Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
Tags: #Science, #Physics, #Crystallography, #Chemistry, #Inorganic
in the enterprise of unifying and concentrating the mind such that it can
remain steadily upon a single object over multiple mind moments.
Buddhist psychology identifies five primary obstacles to meditation,
known appropriately as the five hindrances. The first of these is
sense desire
,
or the impulse of the senses to seek out their objects. It is as if the eye wants
to see forms, the ear is eager to hear sounds, and so on for the other senses,
including the mind liking to think the thoughts that please it in one way or
another. We are so used to having our senses connect with their correspond-
ing object that a considerable habit energy is present in any given moment
inclining the mind to “lean toward” or be attracted to their habitual forms
of stimulation. This pull of the senses, including mind as the sixth sense, is
subtle but can be viscerally discerned as the mind gets more sensitive. The
second hindrance is
ill-will
, a corresponding propensity to shy away or with-
draw from those objects of experience that do not please us or are painful
in some way. These first two hindrances act as a matched pair of polar oppo-
sites, pulling and pushing the mind and senses from one object to another in
ways that make it difficult to settle down. The third and fourth hindrances
also work together as an opposed pair,
restlessness
and
sluggishness
. Rest-
lessness is a matter of too much energy, driving the mind relentlessly from
one object to another, while sluggishness is too little energy, bogging the
mind down in slothful, sleepy, or lazy states. The antidote for restlessness
is to relax and tranquilize the mind, while the remedy for sluggishness is to
arouse greater interest and enthusiasm. Paradoxically, the goal is to reach a
state that is simultaneously tranquil and alert. The mind should be calm with-
out being sluggish and alert without being restless. The final hindrance is
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Andrew Olendzki
doubt
, often manifest as recurring thoughts of self-doubt, doubt about mak-
ing progress, or doubt about the entire enterprise of learning such a daunting
thing as meditation. As long as any of these five states or factors is arising in
the mind, it will be difficult or impossible to focus the mind and hold it steady
upon a particular object. But they can, with patient practice, be temporar-
ily put aside or abandoned. They are likened to wind-blown waves on the
surface of water, and when they quiet down, the mind, like water, becomes
limpid and clear.
Deepening Meditation
Although at first the attention has an almost irresistible propensity to be
drawn to sounds, physical sensations, or stray thoughts—wherever the
action is—it eventually gets less and less diverted by random stimuli. At some
point the momentum shifts, and it becomes more compelling to remain with
the primary object than to pursue the shallow stimulation of some novel
input. It is not that the object itself is of particular interest, but rather the
quality of mind with which the object is cognized becomes more intriguing
as it gains in power, depth, and lucidity. Under the scrutiny of a concen-
trated mind, everything becomes fascinating. If this process of steadying the
mind on a single object is allowed to mature, it will eventually reach a stage
called
absorption
, or
jh¯
ana
in Pali (the same word is rendered
dhy¯
ana
in
Sanskrit,
ch’an
in Chinese, and
zen
in Japanese). In this state the mind is
so thoroughly attending to a particular object that it is no longer aware of
other objects that might present themselves at a sense door. A bird might
sing and the sound waves will reach the ear and may even be processed by
subliminal sensory systems, but it will not enter conscious awareness since
“the line is busy” as it is absorbed by the primary object of awareness. This
is a state most resembling a trance to the outside observer and is the target
of considerable caricature of meditation in popular culture. But while the
mind may appear non-functioning from the outside, it has reached a state
of remarkable capability when regarded from the practitioner’s subjective
standpoint.
The classical meditation literature of the Buddhist tradition describes a
systematic (and repeatable) four-stage process by which the mind becomes
gradually purified of its distractions as it becomes increasingly focused and
potent. Nothing significant happens until the mind has at least temporarily
abandoned the five hindrances mentioned above, and any progress is immedi-
ately canceled if any sort of harmful or unethical impulse arises in the stream
of consciousness. Again, this is not so much a proscription as it is a descrip-
tion of the natural qualities of the mind, which can only achieve an advanced
state of concentration if its thoughts and intentions remain ethically whole-
some. The first stage of absorption meditation is accompanied by intense
physical pleasure and mental joy, more a state of deep well-being permeat-
ing the body than of sensory titillation. This stage also involves the normal
conceptual or discursive functions of the mind. One can feel very focused
while retaining the ability to verbalize and direct thought at will. In the sec-
ond stage these discursive functions cease, while the joy that comes naturally
with concentration persists. It is not that the mind has stopped functioning,
rather certain functions of the mind, those that direct and sustain deliberative
Chapter 2 Mindfulness and Meditation
41
conceptual thought, come to rest. In Buddhist understanding the more pro-
found levels of mind, characterized by a strong inner clarity, are only reached
when the chatter of verbalization and symbol manipulation ceases. The third
stage of absorption sees the diminishing of the intensive joy permeating the
first two stages into a more subtle sense of happiness and well-being. With
the fourth and final stage, all pleasure is replaced with equanimity, a deep
evenness of mind that regards phenomena with compete objectivity. The
usual attraction toward what is pleasing and avoidance of what is displeasing,
both attitudes of mind that prevent us from seeing clearly, are surmounted by
equanimity. At this point the concentrated mind is said to be purified, bright,
and steady. Moreover, like gold purified in a crucible, it becomes malleable
and can be turned with great effect to a number of non-ordinary modes of
functioning.
The civilization into which the Buddha was born had been adept at the
contemplative arts for centuries. The world he inhabited was filled with a
marvelous diversity of spiritual teachers and teachings, and he learned many
meditation practices from others. The
yogis
of his day, those disciplined
practitioners of the meditative arts, were influenced considerably by ancient
shamanic practices and used deep mental training in the service of universal
religious pursuits such as gaining magical powers, traveling to other dimen-
sions of reality, and interacting with non-human beings. Many operated in
traditional Hindu contexts, employing meditative practices in the mystical
pursuit of realizing and uniting with god in various ways. The Buddha seemed
to have a very different set of interests, however, and both discouraged the
development of magical abilities and repudiated the theistic assumptions of
his day. He fully embraced the science of purifying and training the mind,
but directed it to the goal of understanding the nature of human experi-
ence. In particular, he was interested in investigating the moment-to-moment
functioning of mind and body, the synthetic construction of experience, and
the specific ways in which both suffering and well-being are conditioned by
interdependent factors. He saw humanity as being in an existentially chal-
lenging situation, given the ubiquity of change and the inevitability of aging,
sickness, and death. He also saw that human beings have deep instincts for
personal survival, which manifest as a whole array of afflictive emotional
responses rooted in greed, hatred, and delusion. The bulk of our difficulties,
he discerned, come not from the existential challenges themselves, but from
internally generated maladaptive responses activated by the relentless and
unreflective pursuit of pleasure and avoidance of pain. Through the exam-
ple of his own awakening and a subsequent life devoted to training others,
the Buddha demonstrated that these internal causes of suffering can be seen,
understood, and healed. His approach is basically psychological, his methods
are mostly empirical, and his goal is ultimately therapeutic, which is why his
teachings are of growing interest to modern psychologists.
Mindfulness Meditation
The primary tool for bringing about the radical transformation from reflexive
suffering to profound well-being is meditation, but the one-pointed concen-
tration meditations described so far are of only limited usefulness. The dis-
cipline and focus they bring to the mind are indispensible, but insight into
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Andrew Olendzki
the workings of the complex mind requires a more agile meditative tool.
That tool is
mindfulness
. Called
sati
in Pali, mindfulness derives from a root
√
(
sm
r¸
t
) meaning memory or recollection and refers to the cultivation of a
certain presence of mind that remembers to attend with persistent clarity
to the objects of present experience. Like meditation in general, it involves
placing attention deliberately upon an object and sustaining it over time,
but unlike one-pointedness and absorption, mindfulness tends to open to a
broader range of phenomena rather than restricting the focus to a singular
object. Like a floodlight rather than a spotlight, mindfulness illuminates a
more fluid phenomenological field of ever-changing experience rather than
isolating a particular object for intensive scrutiny. This alternative mode of
observation is necessary because mindfulness practice is more about investi-
gating a
process
than about examining an object. All mindfulness meditation
requires a certain degree of concentration in order to gather and focus the
powers of the mind, but the concentrated mind is then directed to a moving
target—the flowing stream of consciousness—rather than being allowed to
stabilize on a single point. Whereas concentration practice involves returning
the mind again and again to the primary object of meditation, mindfulness
practice allows the mind to follow whatever is arising in experience. There
is less a sense of controlling
what
the awareness is resting upon and more
care given to
how
awareness is manifesting.
In classical Buddhist psychology, mindfulness is regarded as a mental state,
one of the 52 functions of the mind that can arise in various combinations
to assist the cognizing of an object by consciousness. These mental factors
are similar to what are often called intentions, attitudes, or qualities of mind.
Among the mental states are found certain functions that are universal to
all mind moments, such as perception, feeling, volition, and attention, some
that may or may not arise in any given mind moment, such as decisiveness,
energy, or joy, and some that occur only in unwholesome states of mind such
as conceit, envy, or avarice. Mindfulness is among a list of factors that are
considered wholesome, and these serve as antidotes and alternatives to the
unwholesome factors. Mindfulness is always accompanied by such comple-
mentary mental factors as trust, equanimity, and kindness, along with factors
that contribute to the mind’s tranquility, malleability, and proficiency. This
system thus maps out a rather precise definition of mindfulness, which says
as much about what it is not as what it is. Mindfulness is not mere atten-
tiveness to experience; nor is it the deliberate turning of the mind toward
a particular object and the sustaining of attention upon that object; nor
can mindfulness ever co-arise with restlessness or any of the mental states
rooted in greed, hatred, or delusion. Mindfulness consists of a quality of
attention that is at once confident, benevolent, generous, and equanimous.
It is a manner of being aware, an attitude of mind toward experience, and a
mode of awareness that is paradoxically both intimately close and objectively
removed (Olendzki, 2008).
One more classical word for meditation that should be considered in this
context is
bh¯
avana
. It is based on the causative construction of the verb “to
be” and is thus literally “causing to be”; it is generally translated as
develop-
ment
. One of the important functions of meditation is the development of
those qualities of mind that are beneficial to a path of transformation. There