Working Models
- Subhuti
Do we see the spiritual life as a path, or a process of surrender,
of unfolding, or of emergence? Subhuti explores these
four approaches and describes how his own meditation practice
has been evolving. Interview by Vishvapani.
When
I started to meditate I learnt two techniques, the Mindfulness
of Breathing and the Metta Bhavana (development of loving-kindness).
These practices are basic to meditation in the Theravada tradition,
and to meditation as taught within the Friends of the Western
Buddhist Order. I used these as the initial basis for my meditation
until I was ordained into the Western Buddhist Order. Then I
took on a visualisation practice and that became the basis of
my practice. In each case meditation meant following techniques
that involved going through specific stages, and trying to cultivate
particular mental states.
But
even quite early on I found, especially doing the Vajrasattva
and Manjusri visualisation practices, that certain experiences
started to unfold for themselves within the context of the formal
technique. As time has gone on - I've now been meditating for
35 years - I am less and less applying will and following a
technique, and increasingly allowing something to unfold naturally
and spontaneously. I hardly use technique at all any more and
no longer think of my meditation in terms of 'doing' any particular
approach. My practice is to allow something to happen.
When
I meditate I try not to think about what I'm doing because
I want to get beyond thought to the experience itself. But I
have also wanted to become clearer about the connection between
these differing approaches. So outside meditation I have reflected
on how we think about what we do in spiritual life.
However
we approach meditation and spiritual life we will always have
a model - an idea of what we are doing. Spiritual life is based
on a fundamental duality between present experience and an experience
you want to develop or grow into, and there is always some kind
of tension between them. You can think about that relationship
in various ways and how you do so determines how you work in
meditation, in your general mindfulness and spiritual life in
general. The desired state can either be seen as lying outside
you or as lying within you. If it is outside you can either
think in terms of developing it within yourself - an approach
that could be termed 'self-development', or of incorporating
yourself into it - which could be called 'self-surrender'. If
it is within you can either think in terms of your discovering
it - 'self-discovery' - or of its emerging within you - 'emergence'.
I
think these four models - self development, self-surrender,
self-discovery and emergence - describe the possible ways of
thinking about any spiritual life, not just for Buddhists. Different
religions emphasise different models. Theistic religions stress
self-surrender while some of them, along with some eastern religions,
have a mystical element that speaks of emergence or discovery
within. More muscular religions, and 19th and 20th-century moral
thinking, emphasise self-development and raising yourself up.
Each
of these approaches has benefits and dangers. When we use a
technique we tell ourselves that 'I' will apply that technique
in order to produce a certain effect: that is the character
of self-development. To start with it was helpful to me to think
in that way and to have a sense that I was using my will
to bring about a different mental state from the one I was then
experiencing. But there are limitations in that way of looking.
It can reinforce your ego identity - your idea of who you are
- or it can be demoralising if you can't do the technique successfully.
Personally
that was compensated for by opening myself up to greater forces,
which I thought of in terms of the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas
upon whom I was meditating. I opened myself to an influence
that was outside and beyond me and I made an effort to surrender
myself to the Bodhisattva. A limitation of that approach is
that it isn't easy to do - you need an experience of the Bodhisattva's
presence in order to surrender to them. There is the possibility
of identifying with them in an immature way and believing you
are their messenger - a great danger in a theistic religion.
One final danger is that you may never go beyond the dualism
between yourself and the Bodhisattva.
But
through that approach of self-surrender I began to have an experience,
which at first I identified with the Bodhisattva. Over time
the experience itself has grown stronger and more vivid and
I stopped thinking about what it was. This experience seems
to be independent of my will, but I have a sufficient continuing
relationship with it that, if I am receptive enough, I can be
confident that it will emerge. Initially I saw what was happening
in terms of self-discovery - I was discovering a truth within
me - but that still implies the exercise of will. It was more
that I was allowing something to emerge - so I have now come
to think more in terms of emergence.
My
experience of meditation, therefore, has moved from one that
could be described as self-development and self-surrender to
one that could be described as self-discovery, especially emergence.
But what can I make of this change? My own teacher, Sangharakshita,
has been wary, even critical, of the language of emergence.
He was concerned that (in the early stages of spiritual life)
to think there is nowhere to go, nothing to do, and one is already
Enlightened, destroys motivation and values. He has seen people
undercutting the moral and cultural aspects of spiritual life
by thinking in that way. However, Buddhism has spoken the language
of all the models I have mentioned. Sangharakshita himself has
also used language that suggests emergence, and he has been
strongly affected by Tibetan dzogchen teachers, who speak in
just these terms. So what is the best approach?
I
was helped greatly in finding a resolution of this conflict
by reading the medieval Korean Son Buddhist teacher Kihwa. Writing
against the background of a fundamental distinction in Chinese
philosophy between essence and function, he speaks of a practice
that is mainly to do with allowing what is essential in you
to emerge, while also finding a way to function that is in accordance
with your essence. He emphasises that what his translator calls
a 'function-orientation' and an 'essence-orientation' must be
kept in balance. He also speaks of a third orientation, which
is a non-orientation - a recognition that both essence and function
are provisional terms. This approach suggests that, as Padmasambhava
teaches, we should 'descend with the view and ascend with the
conduct'. We try to operate from the broadest possible vision,
but proceed in daily conduct by training in the precepts.
Kihwa's
approach confirmed a recognition that had arisen in me, that
there are different ways of thinking about spiritual life, which
need to be balanced. And we need a perspective that lies beyond
any models. Reading Kihwa clarified and resolved the conflict
I had felt between what was developing in my own meditation
practice and Sangharakshita's cautionary words. I saw the possibility
of holding different perspectives together, and considering
they may be appropriate at different times. All are just models
with a provisional truth and all have potential dangers.
In
terms of classical Buddhist analysis, the self-development and
self-surrender models tend to eternalism - fixing the truth
into something absolute and immutable. Emergence and self-discovery
models tend to nihilism - denying that there's any source of
value and meaning at all, because when we look inward the context
is scepticism and doubt about what is outside. That is why it
can be helpful to play these dangers off against each other.
Discussion
of different approaches to spiritual life can easily polarise
as we tend to consider our own approach the best one, and to
see the limitations and dangers in others. It helps to have
a sense that each of them can aid us in some way at a particular
time. Any model is a way of conceptualising something that is
not finally to be understood conceptually, and any model has
dangers if taken over-literally. Seeing the provisionality of
each helps me to appreciate them better. And, as I have become
conscious of the way models work, I have tried to keep the different
models in tension with one another.
In
modern western culture we tend naturally to be most sympathetic
to the view that meaning lies within. In a traditional society
there is a strong sense of a higher reality lying outside oneself
and spiritual life primarily concerns surrendering to something
higher. With the European Enlightenment and modernity people
found it harder and harder to think of an external reality to
which they must surrender themselves. The accent came onto the
individual and their moral responsibility and spiritual life
came to be seen in terms of self-development. But increasingly,
Enlightenment thinking has led to a growing awareness of the
conditional nature of our individuality and our susceptibility
to psychological and cultural forces much larger than the sphere
of our conscious control. Indeed, the whole idea of self-development
has become problematic, especially in light of the political
excesses to which it has led, and we are now much less confident
about the primacy of the individual and the ego. In this post-modern
era we tend to believe that, if there is a truth, it must lie
within.
Over
the years I have been critical of the post-modern position,
as I'm very aware that it can lead both to a failure to make
moral effort, and to over-identifying with what is seen to be
within. Kihwa's notion of the contingency of models of spiritual
life - and the changes in my own practice - has moderated this.
I now accept that the post-modern view is the one from which
most people in the West start, and I believe we must try to
enrich it rather than fight it.
But
like other views the post-modern one goes wrong when taken literally
and becomes relativism - the belief that nothing has more value
than anything else. Even if we don't go to that extreme, there
is a danger in an approach that says models are limited and
we should play them off against each other. It tends to sap
energy and inspiration, and you can end up with nihilism or
vagueness.
My
feeling is that if we find ourself motivated by a model we should
commit to it and follow it through. When meditating we need
to spend some time making an effort and some time not doing
so. If making an effort in meditation has become a grind and
a bore - then just open up. In the Mindfulness of Breathing
there needs to be an element of effort, but that effort needs
to be sensitively applied. What we focus on is not the state
we're trying to bring about but the state we're actually in
- simply experiencing what is going on now and not on trying
to escape it. So to begin with I think that a judicious mix
of self-development and self-surrender is probably the best
way forward. We also need an element of allowing something to
emerge.
At
every stage it's vital to realise that the ways we approach
our spiritual practice can have both benefits and dangers. We
need to keep alive the metaphors we use and be conscious that
different ones may be more or less useful at different points
in our lives. We must also use them intelligently - aware that
they are only metaphors and not Reality itself.
From
- www.DharmaLife.com
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