Dr. Dhammasami
Dr. Dhammasami
Dr. Dhammasami
Khammai Dhammasami
47
48the practice of compassion
and matter, impermanence, suffering and lack of unchanging self.
Should one fail to contemplate on the experiences at the present
moment this way, one may wrongly perceive them as being permanent,
pleasant, good, attractive and the unchanging essence capable of provid-
ing lasting happiness and then become attached to them.1
[My own translation]
Mogok Vipassana Association which has more than four hundred cen-
tres around the country preserves the meditation techniques as taught by
Mogok Sayadaw, also known as U Vimala. He centres his teaching on
mindfulness of breathing and the law of dependent origination. He ar-
gues that a theoretical understanding of the law of dependent origination
is necessary, and its twelve links are considered in the light of the four
noble truths, emphasizing how the cycle of suffering is enforced or
brought to an end. The theoretical teaching of the dependent origination
is provided daily at least for an hour to the meditators during the retreat.
Concentration and mindfulness are established using the awareness of
breathing. Once concentration is achieved to a certain level, the medita-
tor is asked to observe the arising and passing away, impermanence, of
their experiences at the present moment.
One other well-known meditation tradition in Myanmar, Pa Auk,
named after its founder, Pa Auk Sayadaw, U Acinna (1934 ) also
50the practice of compassion
The calm mind is the mind that is firm and stable in Samadhi. There
is awareness of the impermanent but its as if you are not aware. This is
because you let go. The mind lets go automatically. Concentration is so
deep and firm that you let go of attachment to sense impingement quite
naturally. Investigating from within a state of calm leads you to
clearer and clearer insight The clearer and more conclusive the
insight, the deeper inside the mind penetrates with its investigation, con-
stantly supported by the calm of Samadhi. This is what the practice of
kammatthna involves. Continuous investigation in this way helps you
to repeatedly let go of and ultimately destroy attachment to personality
view.
The Four Noble Truths are things to be realized through insight.
Understanding of each Noble Truth emerges at the same place within
the mind. They come together and harmonize as the factors of the Noble
Eightfold Path; As the path factors converge in the centre of the
mind, they cut through any doubts and uncertainty you still have con-
cerning the way of practice.7
the practice of compassion 51
From these excerpts, one can see how Theravada meditation practices
popular nowadays in Myanmar and Thailand stress the development of
mindfulness, concentration and insight. Needless to say, they all pay suf-
ficient attention to the importance of morality as described in the Five
Precepts for lay people and the Ptimokha monastic disciplines for the
monks and nuns. In the general sense though, those moral codes (sla)
give weight to what to refrain from rather than what to develop.
the quality of mind that is shaken when one sees someone in trouble;
mudit as joyous feeling when seeing others doing well; and upekkh
as the ability to remain neutral or indifferent, when examining with
wisdom, with regard to the trouble someone immoral has put himself
in.13
However, P.E.D. defines upekkh as hedonic neutrality or indiffer-
ence, zero point between joy and sorrow; disinterestedness,
neutral feeling, equanimity. I think the P.E.D. interpretation of upekkh
is ques-tionable. I can, however, understand the P.E.D.s point when it
equates upekkh with the feeling which is neither pain nor pleasure.
That is to include upekkh in vedan-kkhandha, the aggregate of
feeling; this is true only to upekkh as part of jhna factors. In fact,
upekkh in the Brahma-vihra is part of sankhara-kkhandha, which it is
about intention, thought and emotion.
I think upekkh is somewhat different from that. To me, it is the state
of balanced and a more stable mind between two seemingly contradicto-
ry emotions: compassion and joy. Contradictory, because they focus on
different objects: suffering and happiness respectively; and, without
being closely supported and sustained by mindfulness and concentra-
tion, when one contemplates suffering, it is possible that one becomes
angry or depressed; and when facing a happy situation, one may feel
jealous and insecure. As repeatedly described in the Satipatthna-sutta,
one uses mindfulness (satim), effort (tp) and understanding (sampa-
jno) to address those hindrances, usually summarized as two: covetous-
ness (abhijjh) and destructive mind (domanassam). On overcoming
those hindrances to compassion and joy, one reaches the state of
upekkh. The Buddha was the embodiment of all the Brahma-vihra; he
was not disinterested in peoples sorrow and joy; indeed, he was moved
by them and spent all his life helping people to overcome them.
Upekkh is how to stay connected with suffering and joy
while not being overwhelmed by them but preserving your own
calm and objectivity.
It should be stressed here that upekkh is one of the most misunder-
stood concepts in Theravada communities of Myanmar, Thailand and
Sri Lanka. As in the P.E.D.s interpretation, people usually take it as
being indifferent or ignoring someones pain or joy, especially pain. I
think the problem may have arisen like this. In many suttas, upekkh is
described with jhnic states and in that situation; even happiness (sukha)
is absent in the state of upekkha. But I think this is true only when one is
in a jhnic state. Otherwise, upekkh is accompanied with rapture (pti)
and calm (passaddhi) just as it is with mindfulness (sati), investigation
the practice of compassion 55
Notes
1
Vipassana Shu-nee Kyan (A Manual on the Techniques of Vipassana Practice), Vol.
1, 2008; p. 232. This two-volume work contains the vipassana meditation techniques
and their explanations as taught by Mahasi Sayadaw. It has been translated into English
under the title A Practical Way of Vipassana and published by the Buddha Sasana-
nuggaha Organization, Yangon in 2011.
2
She has been practicing and teaching metta meditation more than many others in the
Theravada tradition in the West.
3
I follow Richard Gombrichs translation here and use non-changing self, instead of
self. In the suttas, the word atta is usually accompanied with words such as nicco, dhuvo
aviparimadhammo.
the practice of compassion 57
4
Mogok Sayadaw, Thitsar laypah tayah-daw [The Four Noble Truths]. Pp. 2423.
5
Hair of the head, hair of the body, nails, teeth, skin; flesh, sinews, bones, marrow,
kidneys; heart, liver, membranes, spleen, lungs; bowels, intestines, gorge, dung, brain;
bile, phlegm, pus, blood, sweat, fat; tears, grease, snot, spittle, oil of the joints and urine.
6
Earth, water, air/ wind, fire, blue/ green colour, yellow colour, red colour, white
colour, enclosed space and bright light).
7
The Collected Teachings of Ajahn Chah. Pp. 40610.
8
sublime or divine state of mind, blissful meditation (exercises on a, altruistic
concepts; b, equanimity; see on these meditations).
9
There are four protective meditations (catur-rakkha): loving-kindness meditation
(metta), meditation on the loathsome nature of the body (asubha), meditation on the
Buddha (Buddhnussati) and meditation on death (maranassati).
10
Pa Auk Tawya Sayadaw, Light of Wisdom: Meditation in Pa Auk Forest Monastery,
Kuala Lumpur: Wisdom Audio Visual Exchange, 1997. P. 52.
11
You must use loving-kindness. When angry states of mind arise in meditation,
balance them by developing feelings of loving-kindness. The Collected Teachings of
Ajahn Chah. P. 271.
12
Examine these five khandhas as they come and go. You will see clearly that they
are impermanent, that this impermanence makes them unsatisfactory and undesirable,
and that they come and go of their ownthere is no self running things. The Collect-
ed Teachings of Ajahn Chah. P. 221.
13
Phra Dhammapitaka (P.A. Payutto), Khun pitah martah (The Gratitude of Parents).
Pp. 267; Phum tham chao phut (The Foundation of Dhamma for Buddhists). Pp. 148.
Pa Auk Tawya Sayadaw, Light of Wisdom. Pp. 5057.
14
Some take upekkh in the seven factors of enlightenment to mean a special state in
the Vipassana meditation process, that is the feeling of indifference towards the condi-
tioned phenomena, sakhrupekkha. By this, one seems to remove upekkh from the
Brahma-vihra.
15
Satipahana-sutta, DN.
Selected References
1. Gombrich, R. How Buddhism Began: The Conditioned Genesis of the Early
Teachings, London, 1996.
2. Mogok Sayadaw, Thitsar laypah tayah-daw [The Four Noble Truths], (in Burmese)
Publication Serial No. 26, 4th reprint, The Association for Promotion of Mogok
Vipassana Teaching and Practice, Yangon, 1994.
3. Nyanaponika Thera, The Heart of Buddhist Meditation, Buddhist Publication Soci-
ety, Kandy, 1992.
4. Nyanatiloka Mahathera, Buddhist Dictionary, Buddhist Publication Society, Kandy,
1980 (Fourth Revised Edition).
5. Pa Auk Tawya Sayadaw, Light of Wisdom: Meditation in Pa Auk Forest Monastery,
Kuala Lumpur, 1996.
6. Phra Dhammapitaka (P.A. Payutto), Khun pitah martah (The Gratitude of Parents)
(in Thai), Bangkok, 2000.
7. ____ Phum tham chao phut (The Foundation of Dhamma for Buddhists) (in Thai),
Bangkok, 2003.
8. Vipassana Shu-nee Kyan (A Manual on the Techniques of Vipassana Practice) (in
Burmese), Vol. 1, 7th reprint, Thathana Yeiktha Buddha Sasananuggaha Organiza-
58the practice of compassion
tion, Yangon, 2008.
9. The Collected Teachings of Ajahn Chah, 2nd edition, Aruna Publications,
Northumberland, UK, 2011.
10. Smaaphala-sutta, Tevijja-sutta and Satipahna-sutta, Digha-nikya.
11. Rhys Davids. T.W and Stede. W, Pali English Dictionary, The Pali Text Society,
1921.
Author Biography
Venerable Khammai Dhammasami, a Theravada Buddhist monk of some thirty years
of standing, obtained his DPhil at Oxford under Prof. Richard Gombrich. He is a
Research Fellow at the OCBS and Buddhist Chaplain to Oxford University. He is also
founder-abbot of the Oxford Buddha Vihara, UK. Recently he founded Shan State Bud-
dhist University in Taunggyi, Myanmar. He is executive secretary of the International
Association of Buddhist Universities. His main interests are Pali, monastic education
and meditation. His short introduction to meditation, Mindfulness Meditation Made Easy
has been translated into Thai, Tai, Spanish, Serbian, Hungarian, Korean and Portuguese.
He has led a project with some twenty international Buddhist scholars in compiling a
common Buddhist text, translating from the canonical texts of Theravada, Mahayana and
Vajrayana traditions. His scholarly articles include: Idealism and pragmatism: A dilem-
ma in the current monastic education system of Burma and Thailand in Buddhism,
Power and Political Order, ed. I. Harris, London, 2007; Seeing Myself as Another Per-
son: The Autobiography of a Burmese Monastic Thinker in the Twentieth Century in
Lives Lived, Lives Imagined, eds. L. Covill, U. Roesler & S. Shaw, Boston, 2010 and;
Buddhism in the Union of Myanmar in 2600 Years of Global Journey of Awakening,
eds. O. Abeynayake & A. Tilakaratne, Colombo, 2012.