel how worthy he is of reverence and respect. Whenever we see the truth of something, we see his teachings, even if we’ve never actually practiced Dhamma. But even if we have knowledge of his teachings, have studied and practiced them but still have not seen their truth, then we’re still homeless like the aimless wanderer.

    Banana Peel

  • When you see things in the world like banana peels that have no great value to you, then you’re free to walk in the world without being moved, without being troubled, without being hurt in any way by all the various kinds of things that come and pass away, whether pleasant or unpleasant. This is the path that leads you to freedom.

    Blind Man

  • Both the body and mind are constantly arising and ceasing, conditions are in a state of constant turmoil. The reason we can’t see this in line with the truth is because we keep believing in the untrue. It’s like being guided by a blind man. How can we travel with him in safety? A blind man will only lead us into forests and thickets. How could he lead us to safety when he can’t see? In the same way, our mind is deluded by conditions, creating suffering in the search for happiness, creating difficulty in the search for peace. Such a mind can have only problems and suffering. Really, we want to get rid of suffering and difficulty, but instead we create those very things. All we can do is complain. We create bad causes, and the truth of appearances and conditions and try to cling to them.

    Bottle of Medicine

  • We can compare practice to a patient who does not take the medicine that his doctor has left for him. Although detailed instructions have been written on the bottle, all the patient does is read them and doesn’t actually take the medicine. And before he dies, he may complain bitterly that the doctor wasn’t any good; that the medicine didn’t cure him. He may think that the doctor was a fake or that the medicine was worthless, yet he had only spent his time examining the bottle and reading its instructions instead of actually taking the medicine. If he had followed the doctor’s advice, however, and taken the medicine regularly as prescribed, he would have recovered.
    Doctors prescribe medicine to eliminate diseases from the body. The teachings of the Buddha are prescribed to cure diseases of the mind and to bring it back to its natural healthy state. So the Buddha can be considered to be a doctor who prescribes cures for the illnesses of the mind, which are found in each one of us without exception. When you see these illnesses of the mind, does it not make sense to look to the Dhamma as support, as medicine to cure your illnesses?

    Child Playing

  • When we have contemplated the nature of the heart many times, we will come to understand that the heart’s ways are just as they are and can’t be otherwise. They make up the nature of the heart. If we see this clearly, then we can detach from thoughts and feelings. And we don’t have to add on anything more if we constantly tell ourselves that "that’s just the way it is." When the heart truly understands, it lets go of everything. Thinking and feeling will be deprived of power. It is like at first being annoyed by a child who likes to play in ways that annoy us so much we scold or spank him. But later we understand that it’s natural for a child to play and act like that, so we leave him alone. We let go and our troubles are over. Why are they over? Because we now accept the natural ways of children. Our outlook has changed and we now accept the true nature of things. We let go and our heart becomes more peaceful. We now have right understanding.

    Cobra

  • Mental activity is like a deadly, poisonous cobra. If we don’t interfere with a cobra, it simply goes its own way. Even though it may be extremely poisonous, we are not affected by it. We don’t go near it, or take hold of it, and so it doesn’t bite us. The cobra does what is natural for a cobra to do. That’s the way it is. If you are clever, you’ll leave it alone. Likewise, you let be that which is not good - you let it be according to its own nature. You also let be that which is good. Don’t grab at liking and disliking, just as you wouldn’t grab at the cobra. One who is clever will have this kind of attitude towards the various moods that arise in his mind. When goodness arises, we let it be good. We understand its nature. In the same, we let be the non-good. We let it be according to its nature. We don’t take hold of it because we don’t want anything. We don’t want evil. We don’t want good. We don’t want heaviness or lightness, happiness or suffering. When our wanting is at an end, peace is firmly established.

    Coconut Shells

  • Desire is a defilement. But we must first have desire in order to start practicing the Way. Suppose you went to buy coconuts at the market and while carrying them back home someone asked: "Why did you buy those coconuts?" "I bought them to eat," you reply. "Are you going to eat the shells, too?" "Of course not!" "I don’t believe you," he insists. "If you’re not going to eat the shells, then why did you buy them?" Well, what do you say? How are you going to answer that question?
    We practice with desire to begin with. If we didn’t have desire, we wouldn’t practice. Contemplating in this way can give rise to wisdom, you know. For example, those coconuts: Are you going to eat the shells as well? Of course not. Then why do you take them? They’re useful for wrapping the coconuts in. If after eating the coconuts you throw the shells away, there is no problem. Our practice is the same. We keep desire first, just like we do with the coconut shells, for it’s still not time to "throw" it away. This is how the practice is. If somebody wants to accuse us of eating coconut shells, that’s their business. We know what we’re doing.

    Cooking

  • At first, we train the body and speech to be free of unwholesomeness. This is virtue. Some people think that to have virtue you must memorize Pali phrases and chant all day and night, but really all you have to do is make your body and speech blameless, and that’s virtue. It’s not so difficult to understand. It’s just like cooking food - put in a little bit of this and a little bit of that until it’s just right and it’s delicious. And once it’s delicious, you don’t have to put anything else into it. The right ingredients have already been added. In the same way, taking care that our actions and speech are proper will give us delicious virtue, virtue that is just right.

    Crazy Man

  • Suppose one morning, you’re walking to work and a man starts yelling insults at you. As soon as you hear his insults, your mind gets agitated. You don’t feel so good, you feel angry and hurt, and you want to get even! A few days later, another man comes to your house and tells you, "Hey, that man who abused you the other day, he’s crazy! Has been for years! He abuses everybody like that. Nobody takes notice of anything that he says." As soon as you hear this, you are suddenly relieved. That anger and hurt that you’ve pent up within you all these days melt away completely. Why? Because now you know the truth. Before, you didn’t. You thought that man was normal, so you were angry at him and that caused you to suffer. As soon as you found out the truth, however, everything changed: "Oh, he’s mad! That explains everything!"
    When you understand the truth, you feel fine because you know for yourself. Understanding, you can then let go. If you don’t know the truth, you cling right there. When you thought that the man who abused you was normal, for example, you could have killed him. But when you found out the truth, that he was mad, you felt much better. This is knowledge of the truth. Someone who sees the Dhamma has a similar experience. When attachment, aversion and delusion disappear, they disappear in the same way. As long as we don’t know these things, we think, "What can I do? I have so much greed and aversion." This is not clear knowledge. It’s just the same as when we thought the madman was sane. Until we learned that he was really otherwise, we weren’t able to let go of our hurt and anger. Only when the mind sees for itself, can it uproot and relinquish attachment.

    Cup of Water

  • Many of those who came to see me have a high standing in the community. Among them are merchants, college graduates, teachers, and government officials. Their minds are filled with opinions about things. They are too clever to listen to others. It is like a cup of water. If a cup is filled with stale, dirty water, it is useless. Only after the old water has been thrown out can the cup become useful again. You must empty your minds of opinions, then you will see. Our practice goes beyond cleverness and stupidity. If you think that you are clever, wealthy, important, or an expert in Buddhism, you cover up the truth of non-self - I and mine. But Buddhism is letting go of self. Those who are too clever will never learn. They must first get rid of their cleverness, first empty their "cup".

    Dam

  • The training in concentration is the practice to make the mind firm and steady. This brings about peacefulness of mind. Usually our minds are moving and restless, hard to control. The mind follows sense distractions wildly, just like water flowing this way and that. Men, though, know how to control water so that it is of greater use to mankind. Men are clever. They know how to dam water, make large reservoirs and canals - all of this merely to channel water and make it more usable, so that it doesn’t run wild and eventually settle down into a few low spots, its usefulness wasted. So, too, the mind that is dammed and controlled, trained constantly, will be of immeasurable benefit. The Buddha himself taught, "The mind that has been controlled brings true happiness, so train your minds well for the highest benefits." Similarly, the animals we see around us - elephants, horses, buffalos, and so on - must be trained before they can be useful for work. Only after they have been trained is their strength of benefit to us.
    In the same way, the mind that has been trained will bring many more blessings than an untrained mind. The Buddha and His Noble Disciples all started out in the same way as us - with untrained minds. But, afterwards, look how they became the subjects of reverence for us all. And see how much benefit we can gain from their teachings. Indeed see what benefits have come to the entire world from these men who had gone through the training of the mind to reach the freedom beyond. The mind controlled and trained is better equipped to help us in all professions, in all situations. The disciplined mind will keep our lives balanced, make work easier, and develop and nurture reason to govern our actions. In the end, our happiness will increase accordingly as we follow the proper mind training.

    Deep Hole

  • Most people just want to perform good deeds to make merit, but they don’t want to give up wrongdoing. It’s just that "the hole is too deep." Suppose there was a hole and there was something at the bottom of it. Now anyone who put his hand into the hole and didn’t reach the bottom would say the hole was too deep. If a hundred or a thousand people put their hands down the hole, they’d all say, "The hole is too deep!" No one would say that his arm was too short. We have to come back to ourselves. We have to take a step back and look at ourselves. Don’t blame the hole for being too deep. Turn around and look at your own arm. If you can see this, then you will make progress on the spiritual path and will find happiness.

    Dirty Clothes

  • It is only natural that when our body is dirty and we put on dirty clothes that our mind will not be light and cheerful but will feel uncomfortable and depressed. So, too, when morality is not practiced, our bodily actions and speech are dirty. This causes the mind to be unhappy, uncomfortable, and distressed. We become separated from right practice and this prevents us from penetrating into the essence of the Dhamma in our mind. Wholesome bodily actions and speech themselves depend on the mind properly trained, since mind orders body and speech. Therefore, we must continue to practice by training our minds.

    Drinking Glass

  • How can you find right understanding? I can answer you simply by using this glass of water I am holding. It appears to us as clean and useful, something to drink from and keep for a long time. Right understanding is to see this as broken glass, as if it has already been shattered. Sooner or later, it will be shattered. If you keep this understanding while you are using it - that all it is is a combination of elements which come together in this form and then break apart - then no matter what happens to the glass, you will have no problem. The body is like the glass. It is also going to break apart and die. You have to understand that. Yet when you do, it doesn’t mean you should go and kill yourself, just as you shouldn’t take the glass and break it or throw it away. The glass is something to use until it falls apart in its own natural way. In the same way, the body is a vehicle to use until goes its own way. Your task is to see what the natural way of things is. This understanding can make you free in all the changing circumstances of the entire world.

    Drunk

  • attached to the senses is like a drunkard whose liver is not yet cooked. He does not know when he has had enough. He continues to indulge and drink carelessly. He’s caught badly and later suffers illness and pain.

    Duck

  • Your practice is like raising a duck. Your duty is to feed it and give it water. Whether the duck grows fast or slowly is its business, not yours. Let it go and just do your own work. Your business is to practice. If it’s fast or slow, just know it, don’t try to force it. This kind of practice has a good foundation.

    Empty Space

  • People want to go to Nibbana but when you tell them that there is nothing there, they begin to have second thoughts. But there’s nothing there, nothing at all! Look at the roof and floor here. Think of the roof as a "becoming" and the floor as a "becoming", too. You can stand on the roof and you can stand on the floor, but in the empty space between the roof and the floor there is no place to stand. Where there is no becoming, that’s where there’s emptiness, and to put it bluntly, we say that Nibbana is this emptiness. People hear this and they back up a bit. They don’t want to go. They’re afraid that they won’t see their children or relatives. That’s why whenever we bless the laity by wishing them long life, beauty, and strength, they become very happy. However, if we start talking about letting go and about emptiness they don’t want to hear about it. But have you ever seen a very old person with a beautiful complexion, or a lot of strength, or a lot of happiness? No! But we wish them long life; beauty, happiness and strength, and they are all pleased. They’re attached to becoming, to the cycle of birth and death. They prefer to stand on the roof or on the floor. Few are they who dare to stand in the empty space between.

    Family

  • If you want to find Dhamma, it has nothing to do with the forest with mountains or the caves. It’s only in the heart, and has its own language of experience. There is a great difference between concepts and direct experience. With a glass of hot water, whoever puts his finger into it will have the same experience - hot - which can be expressed in as many different words as there are different languages. Similarly, whoever looks deeply into the heart will have the same experience, no matter what his nationality, culture, or language may be. If in your heart you come to that taste of truth, of Dhamma, then you become like one big family - like mother and father, sisters and brothers - because you’ve tasted that essence of the heart which is the same for all.

    Fertilizer

  • Our defilements are like fertilizer for our practice. It’s the same as taking filthy stuff like chicken manure and buffalo dung to fertilize our fruit trees so that the fruit will be sweet and abundant. In suffering, there is happiness; in confusion there is calm.

    Fire

  • Nothing happens immediately, so in the beginning we can’t see any results from our practice. This is like the example that I have often given you of the man who tries to make fire by rubbing two sticks together. "They say there’s fire here!" He says, looking at his sticks. He then begins rubbing energetically. He rubs on and on, but soon becomes impatient. He wants to have that fire, but the fire just won’t come, so he gets discouraged and stops to rest for while. When he starts again the initial heat that he had worked up has already been lost so the going is slow. He just doesn’t keep at long enough. He rubs and rubs until he is tired and stops altogether. Not only is he tired, but he becomes more and more discouraged. "There is no fire here!" He finally decides and gives up completely. Actually he was doing the work, but there wasn’t enough heat to start the fire. The fire was there all the time, but he didn’t carry on to the end. Likewise with the mind. Until we are able to reach peace, the mind will continue in its confusion. For this reason the teacher says, "Just keep on doing it. Keep on with the practice!" Maybe we think, "If I don’t yet understand, how can I do it?" Until we’re able to practice properly, wisdom won’t arise. So we say just keep on with it.

    Fish

  • We don’t want desire, but if there is no desire, why practice? We must have desire to practice. Buddha had desire too. It’s there all the time, but it’s only a condition of the mind. Those with wisdom, however, have desire but no attachment. Our desires are like catching a big fish in a net - we must wait until the fish loses strength and then we can catch it easily. But all the time we must keep on watching it so that it doesn’t escape.

    Fish and Frog

  • If you attach to the senses, you’re the same as a fish caught on a hook. When the fisherman comes, you can struggle all you want, but you won’t be able to get loose. Actually you’re not caught like a fish, but more like a frog. A frog gulps down the whole hook right to its guts. A fish just gets it caught in its mouth.

    Fish Trap

  • If you see clearly the harm in the benefit of something, you won’t have to wait for others to tell you about it. Consider the story of the fisherman who finds something in his fish trap. He knows something is in it because he can hear it flopping about inside. Thinking it’s a fish; he reaches his hand into the trap, only to grab hold of a different kind of animal. He can’t see it, so he’s not sure what it is. It could be an eel, but it could also be a snake. If he throws it away, he may regret it, for if it turns out to be in eel, he’ll have lost something nice for dinner. On the other hand, if he keeps on holding onto it and it turns out to be a snake, it may bite him. He’s just not sure. But his desire is so strong that he holds on, just in case it’s an eel. The minute he brings it out and sees that it’s a snake, however, he doesn’t hesitate to fling it away from himself. He doesn’t have to wait for someone to call out, "Hey, it’s a snake! Let go!" The site of the snake tells him what to do more clearly than words could ever do. Why? Because he sees the danger - snakes can bite and make you very sick or kill you. Who has to tell him about that? In the same way, if we practice until we see things as they are, we won’t meddle with things that are harmful.

    Fisherman

  • Our practice of contemplation will lead us to understanding. Let us take the example of a fisherman pulling in his net with a big fish in it. How do you think he feels when pulling it in again? If he’s afraid that the fish will escape, he’ll rush and start to struggle with the net, grabbing and tugging at it. In this way, before he knows it, the big fish will have escaped. The fisherman mustn’t try to hard. In the old days, they taught that we should do it gradually, carefully gathering it in without losing it. This is how it is in our practice. We gradually feel our way with it, carefully gathering it in without losing it. Sometimes it happens that we don’t feel like practicing. Maybe we don’t want to look, or maybe we don’t want to know, but we keep on with it. We continue feeling for it. This is the practice. If we feel like doing it, we do it. If we don’t feel like doing it, we do it just the same. We just keep on doing it. If we are enthusiastic about our practice, the power of our faith will give us the energy needed to practice, but we will still be without wisdom. Being energetic alone won’t make us benefit much from our practice. On the contrary, after practicing energetically for long time, the feeling that we are not going to find the Way may arise. We may feel that we cannot find peace, or that we’re not sufficiently equipped to do the practice. Or maybe we feel that this Way just isn’t possible anymore. So we give up! At this point, we must be very, very careful. We must use patience and endurance. It’s just like pulling in the big fish - we gradually feel our way with it, we carefully pull it in. The struggle won’t be too difficult, so continue to pull it in without stopping. Eventually, after some time, the fish becomes tired and stops fighting and we’re able to catch it easily. Usually this is how it happens. We practice gradually and carefully, gathering it together. It’s in this manner that we do our contemplation.

    Flashlight

  • In Buddhism we are endlessly hearing about letting go and about not clinging to anything. What does this mean? It means to take hold of but not to cling. Take this flashlight, for example. We wonder: "What is this?" So we pick it up: "Oh, it’s a flashlight." Then we put it down again. We take hold of things, even of wanting, in this way. If we didn’t take hold of wanting, what could we do? We couldn’t do walking meditation or anything else. It’s wanting, yes, a defilement, that’s true, but later on that leads to perfection. So we must take hold of things first. It is like coming here. First you had to want to come here. If you didn’t want to, you wouldn’t be here today. We do things because of wanting, but when wanting arises, we don’t cling to it, just like we don’t cling to that flashlight - "What’s this?" We pick it up. "Oh, it’s a flashlight." We then put it down again. This is what "holding but not clinging" means. We know and then we let go. We don’t foolishly cling to things, but we "hold" them with wisdom and then let them go. Good or bad, we let them all go.

    Freeway

  • Not having full, clear knowledge of the true nature of things, we will go on thinking that we are the sankharas or that we are happiness and unhappiness. The truth is that we can’t force things to follow our desires. They follow the way of Nature. A simple comparison is this: Suppose you go and sit in the middle of a freeway with the cars and trucks speeding down toward you. You can’t get angry at the cars, shouting, "Don’t drive over here! Don’t drive over here!" It’s a freeway. You can’t tell them that. So what can you do? You get off the road. The road is the place where cars run. If you don’t want the cars to be there, you suffer. It’s the same with sankharas. We say they disturb us, like when we sit in meditation and hear a sound. We think, "Oh, that sound’s bothering me!" If we understand that the sound bothers us, then we suffer accordingly. If we investigate a little deeper, we will see that it’s we who go out and disturb the sound. The sound is simply sound. If we understand it in this way, then there’s nothing more to it. We leave the sound alone. We see that the sound is one thing and we are another. This is real knowledge of the truth. We see both sides, so we have peace. If we see only one side there is suffering. Once we see both sides, then we follow the Middle Way. This is the right practice of the mind. This is what we call straightening out our understanding. In the same way, impermanence and death are the nature of all sankharas, but we don’t want it that way. We want the opposite to be true. We want to find truth within the things that aren’t true. Whenever someone sees like this and clings to the sankharas as being himself, he suffers. The Buddha told us to contemplate this.

    Frog

  • The more you neglect the practice, and the more you neglect going to the monastery to listen to the Teachings, the more your mind will sink down into a bog, like a frog going into a hole. Later when someone comes along with a hook, the frog’s days are over. He doesn’t have a chance. All he can do is stretch out his neck and be caught. So watch out you don’t back yourself up into a hole. Someone may just come along with a hook and pull you up. At home, being pestered by your children and grandchildren, and possessions, you are even worse off than the frog! You don’t know how to detach yourself from them. When old age, sickness and death come along, what will you do? This is the hook that’s going to catch you. Which way will you turn?

    Fruit Tree

  • When a fruit tree is in bloom, a strong gust of wind will blow some of its blossoms to the ground. Those that don’t fall will eventually grow into small green fruit. But then another gust comes and some of them will fall, too. As for the rest, they will grow to become fruit nearly ripe, or even fully ripe, before they fall. And so it is with people. Like flowers and fruit in the wind, they, too, fall in different stages of life. Some people die while still in the womb, others within only a few days after birth. Some people live for a few years, then die, never having reached maturity. Some die in their youth. Still others reach a ripe old age before they die. When reflecting upon people, consider the nature of fruit in the wind - both are uncertain. Our minds are also uncertain. A mental impression arises, draws and blows at the mind, and then the mind falls - just like fruit.
    The Buddha understood this uncertain nature of things. He observed the phenomena of fruit in the wind and reflected upon the monks and novices who were his disciples. He found that they, too, were essentially of the same nature - uncertain! How could it be otherwise? This is just the way of all things.

    Garbage Pit

  • If your mind becomes quiet and concentrated, it is an important tool to use. But if you’re sitting just to get concentrated so you can feel happy and pleasant, they you’re wasting your time. The practice is to sit and let your mind become still and concentrated, and then use that quiet concentration to examine the nature of the mind and body. If you make the mind simply quiet with no investigation, however, then for that time it’s peaceful and there is no defilement, but that is like taking a stone and covering up a smelly garbage pit. When you take the stone away, it’s still full of smelly garbage. You must use your concentration, not to attain temporary bliss, but to accurately examine the nature of the mind and body. This is what actually frees you.

    Gift

  • We should investigate the body within the body. Whatever’s in the body, go ahead and look at it. If we just see the outside, it’s not clear. We see hair, nails, and so on and they are just pretty things that entice us. So the Buddha taught us to look at the inside of the body, to see the body within the body. What is the body? Look closely and see! We will see even though it is within us, we’ve never seen it. Wherever we go we carry it with us, but we still don’t know it at all. It’s as if we go and visit some relatives at their house and they give us a gift. We take it and put it in our bag and then leave without opening it to see what is inside. When at last we open it we find it is full of poisonous snakes! Our body is like that. If we just see the shell of it, we say it’s fine and beautiful. We forget ourselves. We forget impermanence, unsatisfactoriness and not-self. If we look within this body, it’s really repulsive. There’s nothing beautiful in it. If we look according to reality, without trying to sugar things over, we’ll see that it’s really sad and wearisome. Dispassion will then arise. This feeling of disinterest does not come from feeling an aversion toward the world. It’s simply our mind clearing up, our mind letting go. We see all things as not being substantial or dependable. However we want them to be, they just go their own way, regardless. Things that are unstable are unstable. Things that are not beautiful are not beautiful.
    So the Buddha said that when we experience sights, sounds, tastes, smells, bodily feelings or mental states, we should let them go. Whether happiness or unhappiness, they’re all the same. So let them go!

    Grass

  • You must contemplate in order to find peace. What people usually mean whenever they say peace is only the calming down of the mind and not the calming down of the defilements. The defilements are simply being temporarily subdued, just like grass being covered by a stone. If you take the stone away, the grass will grow back again in a short time. The grass hadn’t really died; it was just being suppressed. It’s the same when sitting in meditation. The mind is calm, but the defilements are not really calm. Therefore samadhi is not a sure thing. To find real peace you must develop wisdom. Samadhi is one kind of peace, like the stone covering the grass. This is only a temporary peace. The peace of wisdom is like putting the stone down and just leaving it there. In this way the grass can’t possibly grow back again. This is real peace, the calming of the defilements, the sure peace that results from wisdom.

    Hand

  • Those who study theory and those who practice meditation misunderstand each other. Usually those who emphasize study say things like, "Monks who only practice meditation just follow their own opinions, they have no basis in their teaching." Actually, in one sense, these two ways of study and practice are exactly the same thing. We can understand this better if we consider the front and back of our hand. If we hold our hand out, it seems like the back of our hand has disappeared. Actually the back of our hand hasn’t gone anywhere. It’s merely hidden underneath. We should keep this in mind when we consider practice. If we think that it has "disappeared," we’ll go off to study, hoping to get results. But it doesn’t matter how much we study the Dhamma, we’ll never understand it if we don’t know it in accordance with Truth. If we do understand the real nature of Dhamma, then we begin to let go. This is surrendering, removing attachment, not clinging anymore, or if there is still clinging, it diminishes as time goes by. So study and practice are really just two sides of the same hand.

    Hole

  • At times it may seem to some of you that I contradict myself when I teach, but the way I teach is very simple. It is as if I see someone coming down a road he isn’t familiar with but which I have traveled on many times before. I look up and see him about to fall into a hole on the right-hand side of the road, so I call out to him to go left. Likewise, if I see someone else about to fall into a hole on the left, I call out to him to go right. The instructions are different, but I teach them to travel in the same direction on the same road. I teach them to let go of both extremes and come back to the center where they will arrive at the true Dhamma.

    House

  • All my disciples are like my children. I have only loving-kindness for them and care for their welfare. If I appear to make you suffer, it is for your own good. I know some of you are well educated and very knowledgeable. People with little education and world knowledge can practice easily. But people with a lot of knowledge are like someone who has a very large house to clean. They have a lot to do. But when the house has been cleaned, they will have a big, comfortable living space. In the meantime, be patient. Patience and endurance are essential to our practice.

    Housewife

  • Don’t be like a housewife washing the dishes with a scowl on her face. She’s so intent on cleaning the dishes that she doesn’t realize her own mind is dirty! Have you ever seen this? She only sees the dirty dishes. She’s looking too far away from herself, isn’t she? Some of you have probably experienced this, I’d say. This is where you have to look. People concentrate on cleaning the dishes, but they let their minds go dirty. This is not good. They’re forgetting themselves.

    Jackal

  • The Buddha and his disciples once saw a jackal run out of the forest they were staying in. It stood still for a while, then it ran into the underbrush, and then out again. Then it ran into a tree hollow, then out again. One minute it stood, the next it ran, then it lay down, then it jumped up. The jackal had the mange. When it stood, the mange would eat into its skin, so it would run. Running, it was still uncomfortable, so it would stop. Standing, it was still uncomfortable, so it would lie down. Then it would jump up again, running to the underbrush, the tree hollow, never staying still.
    The Buddha said, "Monks, did you see that jackal this afternoon? Standing, it suffered. Lying down, it suffered. It blamed standing for its discomfort. It blamed sitting. It blamed running and lying down. It blamed the tree, the underbrush, and the cave. In fact, the problem was with none of those things. The problem was with his mange." We are just the same as the jackal. Our discontent is due to wrong view. Because we don’t exercise sense restraint, we blame our suffering on externals. Whether we live in Thailand, America or England, we aren’t satisfied. Why not? Because we still have wrong view. Just that! So wherever we go, we aren’t content. But just as that jackal would be content wherever it went as soon as its mange was cured, so would we be content wherever we went once we cured ourselves of wrong view.

    Knife

  • A knife has a blade, a spine and a handle. Can you lift up only the blade? Can you lift up only the handle? The handle, the spine and the blade are all parts of the same knife. When you pick up the knife, all three parts come up at the same time. In the same way, if you pick up that which is good, the bad must follow. People search for goodness and try to throw away evil, but they don’t study that which is neither good nor evil. If you don’t study this, then you won’t have real understanding. If you pick up goodness, badness follows. If you pick up happiness, suffering follows. Train the mind until it is above good and evil. That’s when the practice is finished.

    Knot

  • We contemplate happiness and unhappiness as uncertain and impermanent and understand that all the various feelings we experience are not lasting and not to be clung to. We see things in this way, because we have wisdom. We understand that things are impermanent according to their own nature. If we have this kind of understanding, it’s like taking hold of one strand of a rope that makes a knot and pulling it in the right direction. The knot will then loosen and begin to untangle. It’ll no longer be so tight and tense.
    This is similar to understanding that things don’t always have to be the way they’ve always been. Before, we felt that things had to be a certain way, and in so doing, we pulled the knot tighter and tighter. This tightness is suffering. Living that way is very tense. So we loosen the knot a little and relax. Why do we loosen it? Because it’s tight! If we don’t cling to it, then we can loosen it. It’s not a condition that must always be that way. We use the teaching of impermanence as our basis. We see that both happiness and unhappiness are not permanent. We see them as not dependable. There’s absolutely nothing that is permanent. With this kind of understanding, we gradually stop believing in the various moods and feelings that come up in our mind. Wrong understanding will decrease in the same degree that we stop believing in them. This is what is meant by undoing the knot. It continues to become looser. Attachment will be gradually uprooted.

    Ladle

  • If you listen to the Dhamma teachings but don’t practice, you’re like a ladle in a soup pot. The ladle is in the soup pot every day, but it doesn’t know the taste of the soup. You must reflect and meditate.

    Leaking Roof

  • Most of us just talk about practice without having really done it. This is like the man whose roof is leaking on one side so that he sleeps on the other side of the house. When the sunshine comes in on that side, he rolls over to the other side, all the time thinking, "When will I ever get a decent house like everyone else?" If the whole roof leaks, then he just gets up and leaves. This is not the way to do things, but that’s how most people are.

    Leaves

  • Right now we are sitting in a peaceful forest. Here, if there’s no wind, the leaves remain still. When a wind blows, they flap and flutter. The mind is the same. When it contacts a mental impression, it, too, flaps and flutters. According to the nature of that mental impression. And the less we know of Dhamma, the more the mind will continually pursue mental impressions. Feeling happy, it succumbs to happiness. Feeling suffering, it succumbs to suffering. It’s in a constant flap.

    Letter

  • Just know what is happening in your mind - not happy or sad about it, not attached. If you suffer, see it, know it, and be empty. It’s like a letter - you have to open it before you can know what’s in it.

    Log

  • If we cut a log of wood and throw it into a river, it floats downstream. If that log doesn’t rot or get stuck on one of the banks of the river, it will finally reach the ocean. Likewise, the mind that practices the Middle Way and doesn’t attach to either extreme of sensual indulgence or self-mortification will inevitably attain true peace.
    The log in our analogy represents the mind. The banks of the river represent, on one side, love, and on the other, hate. Or you can say that one bank is happiness and the other unhappiness. To follow the Middle Way is to see love, hate, happiness and unhappiness for what they really are - only feelings. Once this understanding has been achieved, the mind will not easily drift toward them and get caught. It is the practice of the understanding mind not to nurture any feelings that rise or to cling to them. The mind then freely flows down the river unhampered and eventually flows into the "ocean" of Nibbana.

    Lumber

  • If you don’t bother to train your heart, then it remains wild, following the ways of nature. It’s possible to train that nature, however, so that it can be used to advantage. This is comparable to trees. If we just left trees in their natural state, then we would never be able to build houses with them. We couldn’t make planks or anything of use to build houses with. However, if a carpenter came along wanting to build a house, he would go looking for trees in their natural state. He would take raw material and use it to advantage. In a short time he could have a house built. Meditation and developing the heart are similar to this. You must take this natural, untrained heart as you would take a tree in its natural state in the forest, and train it so that it is more refined, more aware of itself, and more sensitive.

    Maggot

  • Contentment doesn’t depend on how many people we are with. It comes only from right view. If we have right view, then wherever we stay, we are content.
    But most of us have wrong view. It’s just like a maggot living in a pile of dung. It lives in filth, its food is filth, but it suits the maggot. If you take a stick and dislodge it from its lump of dung, it’ll squirm and wiggle back to its home. We are the same. The teacher advises us to see rightly but we squirm about and are uncomfortable. We quickly run back to our old habits and views because that’s where we feel at home. If we don’t see the harmful consequences of all our wrong views, then we can’t leave them. The practice is difficult, so we should listen to the teacher.

    Mango

  • We say that morality, concentration and wisdom are the path on which all the Noble Ones have walked to enlightenment. They are all one. Morality is concentration, concentration is morality. Concentration is wisdom, wisdom is concentration. It’s like a mango. When it’s a flower, we call it a flower. When it becomes a fruit, we call it a mango. When it ripens, we call it a ripe mango. It’s a lone mango, but it continually changes. The big mango grows from the small mango, the small mango grows from the small mango, and the small mango becomes a big one. You can call them different fruit or all one. Morality, concentration and wisdom are related like this. In the end it’s the entire path that leads to enlightenment. The mango, from the moment it first appears as a flower, simply grows to ripeness. We should see it like this. Whatever others call it, it doesn’t matter. Once it’s born, it grows to old age and then where? We should contemplate this. Some people don’t want to be old. When they get old, they become regretful. These people shouldn’t eat ripe mangoes. Why do we want the mangoes to be ripe? If they’re not ripe in time, we ripen them artificially, don’t we? But when we become old we’re filled with regret. Some people cry. They’re afraid to get old and die. If it’s like this, they shouldn’t eat ripe mangoes. They’d better eat just the flowers! If we can see this then we can see the Dhamma. Everything clears up and we are at peace. Medicines and Fruit

    Medicines and Fruit

  • Don’t be angry with those who don’t practice. Don’t speak against them. Just continually advise them. They will come to the Dhamma when their spiritual factors are developed. It’s like selling medicines. We advertise our medicines and those with a headache or stomachache will come and take some. Those who don’t want our medicines let them be. They’re like fruit that are still green. We can’t force them to be ripe and sweet — just let them be. Let them grow up, sweeten and ripen all by themselves. If we think like this, our minds will be at ease. So we don’t need to force anybody. Simply advertise our medicines and leave it at that. When someone is ill, he’ll come around and buy some.

    Merchants

  • Everything that you do you must do with clarity and awareness. When you see clearly, you’ll no longer feel the need to force yourself to do and complete everything. Now you are burdened with difficulties because you miss the point: whatever you do, you should just do with your body and mind completely. This will bring you peace. If you think you have to do and complete everything, then whenever you leave something undone or incomplete, you’ll feel discontented and never stop worrying about it. You want to complete everything, but it’s really impossible to do so. Take the case of the merchants who regularly come here to see me. They say, "Oh, when my debts are all paid and property in order, I’ll come to get ordained." They talk like that, but will they ever finish and get it all in order? There’s no end to it. They pay off their debts with another loan; they pay off that one, and do it again. A merchant thinks that when he gets rid of all of his debts, he will be happy, but there’s no end to paying things off. That’s the way worldliness fools us. We go around and around like that never realizing our predicament.

    Oil and Water

  • Oil and water are different in the same way that a wise man and an ignorant man are different. The Buddha lived with form, sound, odor, taste, touch and thought, but he was an arahant so he was able to turn away from them rather than toward them. He turned away and let go little by little, since he understood that the heart is just the heart and thought is just thought. He didn’t confuse them and mix them together like an ignorant man does. The heart is just the heart. Thoughts and feelings are just thoughts and feelings. Let things be as they are. Let form be just form, let sound be just sound, let thought be just thought. Why should we bother to attach to them? If we feel and think in this way, then there is detachment and separateness. Our thoughts and feelings will be on one side and our heart will be on the other. Just like oil and water - they are in the same bottle but they are separate.

    Orphan

  • In the end, people become neurotic. Why? Because they don’t know. They just follow their moods and don’t know how to look after their own minds. When the mind has no one to look after it, it’s like a child without a mother or a father. An orphan has no refuge, and without a refuge, he is very insecure. Likewise, if the mind is not looked after, if there is no training or maturation of character with right understanding, it’s really troublesome.

    Ox Cart

  • Suppose we had a cart, and an ox to pull it. The wheels of the cart aren’t long, but the tracks are. As long as the ox pulls the cart, the tracks will follow. The wheels are round, yet the tracks are long. Just looking at the stationary cart, one couldn’t see anything long about the wheels, but once the ox starts pulling the cart, we see the tracks stretching out behind. As long as the ox keeps pulling, the wheels keep turning. But there comes a day when the ox gets tired and throws off its yoke. The ox walks off and the cart is left there. The wheels no longer turn. In time the cart falls apart. Its constituent parts go back into the four elements of earth, water, wind and fire. People who follow the world are the same. If one were to look for peace within the world, one would go on and on without end, just like the wheels of a cart. As long as we follow the world, there is no stopping, no rest. If we simply stop following it, the wheels of the cart no longer turn. There is stopping right there. Following the world ceaselessly, the tracks go on. Creating bad kamma is like this. As long as we continue to follow the old ways, there is no stopping. If we stop, then there is stopping. This is the practice of Dhamma.

    Pool

  • Be mindful and let things take their natural course, then your mind will become quiet in any surroundings. It will become still like a clear forest pool and all kinds of wonderful and rare animals will come to drink from it. Then you will clearly see the nature of all things in the world. You will see many wonderful and strange things come and go. But you will be still. This is the happiness of the Buddha.

    Rainwater

  • Actually the mind, like rain water, is pure in its natural state. If we were to drop green dye into clear rainwater, however, it would turn green. If yellow dye were added, it would turn yellow. The mind reacts similarly. When a comfortable mental impression drops into the mind, the mind is comfortable. When the mental impression is uncomfortable, the mind is uncomfortable. The mind becomes cloudy, like the colored water. When clear water contacts yellow, it turns yellow. When it contacts green, it turns green. It will change color every time. Actually the water that turned green or yellow is naturally clean and clear. This is also the natural state of the mind - clean and pure and unconfused. It becomes confused only because it pursues mental impressions. It gets lost in its moods.

    River Flow

  • There’s nothing wrong with the way the body grows old and gets sick. It just follows its nature. So it’s not the body that causes us suffering, but our own wrong thinking. When we see the right wrongly, there’s bound to be confusion. It’s like the water of a river. It naturally flows downhill. It never flows uphill. That’s its nature. If we were to go and stand on the bank of a river, and seeing the water flowing swiftly down its course, foolishly want it to flow back uphill, we would suffer. We would suffer because of our wrong view, our thinking "against the stream." If we had right view, we would see that the water must flow downhill. Until we realize and accept this fact, we will always be agitated and never find peace of mind. Our body is like the river that must flow downhill. It passes through youth, old age and finally dies. Don’t let us go wishing it were otherwise. It’s not something we have the power to remedy. Don’t go against the stream!

    Road

  • Wherever you are, know yourself by being natural and watchful. If doubts arise let them come and go. When you meet defilements, just see them and overcome them by letting go of them. It’s very simple - hold on to nothing. It’s as though you are walking down a road. Periodically you will run into obstacles. When you meet defilements, just see them and overcome them by letting go of them. Don’t think about the obstacles you have already passed. Don’t worry about the obstacles you have not yet met. Stick to the present. Don’t be concerned about the length of the road or about your destination. Everything is changing. Whatever you pass, do not cling to it. Eventually the mind will reach its natural balance. Then it will be still whether you sit with your eyes closed or walk around in a big city.

    Rock

  • The teaching that people least understand and which conflicts most with their own opinions is the teaching of letting go or working with the empty mind. When we conceive this in worldly terms, we become confused and think that we can do anything we want. It can be interpreted in this way, but its real meaning is closer to this: It’s as if we were carrying a heavy rock. After a while we begin to feel its weight, but we don’t know how to let go. So we endure this heavy burden all the time. If someone tells us to throw it away, we say, "If I throw it away, I won’t have anything left!" If told of all the benefits to be gained by throwing it away, we would not believe it, but would keep on thinking, "If I throw my rock away, I will have nothing." So we keep on carrying this heavy rock until it becomes so unbearably heavy, and we become so weak and exhausted, that we just have to drop it. Having dropped it, we suddenly experience the benefits of letting go. We immediately feel better and lighter and we know for ourselves how much of a burden carrying a rock can be. Before we let go of the rock, we couldn’t possibly know the benefits of letting go. Later on we may start carrying burdens again, but now we know what the results will be, so we can now let go more easily. This understanding - that it’s useless carrying burdens around and that letting go brings ease and lightness - is an example of knowing ourselves. Our pride, our sense of self that we depend on, is the same as that heavy rock. Like that rock, if we think about letting go of self, we are afraid that without it there would be nothing left. But when we can finally let it go we realize for ourselves the ease and comfort of not clinging.

    Screw

  • If you clearly see the truth through meditation, then suffering will become unwound, just like a screw. When you unwind a screw, it withdraws. It’s not tightly fixed as when you screw it, clockwise. The mind withdraws like this. It lets go, it relinquishes. It’s not tightly bound within good and evil, within possessions, praise and blame, happiness or suffering. If we don’t know the truth, it’s like tightening the screw all the time. You screw it down until it crushes you and you suffer over everything. When you unwind out of all that, you become free and at peace.

    Seedling

  • In meditation, you must continuously be attentive, just like when planting a seedling. If you plant a seedling in one place, then after three days you pull it up and plant it in another place, and after three more days, pull it up again and plant it somewhere else, it will just die and not grow up and bear any fruit. Meditation is the same. If you do a seven-day meditation retreat and after leaving it, for seven months you go around "soiling" the mind, and then come back and do another seven-day retreat where you don’t speak and you keep to yourself, it’s like the tree. Your meditation practice won’t be able to grow and it will die with out producing any real results.

    Sharp Knife

  • When we say that the mind stops, we mean that it feels as if it’s stopped, that it does not go running about here and there. It’s as if we have a sharp knife. If we go and cut away at things randomly, like stones, bricks and glass, without choosing carefully, our knife will quickly become blunt. We must cut only those things which are useful to cut. Our mind is the same. If we let our mind wander after thoughts or feelings which have no use or value, the mind will become weak because it has no chance to rest. If the mind has no energy, wisdom will not arise, because the mind without energy is a mind without concentration.

    Snake

  • People want happiness, not suffering. But in fact happiness is just a refined form of suffering. Suffering itself is the coarse form. We can compare them to a snake. The snake’s head is unhappiness. The snake’s tail is happiness. The snake’s head is really dangerous. It has the poisonous fangs. If we touch it, it’ll bite right away. But never mind the head? Even if we go and hold onto the tail, it will turn around and bite us just the same, because both the head and tail belong to the one snake. Likewise happiness and unhappiness, pleasure and sadness, arise from the same snake: wanting. So when we’re happy, the mind isn’t really peaceful. For example, when we get the things we like, such as wealth, prestige, praise or happiness, we become pleased, but the mind remains uneasy for fear of losing them. That very fear isn’t a peaceful state. Later we may really lose those things, then we truly suffer. So if we’re not aware, even when happy, suffering is imminent. It’s just like grabbing the snake’s tail - if we don’t let go, it’ll bit. So be it the snake’s conditions they’re all just characteristics of the Wheel of Existence, of endless change.

    Spider

  • Watching a spider can give rise to wisdom. A spider spins its webs in any convenient niche and then sits in the center, staying still. Later a fly comes along and lands on its web. As soon as the fly touches and shakes the web - boop! ’ the spider pounces on it and winds it up in thread. It stores the insect away and then returns again to collect itself silently in the center of its web. This is not at all different from our own minds. Our mind is comparable to the spider, and our moods and mental impressions to the various insects. The senses constantly stimulate the mind. When any of them contacts something, it immediately reaches the mind. The mind then investigates and examines it thoroughly, after which it returns to the center. "Coming to the center" means living mindfully with clear comprehension, being always alert and doing everything with precision - this is our center. There’s really not a lot for us to do. We just carefully live in this way. But that doesn’t mean that we live heedlessly thinking, "No need to do sitting or walking meditation!" and so forget all about our practice. We can’t be careless. We must remain alert like the spider waiting to snatch up insects for its food. This is how we abide - alert, acting with precision and always mindfully comprehending with wisdom.

    Still, Flowing Water

  • Have you ever seen flowing water? Have you ever seen still water? If your mind is peaceful, it will be just like still, flowing water. Have you ever seen still, flowing water? There! You’ve only seen flowing water or still water haven’t you? When your mind is peaceful, you can develop wisdom. Your mind will be like flowing water, and yet still, It’s almost as if it were still, and yet it’s flowing. So I call it "still, flowing water." Wisdom can arise here.

    Sweet Fruit

  • Even though a fruit is sweet, we must first taste it before we know what its taste is like. Yet, that fruit, even though no one tastes it, is still sweet. But nobody knows it. The Dhamma of the Buddha is like this. Even though it’s the truth, it isn’t true for those who don’t really know it. No matter how excellent or fine it may be, it is worthless to them.

    Thermos Bottle

  • Read yourself, not books. Truth isn’t outside. That’s only memory, not wisdom. Memory without wisdom is like an empty thermos bottle - if you don’t fill it, it’s useless.

    Thirsty Man

  • A man comes walking along a road. He is very thirsty from his journey and is craving for a drink of water. He stops at a place beside the road and asks for a drink. The owner of the water says, "You can drink this water if you like. The color is good, the smell is good, the taste is good, too, but if you drink it, you will become ill. It’ll make you sick enough to die or nearly die." The thirsty man does not listen. He’s as thirsty as a person after an operation who has been denied a good drink of water for a while. He’s crying for water! So he dips out a bit of water and swallows it down, finding it very tasty. He drinks his fill and gets so sick that he almost dies. He didn’t listen to the warning that was given to him because of his overpowering desire.
    This is how it is for a person caught in the pleasures of the senses. The Buddha taught that they are poisonous but he is thirsty and so he doesn’t listen. He drinks in sights, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile sensations and mind-objects and they are all delicious. So he drinks without stopping, and there he remains stuck fast until the day he dies.

    Thorn

  • All things are just as they are. They don’t cause suffering to anybody. It’s just like a thorn, a really sharp thorn. Does it make you suffer? No, it’s just a thorn. It doesn’t bother anybody. But if you go and stand on it, you’ll suffer. Why is there suffering? Because you stepped on the thorn. The thorn is just minding its own business. It doesn’t harm anybody. It’s because of we ourselves that there’s pain. Form, feeling, perception, volition, consciousness . . . all the things in this world are simply as they are. It’s we who pick fights with them. And if we hit them, they hit us back. IF they’re left alone, they won’t bother anybody. Only the drunkard gives them trouble.

    Trap

  • The Buddha taught that the objects of the senses are a trap, a trap of Mara’s. It is a hunter’s trap and the hunter is Mara. If animals are caught in a hunter’s trap, it’s a sorrowful predicament. They are caught fast and are held waiting for the owner of the trap. Have you ever snared birds? The snare springs and - boop! - caught by the neck! A good strong string holds it fast. Wherever the bird flies, it cannot escape. It flies here and flies there, but it’s held tight, waiting for the owner of the snare to come. When the hunter comes along, that’s it! The bird is struck with fear and there is no escape. The trap of sights, sounds, smells, tastes, touch and mind-objects is the same. They catch us and bind us fast.

    Traveler

  • Naturally people who wish to reach their home are not those who merely sit and think about traveling. They must actually undertake the process of traveling step by step, and in the right direction as well, in order to finally reach home. If they take the wrong path, they may eventually run into difficulties, such as swamps or other obstacles, which are hard to get around. Or they may run into dangerous situations and thereby possibly never reach home. Those who reach home can relax and sleep comfortably. Home is a place of comfort. But if the traveler only passed by the front of his home or only walked around it, he would not receive any benefit from having traveled all the way home. In the same way, walking the path to reach the Buddha-Dhamma is something each one of us must do individually ourselves, for no one can do it for us. And we must travel along the proper path of morality, concentration and wisdom until we find the blessings of purity, radiance and peacefulness of mind that are the fruits of traveling the path. However if one only has knowledge of books, sermons, and sutras, that is, only knowledge of the map or plans for the journey, even in hundreds of lifetimes one will never know purity, radiance and peacefulness of mind. Instead one will just waste time and never get to the real benefits of practice. Teachers are those who point out the direction of the Path. After listening to the teachers, whether or not we walk the Path by practicing ourselves, and thereby reap the fruits of practice, is strictly up to each one of us.

    Trees

  • We can learn Dhamma from trees. A tree is born due to a cause and it, grows following the course of nature until it buds, flowers and bears fruit. Right here the tree is discoursing Dhamma to us, but we don’t understand this. We’re unable to bring it within and contemplate, so we don’t know that the tree is teaching us without investigating: sweet, sour or bitter, it’s the nature of the fruit. And this is Dhamma, the teaching of the fruit. Then the leaves grow old. They wither, die and fall from the tree. All we see is that the leaves have fallen down. We don’t know that nature is teaching us. Later on, the new leaves sprout, and we merely see that, without taking it further. This is not the truth that is known through internal reflection.
    If we can bring all this inward and investigate it, we will see that the birth of a tree and our own birth are no different. This body of ours is born and exists, dependent on conditions, on the elements of earth, water, wind and fire. Every part of the body changes according to its nature. It’s no different from the tree. Hair, nails, teeth and skin, all change. If we know the things of nature, then we will know ourselves.

    Turtle

  • Looking for peace is like looking for a turtle with a mustache. You won’t be able to find it. But when your heart is ready, it will come and look for you.

    Twigs and Root

  • As soon as we’re born we’re dead. Our birth and our death are just on thing. It like a tree. When there are twigs, there must be a root. When there’s a root, there must be twigs. You can’t have one without the other. It’s a little funny to see how at a death people are so grief-stricken, and at a birth so delighted. I think if you really want to cry, then it would be better to do so when someone’s born, for actually firth is death, death is birth; the root is the twig, the twig is the root. If you’ve got to cry, cry at the root, cry at the birth. Look closely and see that if there were no birth, there would be no death.

    Unthreshed Rice

  • People who study the Dhamma without penetrating to its true meaning are just like a dog sleeping on a pile of unthreshed rice. When it’s hungry, it bounds off the pile of rice grain and runs off looking for scraps of food. Even though it’s sleeping right on top of a pile of food, it doesn’t know that. Why? Because it can’t see the rice. Dogs can’t eat unthreshed rice. The food is there but the dog can’t eat it. It doesn’t know the rice. It might not be able to find anything to eat for a long time, and it may even die . . . right on top of that pile of rice! People are like this. No matter how much we study the Dhamma, we won’t see it if we don’t practice. If we don’t see it, then we won’t know it.

    Water Buffalo

  • The Buddha really taught the truth. If you contemplate it, there is nowhere you can argue with him. But we people are like a buffalo. If it’s not tied down by all four legs, it’ll not let itself be given any medicine. If tied down and it can do anything —aha! - now if you want to, you can go ahead and give it medicine and it can’t struggle away. At this extent it will give up. We people are similar. Only when we are completely bound up in suffering will we let go of our delusions. If we can still struggle away, we will not give up very easily.

    Wild Chickens

  • As long as true wisdom hasn’t yet arisen, we still see the senses and their objects as our enemies. But once true wisdom arises we no longer see them as such. They become the doorway to insight and clear understanding.
    A good example is the wild chickens in the forest. We all know how much they fear humans. Yet since I’ve lived in the forest, I’ve been able to teach them and learn from them too. I began by throwing them rice to eat. At first they were afraid and wouldn’t go near the rice. But after a while they got used to it and even began to expect it. They first thought the rice was a dangerous enemy. But there was no danger in the rice. They just didn’t know the rice was food, so they were afraid. When they finally saw there was nothing to fear, they could come and eat peacefully. Wild chickens learn naturally like this. Living here in the forest, we learn in the same way. Before, we thought our senses were a problem, and because we thought our senses were a problem, and because we didn’t know how to use them properly, they were troublesome. Through experience in practice, however, we learn to se them according to the Truth. We learn to use them, just as the chickens did with the rice. Then they’re no longer against us and problems disappear.

    Yard Full of Animals

  • People often presume there would be a problem with language for the Westerners who wanted to stay at Ajahn Chah’s monastery, but this was not the case. Someone once asked Ajahn Chah, "How do you teach all your Western disciples? Do you speak English or French? Do you speak Japanese or German?" "No," replied Ajahn Chah. "Then how do they manage?" he asked. "Do you have water-buffalos in your yard at home?" "Yes, I do."
    "Do you have any cows, or dogs, or chickens?" "Yes, I have them, too," was the reply. "Tell me," Ajahn Chah asked, "do you speak Water-buffalo or Cow?" "No, of course not." "Well, how do you manage then?" 

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A Tree in the Forest
"All the teachings are merely similes and comparisons,
means to help the mind see the truth."

Similes by Ajahn Chah
part 2

Householder

  • What is the mind? The mind doesn’t have any form. That which receives impressions, both good and bad, we call mind. It is like the owner of a house. The owner stays at home while visitors come to see him. He is the one who receives the visitors. Who receives sense impressions? What is it that perceives? Who lets go of sense impressions? That is what we call mind. But people can’t see it. They think themselves around in circles. "What is the mind, what is the brain?" Don’t confuse the issue like that. What is that which receives impressions? Some impressions it likes and some it doesn’t like. Who is that? Is there one who likes and dislikes? Sure there is, but you can’t see it. That is what we call mind.

Ignorant Child

  • Actually, you know, we human beings, the way we do things, the way we live, the way we are, are really like little children. A child doesn’t know anything. If an adult observes the actions of a child, the way it plays and jumps around, its actions don’t seem to serve much purpose. If our mind is untrained, it is like a child. We speak without awareness and act without wisdom. We may degenerate but not know it. A child is ignorant and so it just plays as children do. Our ignorant mind is the same. That is why the Buddha taught us to train this mind of ours.

    Infant

  • See like and dislike arising from sense contact, and do not attach to them. Don’t be anxious for quick results or instant progress. An infant has to crawl first before he learns to walk and run. Be determined in practicing virtue and keep on meditating.

    Itchy Head

  • If we don’t know how to handle suffering when it arises, we won’t be able to get any relief from it. It’s just as if we have an itch on our head and we scratch our leg! If it’s our head that’s itchy, then we’re obviously not going to get any relief by scratching our leg.

    Key

  • If we take the precepts simply out of tradition, then even though the master teaches the truth, our practice will be deficient. We may be able to study the teachings and repeat them, but we have to practice them if we really want to understand. If we do not develop the practice, this may well be an obstacle to our penetrating to the heart of Buddhism, and we will not get to the heart of Buddhism, and we will not get to understand the essence of the Buddhist religion.
    The practice is like a key to a trunk. If we have the right key in our hand, no matter how tight or strong the lock may be, when we take the key and turn it, the lock falls open. If we have no key, we won’t be able to open the lock, and we will never know what is inside the trunk.

Lead for Gold

  • The arahant is really different from ordinary people. The things that seem true and valuable to us are false and worthless to an arahant. Trying to interest an arahant in worldly things would be like offering lead in exchange for gold. We think, "Here is a whole pile of lead, so why won’t he want to trade his piece of gold which is so much smaller?"

Leaving an Old Friend

  • Greed, hatred and delusion are the causes of all our suffering. We must learn to overcome them and free ourselves from their control. This is very hard to do. It is like having the Buddha tell us to leave a friend we have known and loved from the time we were still children. It is not easy to make the separation.

Light Switch and Bowl

  • It is necessary to have concentration firmly established in our practice before wisdom can arise. To concentrate the mind can be likened to turning on a light switch, and wisdom to the light that appears as a result. If there were no switch, there would be no light. Likewise, concentration is like an empty bowl, and wisdom is like the food that you put in it. If there were no bowl, there would be no place to put the food.

Lizard

  • The sutra gives us the simile of a certain man trying to catch a lizard which had run into a termite mound. The mound had six holes in it. Now if the lizard had run in there, how could the man catch it? He would have to close off five of the holes, and leave just one hole open. Then he would have to sit and guard that hole. When the lizard ran out - bop! - he got it. Observing the mind is like this. Closing off the eyes, the ears, the nose, the tongue and the body, one leaves only the mind. To close off means to restrain the five senses, leaving only the mind to be observed. Meditation is the same as catching the lizard.

Lost Something

  • If you understand that good and bad, right and wrong, all lie within you, then you won’t have to go looking for them somewhere else. Just look for them where they arise. If you don’t, it’d be like losing something in one place and then going to look for it in another. If you lose something here, you must look for it here. Even if you don’t find it at first, keep looking where you dropped it. But, usually, you lose it here, then go looking over there. When will you ever find it? Good and bad actions lie within you. One day you’re bound to see it. Just keep looking right here.

Lotus Leaf

  • The Buddha said that the Enlightened Ones were far from defilements. This doesn’t mean that they ran away from defilements. They did not. Defilements were there. He compared it to a lotus leaf in a pond of water. The leaf and the water exist together. They are in contact but the leaf doesn’t become wet. The water can be compared to defilements and the lotus leaf to the enlightened mind. The mind of one who practices doesn’t run anywhere. It stays right where it is. Good and evil, happiness and unhappiness right and wrong they all arise, and he knows them all. The meditator simply knows them, but does not allow them to wet his mind. In other words, he does not cling to any of them.

Lotuses

  • We can compare the mind to lotuses in a pond. Some of the lotuses are still stuck in the mud, some have grown through the mud but are still underwater, some have reached the surface of the water, and some have opened in the sun. Which lotus do you want to be? If you want to be below the surface, be careful - the fish and turtles will bite!

Lump of Ice v

  • How does the body decline? Consider a lump of ice. Originally it was simply water. We then freeze it and it becomes ice for awhile, and then it melts and turns into water again. We can see how the ice declines much the same as the body. We all, without exception, are lumps of deterioration. When we are born we bring this inherent nature of dissolution with us. We can’t avoid it. At birth we bring old age, sickness and death along with us. Right now the lump is hard, just like the lump of ice. But look at the body closely. It’s ageing every day. It declines just like the lump of ice, following the way of nature. Soon, like the lump of ice, the body will melt away and be all gone, too.

Mango

  • We speak of wisdom and concentration as separate things, but in essence they are one and the same. They arise fro the same place but take different directions. It’s like a mango. A mango is first small and green. It then grows larger and larger until it is ripe. The small mango, the large one and the ripe one are the same mango, not different mangoes. Only its conditions have changed. In Dhamma practice, one condition is called concentration, and the later condition is called wisdom, but in actuality samadhi and pañña are both the same thing, just like the mango.

Market Lady

  • Don’t be disappointed if you don’t see quick results in your practice. What is important is simply to continue your practice with determination and perseverance. Don’t give up so readily, like a market lady who wants to sell her goods and doesn’t give up. She keeps on yelling, "Coconu-u-u-ts, rice c-a-a-akes! Get your coconuts and rice cakes here!" She’s determined to sell them and won’t give up until she does.

Meat

  • All that people want these days is money. They think that if they just get enough of it, everything will be all right. So they spend all their time looking for money. They don’t look for goodness. This is like wanting meat, but not wanting salt to preserve it. You just leave the meat around the house to rot. Those who want money should know not only how to find it, but also how to look after it. If you want meat, you can’t expect to buy it and then just leave it lying around the house. It’ll just go rotten. Goodness arises from a cause. Whenever we create good actions, goodness arises in the mind. If we understand causes in this way, we can create those causes and the results will naturally follow. But people don’t usually create the right causes. They want goodness so much and yet they don’t work to bring it about. This kind of thinking is wrong, and the result of wrong thinking is rotten results - just turmoil and confusion.

Meat Between Your Teeth

  • It’s hard to give up sensual pleasure. Consider sensual pleasure like eating some meat which gets stuck between your teeth. When you get it out, you feel some relief for a while. Maybe you even think that you won’t eat any more meat. But when you see it again, you can’t resist it. You eat some more and it gets stuck, you have to pick it out again, which gives some relief once more, until you eat some more meat. That’s all there is to it. Sensual pleasures are just like this. When the meat gets stuck in your teeth, there’s discomfort. You take a toothpick and pick it out and experience some relief. There’s nothing more to it than this with sensual desire.

Millipede

  • If many people live together, as we do here in the monastery, they can still practice comfortably if their views are in harmony. It’s not true to say that there will be disharmony just because there are many of us. Just look at a millipede. A millipede has many legs, doesn’t it? Just looking at it you’d think it would have difficulty walking, but actually it doesn’t. It has its own order and rhythm. In our practice it’s the same. If we practice properly, even if we number in the hundreds or thousands, no matter how many we are, we will live in harmony.

Millipede and Chicken

  • Westerners are very "clever" and can’t accept many principles of Dhamma. I once asked some learned people if they had ever seen a millipede. It has many legs, but how fast can it run? Can it outrun a chicken? No! Yet a chicken has only two legs. How come this animal with so many legs can’t even keep up with a chicken?

Money, Wax, and Chicken Dung

  • Rules and conventions are established to make things more convenient, that’s all. Let’s take money, for example. In olden times, people used materials and goods to barter as money. But they were difficult to keep, so they started to use coins and notes. Perhaps in the future we’ll have a new royal decree saying only lumps of wax can be used as money throughout the country, or chicken dung. Then people would start fighting and killing each other over wax or chicken dung. This is just the way it is. What we use for money is simply a convention that we have set up. It is money because we have decided it to be so, but in reality what is money? Nobody can say. When there is a popular agreement about something, then a convention comes about to fulfill the need. The world is just conventions.
  • But it is difficult to get ordinary people to understand this. Our money, house, family, our children and relatives are simply conventions that we have invented, and we really believe they are all ours, but seen in the light of Dhamma, they don’t belong to us. It’s when we think that they do that we suffer.

Monkey

  • When we know that it is the nature of the mind to be constantly changing, we will understand it. We have to know when the mind is thinking good and bad, that it’s changing all the time. If we understand this, then even while we are thinking we can be at peace. For example, suppose at home you had a pet monkey. Monkeys don’t stay still for long. They like to jump around and grab onto things. That’s how monkeys are. Now you come to the monastery and see the monkey here. This monkey doesn’t stay still either, does it? It jumps around, too, but it doesn’t bother you. Why doesn’t it bother you? Because you are raising a monkey yourself so you know what they’re like. If you know just one monkey, no matter how many provinces you go to, no matter how many monkeys you see, you won’t be bothered by them, because you’re someone who understands monkeys. If we understand monkeys, then we won’t become like a monkey. If we don’t understand monkeys, we may become like one ourselves. When we see it reaching for this and that, we shout, "Hey!" We get angry. But if we understand the nature of monkeys, we’ll then see that the monkey at home and the monkey at the monastery are just he same. Why should we get annoyed by them? When we see what monkeys are like, that’s enough. We can be at peace.

Nest of Red Ants

  • Sensual pleasure is like a nest full of red ants. We take a piece of wood and poke at the nest until the ants come running out, crawling down the wood and into our faces, biting our eyes and ears. And yet we still don’t see the difficulty we are in. In the teaching of the Buddha, it is said that if we’ve seen the harm of something, no matter how good it may seem to be, we know that it’s harmful. Whatever we haven’t yet seen the harm of, we just think it’s good. If we haven’t yet seen the harm of anything, we can’t get out of it.

Old Granny

  • Most people wait until they get old before they start going to a monastery and start practicing the Dhamma. Why do they leave it till they get old? It’s like old grandma. You say, "Hey, Granny, let’s go to the monastery!" "Oh, you go ahead," she answers. "My ears aren’t so good anymore." You see what I mean? When she had good ears what was she listening to? Finally if she does go to the temple, she listens to the sermon but hasn’t got an idea of what’s being said. Don’t wait until you’re all used up before you start thinking of practicing the Dhamma.

Old Liar

  • Our habits try to deceive us over and over again, but if we remain aware of it, we will eventually be able to ignore them altogether. It’s like having an old person come around and tell us the same old lies time after time. When we realize what he’s up to, we won’t believe him any longer. But it takes a long time before we realize it, because deception is always there.

Old Rag

  • If we see everything as uncertain, then their value fades away. All things become insignificant. Why should we hold onto things that have no value? We should treat things as we do an old rag that we keep only to wipe our feet with. We see all sensations as equal in value because they all have the same nature, that of being uncertain.

Paddy Worker

  • Practice consistently and not in spurts like the way some people work in their rice paddy. At first they work very hard and then they stop. They don’t even bother to pick up their tools. They just walk off and leave them behind. Later on when the soil has all caked up, they remember their work and do a bit more, only to leave it again shortly afterwards. Doing things this way you’ll never get a decent paddy. Our practice is the same.

Party Revelers

  • People go through life blindly, ignoring death like revelers at a party feasting on fine foods. They ignore that later they will have to go to the toilet, so they do not bother to find out where there is one. When nature finally calls, they have no idea where to g and are in a mess.

Pedal Sewing Machine

  • When we sit in meditation, we only watch the breath. We don’t try to control it. If we force our breath to be too long or too short, we won’t feel balanced and our mind won’t become peaceful. We must just let our breathing happen naturally. It’s like using a pedal sewing machine. We can’t force the pedal. We push it up and down and let it go naturally. If we force it, the sewing won’t be smooth and easy. So before we actually start to sew anything, we first practice pedaling the machine to get our co-ordination right, then the machine can do its work naturally. Watching the breath is similar. We don’t get concerned over how long or short, weak or strong it is. We just note it. We simply let it be natural and follow it.

Piece of Cake

  • If you still have happiness and still have suffering, you are someone who is still not yet full. It’s as if you’re eating a piece of your favorite cake, but before you can finish eating it, it falls out of your hand. You regret the loss, don’t you? When you feel the loss, you suffer, don’t you? So you need to throw away both happiness and suffering. They’re only food for those who are not yet full. In truth, happiness is suffering in disguise, but in such a subtle form that you don’t see it. If you cling to happiness, it’s the same as clinging to suffering, but you don’t despair, don’t lose yourself in it. See that happiness and suffering have the same equal value.

Planting Fruit Trees

  • Our practice can be likened to planting fruit trees. As with fruit trees, it’s possible to get fruit quickly by taking a cutting and planting it, but the tree won’t be long-lasting or resilient. Another way is to take a seed and cultivate the tree right from the seed. In this way it will be strong and enduring. This is the same with our practice.

Poisonous Injection

  • There are two kinds of suffering: ordinary suffering and extra-ordinary suffering: ordinary suffering is the suffering that is the inherent nature of all conditioned phenomena. Extra-ordinary suffering is the kind that creeps in from the outside. Let’s see how they differ by using the following example: Suppose you are sick and go to see a doctor. The doctor decides to give you an injection. When the needle pierces the skin, there is some pain, which is only natural. When the needle is withdrawn, the pain disappears. This is like the ordinary kind of suffering. It’s no problem; everybody experiences it. The extra-ordinary kind of suffering is the suffering that arises from grasping onto things. This is like having an injection with a syringe filled with poison. This is no longer an ordinary kind of pain. It is the pain which ends in death.

Precious Pen

  • If you don’t understand what peace is, you’ll never be able to find it. For example, suppose you had a very expensive pen which you usually carry in the right front picket of your shirt. But one day you put it somewhere else and forgot. Later when you reach for the pen in its usual place, it’s not there. You get a fright. You think you’ve lost it. You get a fright because of wrong understanding. You don’t see the truth of the matter and so you suffer as a result. Whatever you do, you can’t stop regretting having lost your precious pen: "Such a shame! I spent so much money on it and now it’s gone!" But then you remember, "Oh, of course! When I went to bathe I put the pen in the back pocket of my pants!" The moment you remember this you already feel better, even if you still haven’t seen the pen. You no longer worry about it. And as you’re walking along, you run your hand over your back pocket, and there it is. Your mind was deceiving you all along. The worry came from your ignorance. Now, seeing your pen again, you are beyond doubt, beyond worry. This sort of peace comes from seeing the cause of the problem, the cause of suffering. As soon as you remember that the pen was in your back pocket, your suffering ended. Knowing the truth brings peace.

Raging Tiger

  • This heart of ours is like a raging tiger that lives in a cage. If it can’t get what it wants, it growls and makes trouble. It must be tamed with meditation. Our defilements are also like a raging tiger. This tiger we should put in a solid cage made of mindfulness, energy, patience, and endurance. We then don’t feed it its habitual desires, and it’ll slowly starve to death.

Red-Hot Coal and Bird

  • The household life is easy and difficult at the same time. It’s easy to understand what to do, but difficult to do it. It’s as if you were holding a piece of red-hot coal in your hand and came to me complaining about it. I’d tell you to simply let go of it, but you’d refuse saying, "I want it to be cold." Well, either you drop it, or you must learn to be very, very patient. "How can I just drop it?" you ask, "how can I just drop my family?" Just drop them in your heart. Let go of your attachment to them. Of course you still have obligations to your family. You are like a bird that has laid eggs. You have the responsibility to sit on them and look after them after they have hatched. Just don’t think in terms of can I just drop my family?" Just drop them in your heart. Let go of your attachment to them. Of course you still have obligations to your family. You are like a bird that has laid eggs. You have the responsibility to sit on them and look after them after they have hatched. Just don’t think in terms of my family. This kind of thinking is just another cause of suffering. Don’t think either that your happiness depends upon whether you’re living alone or with others. Just live with the Dhamma and find true happiness.

Restless Monkey

  • The mind out of control is like a restless monkey jumping here and there senselessly. You have to learn to control it. See the real nature of the mind: impermanent, unsatisfactory, and empty. Don’t just follow it as it jumps around. Learn to master it. Chain it down and let it wear itself out and die. Then you have a dead monkey, and you’re finally at peace.

Rivers and Streams

  • When people enter the stream of Dhamma, it’s the one Dhamma. Even though they may come from different places, they harmonize, they merge. Just like the rivers and streams that flow to the sea . . . once they enter the sea, they all have the same taste and color. It’s the same with people.

Rope

  • Trying to end suffering without first understanding the cause is like pulling on a rope that’s stuck. You just pull the end of the rope over here. The other end of the rope is still stuck over there so it never comes. What to do to make it come? It does not come free because you never seek out the source, the root. You just get lost in pulling on this end. What is it stuck on? It must be stuck on something, and that’s why it doesn’t come. Go to the source, untie the knot, and be free.

Sand and Salt

  • Problems occur because people cling to conventions and what they suppose things to be. If you look closely, in the absolute sense, however, you will see that things don’t really exist. Our house, our family, our money are simply conventions that we have invented. Seen in the light of Dhamma, they don’t belong to us. Even this body is not really ours, and just because we suppose it to be so doesn’t make it so.
It would be like taking a handful of sand and agreeing to call it salt. Would that make it salt? Well, yes, it would, but in name only and not in reality. You still wouldn’t be able to cook with it, because no matter what you call it, it’s still sand. Supposing sand to be salt doesn’t make it so.

School boy

  • Practicing Dhamma is like a child learning to write. At first he doesn’t write nicely – big, long loops and squiggles. He writes like a child. After a while the writing improves through practice. Practicing the Dhamma is like this. At first you are awkward, sometimes calm, sometimes not. You don’t really know what’s what. Some people get discouraged. But don’t slacken off. Live with effort, just like the schoolboy. As he gets older he writes better and better. From writing badly he grows to write beautifully, all because of the practice from childhood.

Spillway

  • When you make a dam, you must make a spillway, too. Then when the water rises too high, the water can flow off safely. When it’s full to the brim, you open your spillway. You have to have a safety valve like this. Understanding impermanence is the safety valve of the Noble Ones. If you also have this safety valve, you will also be at peace.

Splinter in Your Foot

  • The Buddha taught us to escape from suffering using wisdom. For example, suppose you had a splinter embedded in your foot. Sometimes you step on a stone that presses on the splinter, and it really hurts. So you feel around your foot. But not finding anything, you shrug it off and walk on a bit more. Eventually you again step on something else, and the pain is there again. This happens many times. What is the cause of that pain? The cause is that splinter in your foot. Whenever the pain arises, you may take a look and feel around a bit, but not seeing the splinter, you let it go. The pain recurs again and again until the desire to take it out is constantly with you. Finally it reaches a point where you make up your mind once and for all to get that splinter out – because it hurts! Our effort in the practice must be like this. Wherever it huts, wherever there’s friction, we must investigate. We must confront the problem head on and not just shrug it off. Just take the splinter out of your foot. Wherever your mind gets stuck you must take note. As you look into it, you will know it, see it and experience it as it is.

Stubborn Horse

  • The mind is as stubborn as a horse and as hard to train. What do you do when you’ve got a horse that’s stubborn? Don’t feed it for a while and it will soon come around again. And when it listens to your command, feed it a little. We can train the mind in the same way. With right effort, wisdom will arise.

Stump

  • You should get at the root causes of things. It’s like you are going for a walk and you trip over a stump. So you get a hatchet and cut it, but it grows back and you trip over it again. So you cut it again. But it keeps n growing back. You’d better get a tractor and plow it up. But don’t put it off. It’s like saying to yourself, "Should I go today? Should I . . . ? Maybe I’ll go tomorrow . . . ?" Then the next day, "Should I go, or shouldn’t I?" And you keep on doing this day after day until you die and you never go anywhere. You’ve got to think, "Go!" and that’s it!

Sweet Dessert

  • Practice is a matter of directly looking at the mind. This is wisdom. When you have examined and understood the mind, then you have the wisdom to know the limitations of concentration or books. If you have practiced and understood not0clinging, you can then return to the books. They will be like a sweet dessert. They can help you to teach others. Or you can go back to practicing absorption, because now you have the wisdom to know not to hold onto anything.

Sweet Mango

  • Dhamma is in your mind, not in the forest. Don’t believe others. Just listen to your own mind. You don’t have to go and look anywhere else. Wisdom is in yourself, just like a sweet ripe mango is already in a young green one.

Sweet Papayas

  • Defilements can be useful if used skillfully. It’s like taking chicken and buffalo dung and putting them into the ground to help make our papaya trees grown. Dung is filthy stuff, but when the trees give fruit, the papayas are so nice and sweet. Whenever doubt arises, for example, look at it, investigate right there. This will help your practice grow and bear sweet fruit.

Tape Recorder

  • If listening to Dhamma makes your heart peaceful, that’s good enough. You don’t need to make an effort to remember anything. Some of you may not believe this, but if your heart is peaceful and you just listen to what is being said, letting it pass by while contemplating continuously, then you’ll be like a tape recorder. After some time, when you turn on, everything will be there. Have no fear that there won’t be anything. As soon as you turn on your tape recorder, everything will be there.

Thief and Boxer

  • People who have wrong understanding practice meditation like a thief who, after having got caught, hires a clever lawyer to get him out of trouble. Once he is out, however, he starts stealing again. Or they are like a boxer who gets beaten up, nurses his wounds, and then goes to fight again which only brings him fresh wounds. And this cycle goes on endlessly. The purpose of meditation is more than just calming ourselves from time to time, getting ourselves out of trouble, but seeing and uprooting the causes which make us not calm to begin with.

Thieves and Murderers

  • Your body and mind are like a gang of thieves and murderers. They keep trying to drag you into the fire of greed, hatred, and delusion. They cheat you through the pleasures of the senses. They call in sweet melodic voices from the other side of the door, saying, "Oh, come here, please come here." And when you open the door, they shoot you.

Tightly Woven Net

  • Know and watch your heart. It’s pure but emotions come to color it. So let your mind be like a tightly woven net to catch emotions and feelings that come, and investigate them before you react.

Tree

  • Fostering the practice of Buddhism can be likened to a tree. A tree has roots, a trunk, branches and leaves. Every single leaf and branch, including the trunk, depends on the roots to absorb nutriment and send it up to them. A tree is dependent on the roots for sustenance. We are the same. Our actions and our speech are like the trunk, branches, and twigs. The mind is like the root, which absorbs nutriment and sends it out to sustain them, which in turn bears fruit. Whatever state the mind is in, be it based in wrong view or right view outwardly through our actions and speech. So nurturing Buddhism through the practical application of the Teachings is very important.

Trees Growing Outward

  • Does anyone order the trees to grow the way they do? They can’t talk nor can they move around, and yet they grow away from obstacles. Wherever it’s cramped and growing will be difficult, they bend outwards. Trees by nature don’t know anything. They act on natural laws, yet they do know enough to grow away from danger, to incline toward a suitable place. People are like this. We want to transcend suffering, and if that which we like and that which we don’t like are suffering, we should then not go so close to them, not be cramped by them. When we incline toward the Buddha, suffering will lessen and eventually come to a complete end.

Vanity

  • Worldly people usually speak out of vanity. For example, suppose there was a certain person whom you hadn’t seen for a long time, and then one day you happen to meet on the train: "Oh, I’m so glad to see you! I was just thinking to look you up!" Actually it’s not so. You hadn’t even thought of him at all, but you just say so at the time out of gladness. And so it becomes a lie. Yes, it’s lying out of heedlessness. This is a refined form of lying, and people tend to speak like this. This, too, is a defilement which we should practice to get rid of.

Vine

  • A growing child is like a growing vine. A vine will grow and attach itself to the nearest tree. It won’t follow some other tree or form, and it’s from that tree that it will get its shape and direction. If the tree is growing straight and upwards, the vine, too, will grow straight and upwards. If the tree is growing crooked and sideways, so will the vine. Understand that your teaching of a child really comes more from how you are and what the child sees than from anything you say. So your practice is not just your own, but also for your children . . . and others around you.

Vulture

  • Many people who have studied on a university level and attained graduate degrees and worldly success find that there is still s something missing in their lives. Although they think high thoughts and are intellectually sophisticated, their hearts are still filled with pettiness and doubt. It’s like a vulture: it flies high, but what does it feed on?

Water in an Urn

  • If we keep on contemplating in meditation, energy will come to us. This is similar to the water in an urn. We put in water and keep it topped up. We keep on filling the urn with water so that the larvae which live in the water don’t die. Making effort and doing our everyday practice is just like this. We must keep it topped up.

Water Buffalo

  • Our thinking follows sense objects and pursues them wherever they go. Yet not any one of the sense objects is substantial. They are all impermanent, unsatisfactory, and empty. When they arise, observe them and see what happens. It is like looking after a buffalo in a rice paddy. When someone looks after a buffalo, he lets it walk around freely, but he keeps an eye on it. If the buffalo goes near the rice plants, he yells at it and the buffalo backs off. If it doesn’t obey, it gets to feel the hard end of a stick. The person watching the buffalo can’t doze off either, or he’ll get up finding the rice plants all eaten away.
  • The mind is like the buffalo, and the rice plants are like the sense objects. The one who knows is the owner. When observing the mind, the one who knows notices everything. It sees how the mind is when it follows sense objects, and how it is when it doesn’t follow them. When the one who knows observes the mind like this, wisdom will arise. When the mind meets an object, it’ll grab hold, just like the buffalo will bite on a rice plant when it sees one. So wherever the mind goes, you must watch it. When it goes near the rice plants, shout at it. If it will not obey you, just give it the stick.

Well and Orchard

  • You’ll have to work to find peacefulness in the world. It’s like reaching water for a well – it’s there but you have to dig for it. Or like an orchard that’s already planted – the fruit are there, but you have to pick them. They won’t just fall into your mouth.

Wooden Log

  • One can’t separate samatha and vipassana. Samatha is tranquility, vipassana is contemplation. In order to contemplate, one must be tranquil, and in order to be tranquil, one must contemplate to know the mind. Wanting to separate them would be like picking up a log of wood in the middle and wanting only one end of the log to come up. Both of its ends must come up at the same time. You can’t separate them. In our practice, it isn’t necessary to talk of samatha or vipassana. Just call it the practice of Dhamma, that’s enough.

Sweet Papayas

  • If you don’t understand the truth of suffering and how to get rid of it, all the factors of the path will be wrong – wrong speech and action, and wrong practice of concentration. It would be like wanting to travel to a certain village. You make a mistake and take the wrong road, but you find it comfortable to travel on and so continue walking in the wrong direction. No matter how comfortable and convenient the road may be, however, it won’t take you to where you want to go. With even a little intuitive wisdom we will be able to see clearly through the ways of the world. We will come to understand that everything in the world is a teacher. Trees and vines, for example, can reveal the nature of reality to us. With wisdom there is no need to question anyone, no need to study. WE can learn enough from Nature to be enlightened.

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