Life Is Spiritual Practice: Achieving Happiness with the Ten Perfections
By Jean Smith
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About this ebook
Discover the ten perfections--qualities of the heart and mind that cultivate happiness, wisdom, and compassion--and learn how to bring them into your life with this in-depth practice manual. Life Is Spiritual Practice carefully lays out the perfections, or paramis: the Buddha's foundational teaching for true happiness.
Generosity • Ethical Integrity • Renunciation • Wisdom • Wise Effort • Patience • Truthfulness • Resolve • Loving-Kindness • Equanimity
Drawing on her more than twenty years of teaching experience, Jean Smith teases out the subtleties of the perfections and offers helpful exercises, real-life examples, and instructions for an independent self-retreat for their practical application. With this book in hand, embody the ten perfections and achieve lasting happiness, regardless of your spiritual tradition.
Jean Smith
I attended St Marys High School in Downpatrick that is where my interest for writing grew; I was thirteen when I entered a writing competition for a play I was lucky to win and my mum Maureen Mageean went with me to recording studio in England and it was screened on television in 1965, I worked in the catering trade which I loved and later on met my husband and we had a lovely son named Gary who married Michelle and they have given me three lovely grand children Rayan Shannon and Amy; I have continued writing through out the years and since retiring I now have the time to sit down and write.
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Life Is Spiritual Practice - Jean Smith
Life Is Spiritual Practice
DISCOVER THE 10 PERFECTIONS AND CULTIVATE HAPPINESS, WISDOM, AND COMPASSION.
Generosity
Ethical Integrity
Renunciation
Wisdom
Wise Effort
Patience
Truthfulness
Resolve
Loving-Kindness
Equanimity
Drawing on more than twenty years of experience, Jean Smith guides us through the subtleties of the perfections, the Buddha’s foundational teaching for true happiness.
With helpful exercises to incorporate them into daily life and instructions for an independent, at-home self-retreat, you can achieve lasting happiness, regardless of your spiritual tradition.
JEAN SMITH is the author of numerous books, including 365 Zen, A Beginner’s Guide to Insight Meditation, NOW!, and Breath Sweeps Mind. A longtime associate of the Insight Meditation Society, she is the head of the executive board of the Mountain Retreat Center in Taos, New Mexico, where she lives.
Contents
Introduction: So You Want to Be Happy
Part I. Foundations for Happiness
1.Suffering as the Beginning of Happiness
Practice and Reflection: Aging
2.Impermanence and the Self: The Beginning of Suffering
Practice and Reflection: Impermanence
3.Karma: Creating Suffering or Happiness
Practice and Reflection: Karma
4.Cultivating Mindfulness
Practice and Reflection: The Hindrances
Part II. Life Practice: Our Personal Ideals
5.An Introduction to the Perfections
Practice and Reflection: The Perfections
6.Generosity
Practice and Reflection: Generosity
7.Ethical Integrity
Practice and Reflection: Ethical Integrity
8.Renunciation
Practice and Reflection: The Senses
9.Wisdom
Practice and Reflection: Wisdom
10.Wise Effort
Practice and Reflection: Energy
11.Patience
Practice and Reflection: Patience
12.Truthfulness
Practice and Reflection: Truthfulness
13.Resolve
Practice and Reflection: Resolve
14.Loving-Kindness
Practice and Reflection: Loving-Kindness
15.Equanimity
Practice and Reflection: Equanimity
APPENDIX: A Self-Retreat on Metta and the Perfections
Suggested Reading
Index
About the Author
Introduction:
So You Want to Be Happy
MAHATMA GANDHI believed that happiness is natural when what you think, what you say, and what you do are in harmony. Such astute assertions often lead us to counter with responses like "Yes, but does everything have to be an experience for learning harmony? or
Oh no, not another unasked-for growth opportunity! or
I don’t want any more spiritual challenges." When such thoughts come up, they’re usually unenthusiastic reactions to situations in our everyday lives—times when we’re not in harmony. But, in fact, those situations can be learning experiences and growth opportunities—even cornerstones of our spiritual life and happiness: Every aspect of our lives, even the most mundane, can be part of our spiritual practice.
Let me share a very old story with you. Thousands of years ago two young men who had grown up together decided to go their separate ways in adulthood. Unknown to the younger one, the older sewed a precious jewel into the lining of the younger’s coat. Years later they met again. The older man had prospered, but the younger had fallen on hard times, and his clothing was in tatters. The older man shocked him by showing him the hidden jewel and telling him that this wealth had always been available to him, had he but known of it.
Each one of us carries such precious stones. They are sacred jewels of purity in our hearts, known as the paramis, or perfections. If we want everyday life to be spiritually rewarding to ourselves and others, we need only realize that they are there and that we can bring them to light.
This possibility of living a seamless life—one that embraces the jewels in all aspects of our lives, rather than sewing them into separate pockets for work, relationships, play, faith, and such—is what peaked my interest in spirituality, one day in 1984 when I encountered a way of life I’d spent years searching for.
I was in the Himalayas that day; I’d walked into a small Nepali village of about seven houses. I paused, as I usually did, near the well, to get a sense of this community and its people. After about twenty minutes I wandered on until I saw a woman sitting on her mud stoop, weaving on a vertical loom. I had never seen anyone use a vertical loom but the Athabascan people of North America, whom the weaver very much resembled physically. I squatted down near her, my head filled with intellectual analyses about migration between Asia and North America and Ice Ages.
Then the weaver looked up at me and smiled. I smiled back, brought my hands together, and said, "Namaste—
the spirit in me salutes the spirit in you." She bowed with her hands together and responded, Namaste.
I looked at her weaving and said, "Ramro—
beautiful. She smiled again, then turned her attention back to her loom. I stayed there, watching her. As the minutes passed, I observed that she was totally absorbed by what she was doing. Her quiet purposefulness inspired a sense of serenity in me—I realized that she had something I did not fully understand but knew I wanted. She was my first teacher of Buddhism: she showed me that even the most ordinary daily activity is an opportunity for spiritual practice. Such absorption is possible no matter what the setting—one doesn’t have to be a Himalayan villager to see life in front of you as a source of practice. But, you may ask,
Why would we want to make life our spiritual practice anyway?" To cite the Dalai Lama’s answer: because all beings want to be happy—all beings, whether a child staring through the window of a toy store wanting to get inside or a housefly banging against a window trying to get outside. When we look back throughout history, we find that the people who most successfully have found the true nature of happiness and shared it with others—whether Jesus of Nazareth, Nelson Mandela of South Africa, or Aung San Suu Kyi of Burma—have been seen as good people.
Historical period, ethnic group, gender, culture, and faith have not determined who these people are. Each has embodied characteristics of heart and mind that others have recognized and emulated. Meditation teacher Steve Armstrong described these heart-mind characteristics in modern terminology as default settings for first responders to suffering.
And you have these settings built in too.
All faiths and religions have shining exemplars of the kind of people we would like to be. In the framework for this book, I have chosen the teachings of the Buddha, for three primary reasons: First, the systematic study of the ten heart-mind qualities (the perfections) that led Siddartha Gautama to be recognized as the Buddha have been scrutinized for almost 2,600 years and are well documented. Second, the Buddha emphasized that these qualities of the heart are ones that we already have and can learn to develop further. Third, these ten qualities are not inherently Buddhist characteristics—they are human ideals, natural and sacred in all of us.
If any of the Buddhist material in this book does not resonate with you, that’s just fine. Plumb your own spiritual tradition for similar teachings. The Buddha himself stressed that we should not take what he says as absolute truth but rather as propositions that we ourselves should test and prove
to ourselves. We don’t have to seek out esoteric teachings or philosophies to make our daily lives into our spiritual practice; all we have to do is embrace four goals:
1.Establish the heartfelt intention to want to lead a good
life.
2.Identify the heart-mind qualities we want to actualize.
3.Cultivate mindfulness to recognize the presence or absence of those qualities.
4.Resolve to make those qualities central to our lives.
A warning: This path is not an instant bliss trip. The contentment and fulfillment we can achieve don’t come to us in a spiritual hot flash but rather must be cultivated slowly over time. This means that the first step on the path is faith: believing that you can be happy but not at others’ expense. Part I, Foundations for Happiness,
explores the practices that inspire and confirm this faith, the ways we can learn to deal with life on life’s terms—and to do so with equanimity. Key among these foundations is mindful awareness of the heart-mind characteristics that lead to our spiritual liberation, ideals introduced in chapter 5.
The second step is willingness to cultivate these spiritual practices in our everyday life. Throughout the book, the strategies for happiness are applied to specific areas of life, such as relationships, work, and illness. Each chapter in part II delineates a particular ideal and begins with a resolve that when nurtured perfects that ideal, as well as a shortened version, a mantra, that may be used in meditation practice.
The word practice is important here. Think about some kinds of practice: Vocalists don’t spend hours singing scales so that they can go out on stage and sing scales. Tennis players don’t spend hours hitting a ball against a wall so that they can enter a tournament where they hit balls against a wall. Those seeking physical fitness don’t spend hours lifting weights so that they can go out onto the street and lift weights for the entertainment of passersby. Similarly, we don’t practice mindful awareness so that we can take a meditation cushion out in public so people can admire our sitting technique. The performance
of our practice is making our lives into the basis of spiritual integrity, an endeavor that can lead us to freedom and happiness and a way of living that does not harm others or our world.
We can achieve these blessings by embracing and developing the perfections of the Buddha. Join me in bringing them to light in your life; join me in taking the steps to make these ten resolves central to our lives:
1. Generosity: May my heart be open to give and to receive with joy and ease.
2. Ethical Integrity: May ethical integrity in thoughts, words, and actions be my gift to myself and the beings around me.
3. Renunciation: May I let go of anything that harms me or other beings.
4. Wisdom: May I make insightful choices that lead to compassion and liberation for all.
5. Wise Effort: May I awaken and sustain spiritual ideals in my life.
6. Patience: May I be patient and forgiving when negative emotions and events arise.
7. Truthfulness: May I be truthful with myself and others.
8. Resolve: May I resolve that my spiritual practice is for the benefit of all beings.
9. Loving-Kindness: May loving-kindness define my relationships with others.
10. Equanimity: Balanced in body, heart, and mind, may I be nonreactive to the unexpected changes of life.
Jean Smith
Taos, New Mexico
Part I
Foundations for Happiness
1.
Suffering as the Beginning of Happiness
THE BUDDHA FREQUENTLY SAID, I teach one thing and one thing only: suffering and the end of suffering.
If his sentence had ended after the first time the word suffering was used, his teachings probably would have lasted about 26 minutes instead of 2,600 years. But from his first teaching, he said that suffering has a cause and can be ended. When we are honest with ourselves, we know deep in our hearts that life is more often uncomfortable than not and that we spend a lot of time, money, and energy trying to get rid of discomfort. But none of our solutions seems to last very long or to be totally satisfying.
As a basis for all that follows, let’s begin with an overview of some key points regarding suffering and happiness, drawn from the Buddha’s first teaching, on the Four Noble Truths. A first challenge is in using the word suffering. Among the more popular translations of the Pali word dukkha, which the Buddha used for suffering, are dis-ease,
stress,
and anguish.
The causes of this dis-ease include birth, aging, illness, death, having to be with what one does not like, not getting what one wants, craving what one doesn’t have or clinging to what one has.
All suffering is possible only through contact with our six senses (the mind is included as a sense). The end of suffering is nonattachment or nonclinging, which requires wisdom, moral integrity, and mental discipline. Interestingly, the origin of the word dukkha was the hole through which a chariot’s axle passed, so not all dukkha was of the life-and-death variety—if you’ve ever had a grocery cart with a clunky wheel, you’ve known dukkha.
These initial teachings are straightforward and from the Buddha’s keystone teaching, the Four Noble Truths: dis-ease is part of life, its cause is clinging, its end is to relinquish clinging, and there is a path to the end of clinging. But to complicate matters, the Buddha described all conditioned existence (which means everything in life, because all life depends upon causes and conditions) as comprising three characteristics: suffering, impermanence, and not-self (the absence of a permanent, autonomous, separate self). We’ll look closely at each of these characteristics in more detail later, but first let’s isolate just one aspect: craving what we have come into contact with through our senses. When we realize that (1) dis-ease is caused by attachment through our senses and that (2) our senses too—like all conditioned things—are impermanent, we get an inkling of why even the things that at least momentarily make us most happy are in themselves the source of future dis-ease. In other words, when we who are impermanent cling to that which is also impermanent, eventually we will experience dis-ease, because those cherished objects of our attachment (people, situations, emotions, even ideas) will change or end. For example, if we see a chocolate ice cream bar, we may begin to experience a craving for chocolate, then eat the whole bar, then feel sadness when we have eaten it and it is gone. Understanding the nature and effects of impermanence is critical to our being willing to take the steps necessary to nurture our spiritual lives.
Although we may become attached to almost anything that we contact through the senses, four areas of attachment often cause the greatest suffering:
1.Clinging to sense pleasures. Sometimes our clinging to sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and tactile sensations becomes so powerful that it is a passion, an addiction. The first twelve-step program, Alcoholics Anonymous, was founded to deal with the seemingly hopeless addiction to alcohol. Now there are twelve-step programs for a range of sense addictions from narcotics to sex to food. Many of us have had the experience of gaining such pleasure from overindulging in our favorite food or drink that we have made ourselves sick, or at least unhealthy. Addiction is a complex psychological and physical phenomenon; I am not suggesting that addiction is as simple as thinking about wine or chocolate ice cream as being delicious. Because in Buddhism the brain is considered a sense organ, the combination of a physical addiction and a mental obsession can make the dynamics of a strong craving hard to resist.
2.Clinging to ideas and opinions about the world and the narratives
of our lives. Discomfort around our opinions about the world seems to ratchet up considerably during election years. Observe what happens to your body and mind, for example, when you watch a presidential debate on TV. And observe yourself and those around you when your candidate loses, even if only for the school board.
3.Clinging to precepts, rites, and practices. The degree to which we can become attached to particular ways of doing things—"the right, the only way—historically has shown up, sometimes violently, when a religious practice has been violated or even modified. There was anger, chaos, and rebellion, for example, when the Catholic Church started saying Mass in the vernacular of a country rather than in Latin. Depicting the Prophet Muhammad in a graphic representation has evoked enraged protests from Muslims around the world. Adherents of one school of Buddhism may scoff because another school meditates too much, or not enough. Even in everyday life, clinging to
our way" can cause us some degree of discomfort over such commonplace acts as a guest helping with after-dinner cleanup who does not wash the glasses first, a child who leaves a favorite book on the bed rather than a shelf, not having turkey for Thanksgiving dinner, forgetting to celebrate a spouse’s birthday.
4.Clinging to the dogma of a separate, permanent self. Philosophers, without experiencing a great deal of suffering, may speculate intellectually about the existence of a self and its defining characteristics. (I think, therefore I am
; if I don’t think, am I not?) But for the rest of us, anytime a situation arouses an aversive reaction—fear, anger, blame, jealousy, feelings of inadequacy—we