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The Noble Eightfold Path 
© Rick Hanson, 2006 
"I teach one thing: Suffering and its end." -- The Buddha 
Introduction 
The Eightfold Path is the fourth of the Buddha's Noble Truths, and he described it as 
the way that leads to the uprooting of the causes of suffering, and thus to 
increasingly stable and profound peacefulness, wisdom, virtue, and happiness. 
Each of the eight elements of this Path is described by a word that is typically 
translated as "right" or "wise." Both meanings are useful to reflect upon regarding 
your own suffering and your yearning for its end. Each element of the Path is right, 
in the sense of being correct, moral, and a pointed instruction about how to live. Each 
element is also wise, in the sense of resulting from deep understanding and leading 
to good results. In keeping with the weight of tradition and the value of the sharp 
edge of the word, "right," that's what is used in this summary. 
While the eight elements of the Path are presented here in their traditional sequence, 
they are not something you develop in order. They are all important, all the time. Yet 
some may become more prominent aspects of your practice at one time or another. 
The heart of each element of the Path is non-clinging, the essence of the Third Noble 
Truth: the cause of the end of suffering. 
[Note: Quotations are shown in italics, and in some cases have been edited for brevity, clarity, 
including female pronouns, etc. Unless otherwise indicated, quotations from the Buddha are from 
Bhikkhu Bodhi's anthology, In the Buddha's Words, shown as BW with page number(s).] 
Right View 
Introduction 
Right View entails a deep, embodied understanding of the truth of things -- in 
particular, the truth of the three topics discussed just below. 
One who has fully developed right view is considered a "stream-enterer," one who is 
certain of ultimate liberation." 
The Four Noble Truths 
The Buddha: "And what, monks, is right view? Knowledge of suffering, knowledge of the 
origin of suffering, knowledge of the cessation of suffering, knowledge of the way leading to 
the cessation of suffering." 
Please see the article on “The Four Noble Truths” in the Buddhist Wisdom section of 
this webpage: http://www.wisebrain.org/articles.html.
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© Rick Hanson, 2007 
The Unwholesome and the Wholesome 
Right view also entails understanding what is unwholesome and avoiding it, and 
understanding what is wholesome and doing it. 
What did the Buddha say were the causes of the unwholesome? They are any and all 
forms of greed, hatred, delusion, and the belief in a separate self. 
What did the Buddha say were the causes of the wholesome? They are equanimity 
and renunciation, compassion and lovingkindness, wisdom, and releasing the 
"conceit" of self. 
You might like to consider the causes of the wholesome and unwholesome as they 
occur in your own mind and life. For example, you could take a day or a week and 
investigate one cause in particular, such as all the manifestations of greed in your 
mind - or alternately, all the manifestations of compassion. 
The Chain of Dependent Origination 
Last, right view means understanding what the Buddha called "the chain of 
dependent origination." 
In its essence, this means simply understanding that everything is the result of 
causes, a restatement of the law of karma. In personal terms, this means that if you 
foster certain causes in your life, good things will result for you and others; on the 
other hand, if you foster other causes, bad things will result. Wisdom is knowing 
which is which! 
In the formal, detailed statement of the chain of dependent origination, the Buddha 
gave a complex, circular, intertwining, and sometimes mind-boggling description of 
why things are the way they are. This description can be daunting at first glance. 
Take your time with it, and learn more about what the specific terms mean that the 
Buddha uses. Its depth and power will become clearer for you, and probably very 
useful. This is the chain, with thirteen links: 
• "Taints" (sensual desire, ignorance, and sheer existence) lead to: 
• Ignorance (not realizing the Four Noble Truths; presuming a separate self), 
leading to: 
• "Volitional formations" (wholesome and unwholesome intentions expressed 
through the body, speech, or mind), leading to: 
• Consciousness (linked to the five bodily senses and the mind), leading to:
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• "Name-and-form" (the cognitive and physical aspects of individual existence), 
leading to: 
• The six sense bases (sight, touch, mind, etc.), leading to: 
• Contact (the meeting of three things: a sense organ, an object appropriate to that 
organ, and the consciousness associated with that organ; with the five senses and the 
mind, there are six types of contact), leading to: 
• Feeling (meaning not emotion, which is a "mental formation," but the tone of an 
experience as pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral), leading to: 
• Craving (for forms, for mental phenomena, etc.), leading to: 
• Clinging (to sensual pleasures [including avoiding pain], to views, to rites and 
rituals, and a sense of separate self), leading to: 
• Existence (in one of the realms of Buddhist cosmology, ranging from hells to 
heavens), leading to: 
• Birth (through reincarnation, in one of those realms of existence), leading to: 
• Aging and death, and then carrying karmic tendencies which are: 
• Taints . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 
There are repetitions and feedback loops within the chain of dependent origination. 
That means you can change your fate at many "links" within the chain. In particular: 
• Reducing ignorance sends huge positive ripples through the whole system. 
• If you can have equanimity toward your feeling reaction - toward whether 
something is pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral - you can interrupt the tendency 
toward craving, clinging, etc. 
Right Intention 
Introduction 
This is sometimes translated as "right resolve," which conveys the determination, 
firmness of aim, heartfelt conviction, and persistence that are central to right 
intention.
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Intention of harmlessness 
This is a broad aim of not causing pain, loss, or destruction to any living thing. At a 
minimum, this is a sweeping resolution to avoid any whit of harm to another human 
being. The implications are far-reaching, since most of us participate daily in 
activities whose requirements or ripples may involve harm to others (e.g., use of 
fossil fuels that warms the planet, purchasing goods manufactured in oppressive 
conditions). Further, in American culture there is a strong tradition of rugged 
individualism in which as long as you are not egregiously forceful or deceitful, "let 
the buyer beware" on the other side of daily transactions; but if your aim is 
preventing any harm, then the other person's free consent does not remove your 
responsibility. 
Taking it a step further, to many, harmlessness means not killing bothersome insects, 
rodents, etc. Even as you feel the mosquito sticking its needle into your neck. And to 
many, harmlessness means eating a vegetarian diet (and perhaps forgoing milk 
products, since cows need to have calves to keep their milk production flowing, and 
half of those calves are male, who will eventually be slaughtered for food). 
Nonetheless, we need to realize that there is no way to avoid all harms to other 
beings that flow inexorably through our life. If we are to eat, we must kill plants, and 
billions of bacteria die each day as we pass wastes out of our bodies. If we get hired 
for a job, that means another person will not be. 
But what we can do is to have a sincere aspiration toward harmlessness, and to 
reduce our harms to an absolute minimum. And that makes all the difference in the 
world. 
Intention of non-ill will 
Here we give up angry, punishing reactions toward others, animals, plants, and 
things. If such attitudes arise, we resolve not to feed them, and to cut them off as fast 
as we can. 
Please see the article on “Ill Will to Good Will” in the Buddhist Wisdom section of 
this webpage: http://www.wisebrain.org/articles.html. 
Intention of renunciation 
Renunciation is founded on a disenchantment with the world and with experience, 
based on right view. You see through all the possibilities of experience: you see their 
ephemeral, insubstantial, empty qualities, no matter how alluring or seemingly 
gratifying. You see the suffering embedded in the experience, the "trap," as the 
Buddha put it. And you see the happiness, peace, and love available in not chasing 
after pleasure or resisting pain.
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© Rick Hanson, 2007 
Based on this clear seeing, you align yourself with the wisdom perspective and with 
the innate, prior, always already existing wakeful, pure, peaceful, and radiant 
awareness within yourself. In so doing, you renounce worldly things and worldly 
pleasures. If they pass through your awareness - a sunset, a child's smile, chocolate 
pudding, Beethoven's 9th - fine; just don't cling to them as they disappear as all 
experiences do. 
Renunciation is NOT asceticism, or privation for privation's sake. It is a joyous union 
with the path of happiness that happens to include a relinquishing, casting off, 
abandoning, walking away from any seeking at all of worldly gratifications. 
At its heart, renunciation is simple: we just let go. Ajahn Chah: "If you let go a little, 
you will have a little happiness. If you let go a lot, you will have a lot of happiness. If you let 
go completely, you will be completely happy." 
Right Speech 
Abstinence from false speech 
Do not knowingly say what is not true. But note that this does not mean you have to 
tell people everything. The Buddha said that whatever we say should pass three tests 
at a minimum, and often a fourth: Is it true? Is it useful? Is it timely? (And the fourth: 
Is it welcome?) 
Abstinence from malicious speech 
This links to the intention of non-ill will. Malice has to do with intention, but those 
intentions are often unconscious or fleeting. If you are about to say something but 
you're getting a funny feeling, you probably shouldn't say it. 
Abstinence from harsh speech 
"Harsh" is a matter of both content and tone. Sometimes the best course is to say 
something that is true, useful, and timely - even if not welcome - and the art is to say 
it in a clean way. Imagine a video camera is recording you and will be played back 
later; act in such a way that you will not squirm but will feel at peace with what you 
see. Or try out what you might say (or write) with others and get their feedback 
about harshness, including some that might just be leaking through in spite of your 
filters. 
Abstinence from idle chatter 
This probably originated as an admonition to monks and nuns, but it is also worth 
considering in householder life. How much of the time are we jabbering away to no
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good purpose - not even our own well-being - wasting time and energy, consuming 
the attention of others, avoiding what's really important? 
Extending these standards to thought 
Much thought is internal speech: the verbal processes of the mind. Consider 
abstaining from false, malicious, harsh, or idle thinking! 
Right Action 
Introduction 
These are restatements of three of the five basic precepts. 
Abstinence from the destruction of life 
At a minimum, this means not killing human beings through murder or through 
war. For example, unlike other major religions, there has never been a war in the 
name of the Buddha. 
It is also often taken to mean (especially for monks and nuns) not eating meat from 
an animal that was killed specifically to feed you; on the other hand, if 
(hypothetically) a chicken were killed for a family's dinner and some meat was 
leftover and placed in a nun's begging bowl, she could eat it. 
As with the intention of non-harming, the literal meaning of the abstinence from the 
destruction of life has far-reaching implications. Do you never eat vegetables that 
have been raised with pesticides? How about vegetables grown organically with 
pesticide control via the introduction of bugs that eat (and kill) pests? How about 
vegetables with no pest control at all but harvested by people who can't help but 
crush tiny insects as they walk about the fields wearing leather shoes? Since absolute 
harmlessness is impossible, the question of balance is a serious one. 
Abstinence from taking what is not given 
Beyond the obvious action of not stealing, it's interesting to reflect on broader notions 
of not taking what is not freely offered. What about glancing at a letter sitting out on 
another person's desk; were its contents freely offered to you? Or looking at the 
photo of an actress sunbathing snapped by a paparazzi; did she offer you her image 
voluntarily? There's $10 lying on the sidewalk: do you pick it up? 
Abstinence from sexual misconduct 
Obviously, this means not engaging in infidelity, rape, molestation, or incest; for 
monks and nuns it goes farther and includes touch, being alone with a member of the 
opposite sex, etc.
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© Rick Hanson, 2007 
But there are also realms of sexuality that involve shades of gray. For example, when 
is sexual exploitation involved in seduction or even flirting? We often know in our 
bones if we are starting to cross a line in which we are using another person for our 
own purposes, especially if there is any element of deception - but sometimes it's not 
so clear. How about cajoling or pressuring our mates for sex when they'd rather go to 
sleep; is that misconduct? 
Or consider viewing pornography. If you believe the people in the images are being 
exploited in some way - even if their participation is ostensibly voluntary - are you 
engaging in sexual misconduct if you participate in their exploitation by buying the 
magazine or simply clicking onto the website? 
Practice is about wrestling with these questions mindfully, with a skeptical eye on 
the element of clinging, not robotically adhering to some fixed rule. If there is any 
whiff of clinging, grasping, or aversion in the action, it's probably best avoided - and 
this applies to each of the elements of the Eightfold Path. 
Right Livelihood 
Introduction 
Some of the Buddha's general instructions on householder life are included here, 
particularly as they pertain to making a living or accumulating wealth. Obviously, 
many of the considerations of right livelihood and family life would not apply to 
monks or nuns, who are "homeless," celibate, do not handle money or own property, 
and never ask for payment of any kind. 
Avoiding Wrong Livelihood 
The Buddha talked about many of the central themes of his teaching in terms of their 
negation, such as impermanence, not-self, and non-clinging. He did the same in his 
explicit description of what constitutes right livelihood: 
"These five trades should not be taken up: trading in weapons, living beings, meat, 
intoxicants, poisons." [BW, 126] 
The Sources of Welfare and Happiness in the Present Life 
Additionally, the Buddha offered guidance for how a householder should engage the 
world that have clear implications for right livelihood. 
"Four things lead to the welfare and happiness of a family man or woman: 
• The accomplishment of persistent effort - Whatever may be the means by which a person 
earns a living, he or she is skillful and diligent.
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• The accomplishment of protection - The person sets up protection and guard over the 
wealth acquired by energetic striving, amassed by the strength of his or her arms, earned by 
the sweat of his or her brow, righteous wealth righteously gained. 
• Good friendship - Wherever one dwells, one associates with people who are of mature 
virtue and accomplished in faith, moral discipline, generosity, and wisdom, and converses 
with and emulates them. 
• Balanced living - A person knows his or her income and expenditures and leads a 
balanced life, neither extravagant nor miserly, so that income exceeds expenditures rather 
than the reverse. Just as a goldsmith or his apprentice, holding a up a scale, knows, 'By so 
much it has dipped down, by so much it has tilted up,' so a family man or woman leads a 
balanced life." [BW, 124-125] 
"Four other things also lead to a family man's or woman's welfare and happiness in the 
present life: accomplishment in faith, moral discipline, generosity, and wisdom: 
• Accomplishment in faith - The person places faith in the enlightenment of the Buddha 
• Accomplishment in moral discipline - The person keeps the five basic precepts (no 
killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, false or harmful speech, or intoxicants leading to 
carelessness) 
• Accomplishment in generosity - The person dwells at home with a mind devoid of the 
stain of stinginess, freely generous, open-handed, delighted in relinquishment, devoted to 
charity, delighting in giving and sharing. 
• Accomplishment in wisdom - The person possesses the wisdom that sees into the arising 
and passing away of phenomena, that is noble and penetrative and leads to the complete 
destruction of suffering." [BW, 125-126] 
Note the framing of faith, morality, etc. as accomplishments, as character traits in 
which one can become increasingly effective, skillful, and masterful. This reflects the 
fundamental theme in Buddhism of a progressive process of growing skillfulness. In 
other words, we all have the opportunity for spiritual realization - even of the 
highest sort - and we are the ones who are responsible for making use of that 
opportunity. 
The Proper Use of Wealth 
"With wealth acquired by energetic striving, amassed by the strength of his or her arms, 
earned by the sweat of his or her brow, righteous wealth righteously gained, the noble disciple 
undertakes four worthy deeds:
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• He makes himself happy and pleased and properly maintains himself in happiness, and 
he does the same for his parents, wife and children, workers and servants, and friends and 
colleagues. 
• He makes provisions against the losses that might arise on account of fire and floods, 
kings and bandits and unloved heirs; he makes himself secure against them. 
• He makes the five kinds of offerings: to relatives, guests, ancestors, the king, and the 
devas [religious spirits]. 
• He establishes a lofty offering of alms to those ascetics and Brahmins [noble beings] who 
refrain from vanity and negligence, who are settled in patience and gentleness, who are 
devoted to taming themselves, to calming themselves, and to attaining Nibbana - an offering 
that is heavenly, resulting in happiness, conducive to heaven. 
For anyone whose wealth is expended on other things apart from these four worthy deeds, that 
wealth is said to have to waste, to have been squandered and used frivolously. But for anyone 
whose wealth is expended on these four worthy deeds, that wealth is said to have gone to good 
use, to have been fruitfully applied and used for a worthy cause." [BW 126-127 ] 
Avoiding the Dissipation of Wealth 
"Wealth has four sources of dissipation: womanizing, drunkenness, gambling, and evil 
friendship." [BW 125 ] 
The Happiness of a Householder 
"There are four kinds of happiness which may be achieved by a layperson who enjoys sensual 
pleasures, depending on time and occasion: 
• The happiness of possession - When a person thinks, 'I possess wealth acquired by 
energetic striving, amassed by the strength of his or her arms, earned by the sweat of his or 
her brow, righteous wealth righteously gained,' he or she experiences happiness or joy. 
• The happiness of enjoyment - When a person thinks, 'I enjoy my wealth and do 
meritorious deeds,' he or she experiences happiness or joy. 
• The happiness of freedom from debt - When a person thinks, 'I am not indebted to 
anyone to any degree, whether small or great,' he or she experiences happiness or joy. 
• The happiness of blamelessness - When a person thinks, 'I am endowed with blameless 
conduct of body, speech, and mind,' he or she experiences happiness or joy." [BW 127-128] 
How to Cultivate Right Livelihood
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© Rick Hanson, 2007 
• Mindfulness of the body - By remaining aware of the body, you can stay 
present with the people and the activities involved in your work. 
• Not clinging to self - By relaxing attachment to "me and mine," by not getting 
identified with views, by seeing oneself and others as simply parts of one whole 
thing, then one will be more likely to be caring and moral in one's work. 
• Avoiding harms to oneself and others - We typically focus on avoiding harms 
that have to do with outcomes, with the results of our work, and that is certainly 
good. Additionally, consider avoiding the harms that have to do with the process or 
manner of our work, such as how we represent ourselves in the world, or do 
business, or speak with customers or colleagues. 
• Tend to the mental dimension - Note the frequent reference to blameless 
conduct of mind. It's relatively easy to act well in one's speech and outward 
behavior. But being blameless in thought or inner feeling: hmm, that is a much 
greater challenge - yet having a blameless mind will probably bring much greater 
benefit to you and others than blameless speech or behavior. 
• Focus on the fundamental causes (and that's all anyone can really do): 
"Buddhism teaches us to make earnest efforts in the things we do, but our actions should not 
be mixed with desire. They should be performed with the aim of letting go and realizing 
nonattachment. We do what we need to do, but with letting go. We do our work according to 
our responsibilities [rather than because of a wish to get something]. If we act like this, we can 
be at ease. . . . It's a matter of making causes. If the causes are good, the result is bound to be 
good. If we think like this, there will be lightness of mind. This is called right livelihood." 
Ajahn Chah, Being Dharma, pps. 118-119 
Right Effort 
Introduction 
Right Effort is one of the three elements of the Path that focus particularly on your 
internal states of being (the others are Right Mindfulness and Right Concentration). 
Preventing and Abandoning the Negative, Cultivating and Maintaining the 
Positive 
"And what, monks, is right effort? Here, monks, a person generates desire for the nonarising 
of unarisen evil unwholesome states; he or she makes an effort, arouses energy, applies his or 
her mind, and strives. He or she generates desire for the abandoning of arisen evil 
unwholesome states . . . He or she generates desire for the arising of unarisen wholesome 
states . . . . He or she generates desire for the continuation of arisen wholesome states, for their 
nondecline, increase, expansion, and fulfillment by development; he or she makes an effort 
arouses energy, applies his or her mind, and strives. This is called right effort."
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[BW, 239] 
Unwholesome States 
At root, these are conditions of greed, hatred, and delusion -- even in their subtlest 
forms. Such states also encompass sloth and torpor, restlessness and remorse, and 
doubt (from the Five Hindrances), and wrong view (e.g., belief in a self). These are 
considered "evil" because they lead to bad results for oneself and others. 
Wholesome States 
These include non-greed, non-hatred, etc., as well as more affirmatively described 
conditions of generosity, diligence, insight, wisdom, equanimity, lovingkindness, 
concentration, bliss, and joy. 
Cultivating Your Garden 
Right Effort is an ongoing, conscious, and wholehearted application of energy and 
attention to cultivating the garden of your mind and heart. But what helps you - or 
could help you - keep weeding and pruning, planting and fertilizing, day after day 
after day? Each person has their own answers, but traditionally the Buddha offered 
three great resources (sometimes called refuges) to help you keep at the path of 
Awakening: 
• The Buddha - Both as a wise teacher you can have general confidence in and as 
a symbol of the natural wisdom and goodness we all have at the core of our being 
• The Dharma - Both the teachings of Buddhism, evaluated by each person for 
themselves, and ultimately, reality itself with all of its mysteries 
• The Sangha - Both the vertical dimension of our teachers and the horizontal 
dimension of fellow practitioners gathered together on the path 
The Noble Eightfold Path: 
Right Mindfulness 
© Rick Hanson, 2006 
"I teach one thing: Suffering and its end." -- The Buddha 
The Eightfold Path is the fourth of the Buddha's Noble Truths: the way that leads to 
the uprooting of the causes of suffering, and thus to increasingly stable and profound 
peacefulness, wisdom, virtue, and happiness. The heart of each element of the Path is 
non-clinging, the fundamental cause of the end of suffering.
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Right Mindfulness 
Introduction 
Right Mindfulness is one of the three elements of the Path that focus particularly on 
your internal states of being (the others are Right Effort and Right Concentration). 
What Is Mindfulness? 
Mindfulness is simply a continuous, non-judgmental, accepting awareness of your 
inner and outer world - especially your inner one: the flow of experience. It is a very 
grounded awareness, not some kind of lofty mystical state. 
Why Be Mindful? 
Mindfulness feels good in its own right: relaxed, alert, and peaceful. Additionally, 
studies have shown that it lowers stress, makes discomfort and pain more bearable, 
reduces depression, and increases self-knowledge and self-acceptance. Mindfulness 
is required for the "observing ego" everyone needs for healthy functioning. It 
detaches you from reactions to see them with gentle clarity and perspective, helping 
you change old patterns and respond more skillfully. The mindful acceptance 
of a difficult experience, opening to it without resistance, often allows it to 
move on. Mindfulness brings you into the present, the only place you can 
ever be truly happy and free. All this is reason enough to cultivate this quality in 
our lives. 
Further, the Buddha described mindfulness, when fully developed, as the direct path 
to enlightenment and the end of suffering: 
"This is the one-way path for the purification of beings, for the surmounting of sorrow and 
lamentations, for the passing away of pain and dejection, for the attainment of the true way, 
for the realization of Nibbana - namely, the four establishments of mindfulness. 
"What are the four? A person dwells contemplating the body in the body, ardent, clearly 
comprehending, and mindful, having subdued longing and dejection in regard to the world. 
He or she dwells contemplating feelings in feelings, ardent, clearly comprehending, mindful, 
having subdued longing and dejection in regard to the world. He or she dwells contemplating 
mind in mind, ardent, clearly comprehending, mindful, having subdued longing and 
dejection in regard to the world. He or she dwells contemplating phenomena in phenomena, 
ardent, clearly comprehending, mindful, having subdued longing and dejection in regard to 
the world." 
[In the Buddha's Words., p. 281] 
"Contemplating body in the body" (or feelings in feelings, etc.) means being simply 
aware of immediate, experiential phenomena as it is without conceptualization or
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commentary. Just the sensations of the rising breath in the belly. Just the subtle 
feeling of a sound being mildly unpleasant. Just the sense of consciousness being 
contracted or spacious. Just a single thought emerging and then disappearing. Just 
this moment. Just this. 
This pure awareness - which becomes increasingly absorbed by its objects with 
growing concentration, to the point that there is vanishingly little difference between 
the observer and the observed (see the handout on Right Concentration) - is a kind of 
spotlight illuminating the nature of mind and reality in more and more breathtaking 
detail. This brings insight into the causes of suffering, and into the causes leading to 
the end of suffering. (In Pali - the language in which the teachings of the Buddha 
were first written down - the word for insight is "vipassana.") 
Mindfulness is the counter to our habitual state of mind, which is beautifully 
characterized in this story: A renowned Thai meditation master was once asked 
what his take on the world was. His concise summary was, “Lost in thought.” 
Imagine being in a lovely and peaceful meadow, with a train full of thoughts and 
feelings and desires rolling by in the distance . . . Normally, as this train approaches 
we tend to become fascinated, drawn in some significant way, and we hop on board 
and get carried away . . . lost in thought. 
On the other hand, mindfulness allows you to see the train coming but have the 
presence of mind . . . to stay in the meadow! And whenever you get swept along by 
the train, as soon as you notice that, whoosh, you return immediately to the peaceful 
meadow, to the refuge of mindfulness. 
Where Is Mindfulness to Be Established? 
The Buddha named four "establishments, "foundations," or "frames of reference" of 
mindfulness (depending on how the original term is translated): 
• Body, both as an objective entity and as a subjective experience of sensations, 
sights, sounds, smells, and tastes 
• "Feelings" which mean not emotions but the tones of pleasant or unpleasant or 
neutral that come with every experience 
• "Mind," which means consciousness and states of consciousness 
• "Phenomena," (sometimes translated as "formations") which means all the other 
contents of mind, including thoughts, emotions, desires, images, plans, inner 
conflicts, views, murky psychological dynamics, transference from childhood, etc.
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Mindfulness in Meditation 
Meditation is the preeminent opportunity to practice and to cultivate mindfulness. 
This is a progressive process in which " . . . the mind is steadied internally, quieted, 
brought to singleness, and concentrated," leading to liberating insight. 
Buddhism is a 2500 year tradition of dedicated practitioners using skillful means to 
achieve these deepening states of awareness. And recently, research on the brain has 
both corroborated and enriched that tradition with findings that have practical 
implications for how to have meditation be as effective as possible. 
Some of these findings are specific to steadying the mind . . . or to quieting it . . . or 
to bringing it to singleness . . . or to concentrating it. Others are more general, and 
these are presented in the rest of this article. Think of these as practical tools that you 
can pick and choose among to find whatever might be helpful. 
Continuity of Mindfulness 
But mindfulness is not reserved just for some special period of meditation in the day, 
but is to become as continuous as possible, whether sitting, standing, walking, or 
lying down . . . or doing acts of the body, speech, or mind . . . . or answering the 
telephone, responding to emails, arguing with a family member, doing the 
crossword, eating, watching the news on TV, and so on. 
Consider this story from the book, Knee Deep in Grace (p. 83), about Dipa Ma, the 
great Indian teacher - and housewife and grandmother: 
"Dipa Ma was a living example of how to live in this world, of how practice and the mundane 
activities of our day-to-day existence can be made one. She insisted that the practice be done 
all the time, and that we do the things we do throughout the day without making them into 
problems. Dipa Ma wanted to know, "How awake are you in your life? Are you just thinking 
about being mindful, or are you really doing it?" Dipa Ma said that even while she was 
talking, she was meditating. Talking, eating, working, thinking about her daughter, playing 
with her grandson---none of those activities hampered her practice because she did them all 
with mindfulness. "When I'm moving, shopping, everything, I'm always doing it with 
mindfulness. I know these are things I have to do, but they aren't problems. On the other 
hand, I don’t spend time gossiping or visiting or doing anything which I don’t consider 
necessary in my life." 
For more information about ways to weave mindfulness throughout daily life, please 
see the article at www.WiseBrain.org/articles.html titled “Continuity of 
Mindfulness.” 
Some of the key factors promoting mindfulness are summarized below.
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© Rick Hanson, 2007 
Being Awake 
When you can, meditate during the times when you are maximally alert within your 
own sleep-wake cycle. (Of course, this is irrelevant on a retreat where you are 
meditating 10 or more hours a day.) 
Minimize drains on your wakefulness, such as lack of sleep, fatigue, illness, 
hormonal conditions (e.g., thyroid problems), or depression. 
In sum: take care of yourself. Pay attention to physical factors, rather than trying to 
muscle through them or beat yourself up for not being able to overcome them. 
Being Alert 
Several factors increase alertness: 
• Posture - Provides internal, somatosensory feedback to the reticular formations 
that lead to alertness. Being upright says to the mind: "Wake up!" 
• "Brightening the mind" - Here you deliberately activate an internal sense of 
energizing and enlivening your mind. In physiological terms, this is probably linked 
to a surge of norepinephrine, which helps you feel both alert and relaxed. 
This is distinct from epinephrine - adrenaline - which indeed wakes the whole body 
up, but also has a kind of jangly, fight-or-flight quality to it. And adrenaline decays 
into secondary metabolites that remain in the body for hours and have a stressful, 
disturbing quality to them. 
Sometimes you may want to trigger an adrenaline-based surge of "darn it, focus, get 
here now!" in order to wake yourself up. But only in small doses, and consider the 
"brightening the mind" approach instead. 
• Oxygen - Oxygen is to the brain what gas is to your car. By taking several deep 
breaths, you increase the oxygen saturation in your blood and thus "push the pedal" 
with your brain. 
Feeling Safe 
To help us survive, the brain is naturally vigilant, routinely moving attention across 
the environment to look for threats. Feeling safe encourages the brain to withdraw 
the sentries from the battlements, so to say, and put them to work internally (e.g., 
keeping watch on the breath). 
For example, there is the Buddha's recurring instruction to find a place of seclusion - 
i.e., safety - and then sit down at the base of a tree - where he found his own
The Noble Eightfold Path 16 
© Rick Hanson, 2007 
enlightenment - with your back to it, protecting your most vulnerable flank. Other 
traditional practices help one get used to, and thus relax about, perceived threats - 
such as meditating on the jungle side of a well or simply being alone in the forest at 
night. And some practices have a welcome side effect of helping one to overcome 
fears, even if that is not their primary purpose (e.g., charnel ground meditations, 
lovingkindness meditation). 
Some methods for feeling safe: 
• Diaphragm breathing 
• Relaxing the body 
• Imagery 
• Taking refuge 
• Disputing or detaching from worries or other views that make you anxious 
Feeling Happy 
Commonly used Pali words that refer to positive emotions are "sukha" (happiness, 
contentment, tranquility) and "piti" (rapture, bliss). These are also two of the five 
factors that cultivate deep states of concentration, including those known as the 
"jhanas." 
Positive feelings: 
• Have vigor and pep, and thus foster greater alertness 
• Activate the parasympathetic nervous system, which reduces the distractions of 
the "fight-or-flight" sympathetic system, and brings relaxation and attention to the 
body 
• Increase overall resilience, so you're less likely to be bothered by something 
when you meditate 
• Counteract negative emotions, which consume attention (plus feel lousy) 
Feeling happy is skillful means! 
Here are some ways to generate positive emotions: 
• The "soft smile" recommended by Thich Nhat Han triggers feedback loops 
within the emotional circuitry of the brain, activating the feelings associated with 
smiling. 
• Metta practice - compassion, lovingkindness, etc. - bathes you in positive 
emotion. 
• Remember past states of positive emotion ("taking in" them helps support this 
memory). Then access that bodily/emotional memory to rekindle the positive 
feeling.
The Noble Eightfold Path 17 
© Rick Hanson, 2007 
Right Concentration 
Introduction 
Concentration is a natural ability that everyone has, and everyone can get 
increasingly better at it. It's like a muscle: by exercising it, you make it stronger. 
To do that, alas, we must accept "failing" over and over again. For most people, 
especially those new to meditation, it is difficult to stay engaged with more than a 
few breaths in a row - or less! - without the mind wandering off to something else. 
So it's especially important to find that middle way between being uncaring and 
being harsh with yourself. When your mind wanders, try not to be self-critical, but 
simply get back into full awareness of the next breath. It's not what happened in the 
past that matters but what you do now and now and now. 
Benefits of concentration 
Cultivates the will. 
Trains the mind to a greater steadiness, thus aiding both sila and insight. 
Overcomes the hindrances (greed/lust, aversion, sloth and torpor, restlessness and 
remorse, and doubt). The deepest states of concentration known as "jhanas" or 
"samadhis," eliminate the hindrances for the temporary (i.e., impermanent) duration 
of the state; this is one of the rewards of the jhanas/samadhis. 
Breeds conviction and faith: The deeper states of concentration are not ordinary 
states, and when you experience them, it becomes palpably clear that the fruits of 
practice include increasingly stable, profound, wonderful, joyous, magnificent 
conditions of the heart and mind. 
Factors of concentration 
• Applying your attention - This is the deliberate focusing of attention on an 
object, whether a teacher's presentation, the sensations at the upper lip, or interesting 
stillness between two thoughts. 
• Sustaining attention - This means staying with the object of attention. 
Sometimes the metaphor of rubbing is used, like two sticks rubbing together, staying 
in contact throughout. Sally Clough, a Spirit Rock teacher, combines applying and 
sustaining attention (especially applicable for the breath) into a single metaphor from 
ice skating: applying attention is like planting your foot, and sustaining it means 
gliding along; then at the end of the inhalation (for example), you plant your foot
The Noble Eightfold Path 18 
© Rick Hanson, 2007 
again ( = focusing on the exhalation) and then glide along the length of the 
exhalation, staying in contact with every part of it. 
• Rapture - A strong sense of bliss, often felt particularly in the body, often with 
an energizing, upwardly moving sense to it. 
• Happiness - Also a definite, unmistakable feeling, that sometimes shades into a 
quality of contentment or perhaps tranquility. 
• One-pointedness - This is the mind brought to singleness, in which there is a 
kind of unitary state in which all elements of experience are experienced as a whole; 
there is often a sense when this factor arises of a kind of ka-chunk, of all the pieces 
coming together. 
Æ These factors can vary in their intensity from sitting to sitting. In particular, the 
factor of rapture can be experienced over time as a bit jangly and too intense, and 
give way increasingly to the factor of happiness. 
Æ Try to register a clear sense of each factor, so that you know what it feels like 
and can find your way back to it again. 
Æ To an extent (and which usually grows with practice), you can invite, call up, or 
invoke each factor. Traditionally, you can say in your mind, "May rapture (or 
happiness, etc.) awaken (or arise, or be present)." If it comes, conditions are ripe. If it 
does not come, be patient and keep cultivating the causes of its arising and have faith 
that it will come. 
Æ Getting tense with yourself or impatient will not serve. Relaxation and 
happiness are the immediate causes of concentration. Striving is a form of clinging. 
Access concentration 
This is a state in which the five factors are present, but you haven't yet tipped fully 
into the jhanas. Applying and sustaining attention take little effort; the mind is quite 
quiet, with thoughts apparent as discrete entities, coming and going; the body 
commonly feels both light and grounded. Get to know this state well so you can 
readily settle into it. 
The jhanas 
These are progressively deeper and more subtle states of deep meditative absorption. 
There are four "form" jhanas, in which there is still a clear sense of ordinary physical 
reality. Then there are the four "formless attainments," which can - if the causes are 
ripe - culminate in Nibbana.
The Noble Eightfold Path 19 
© Rick Hanson, 2007 
Descriptions vary regarding what is a jhana and what isn't. In our experience, these 
are unmistakable, remarkable, non-ordinary states of being that have a self-evident 
persuasiveness when they come upon you. 
In the Buddha's description, which is repeated verbatim or with minor changes 
throughout the Pali Canon: 
"And what, monks, is right concentration? Here monks, secluded from sensual pleasures, 
secluded from unwholesome states, a person enters and dwells in the first jhana, which is 
accompanied by thought and examination [i.e., applied and sustained attention] with rapture 
and happiness born of seclusion. 
With the subsiding of thought and examination, she or she enters and dwells in the second 
jhana, which has internal confidence and unification of mind, is without thought and 
examination, and has happiness and rapture born of concentration. 
With the fading away as well of rapture, the person dwells equanimous, and mindful and 
clearly comprehending, he or she experiences happiness with the body; he or she enters and 
dwells in the third jhana of which the noble ones declare: 'He or she is equanimous, mindful, 
one who dwells happily.' 
With the abandoning of pleasure and pain, and with the previous passing away of joy and 
dejection, the person enters and dwells in the fourth jhana, which is neither painful nor 
pleasant and includes the purification of mindfulness by equanimity. 
This is called right concentration."

More Related Content

8 foldpath

  • 1. The Noble Eightfold Path © Rick Hanson, 2006 "I teach one thing: Suffering and its end." -- The Buddha Introduction The Eightfold Path is the fourth of the Buddha's Noble Truths, and he described it as the way that leads to the uprooting of the causes of suffering, and thus to increasingly stable and profound peacefulness, wisdom, virtue, and happiness. Each of the eight elements of this Path is described by a word that is typically translated as "right" or "wise." Both meanings are useful to reflect upon regarding your own suffering and your yearning for its end. Each element of the Path is right, in the sense of being correct, moral, and a pointed instruction about how to live. Each element is also wise, in the sense of resulting from deep understanding and leading to good results. In keeping with the weight of tradition and the value of the sharp edge of the word, "right," that's what is used in this summary. While the eight elements of the Path are presented here in their traditional sequence, they are not something you develop in order. They are all important, all the time. Yet some may become more prominent aspects of your practice at one time or another. The heart of each element of the Path is non-clinging, the essence of the Third Noble Truth: the cause of the end of suffering. [Note: Quotations are shown in italics, and in some cases have been edited for brevity, clarity, including female pronouns, etc. Unless otherwise indicated, quotations from the Buddha are from Bhikkhu Bodhi's anthology, In the Buddha's Words, shown as BW with page number(s).] Right View Introduction Right View entails a deep, embodied understanding of the truth of things -- in particular, the truth of the three topics discussed just below. One who has fully developed right view is considered a "stream-enterer," one who is certain of ultimate liberation." The Four Noble Truths The Buddha: "And what, monks, is right view? Knowledge of suffering, knowledge of the origin of suffering, knowledge of the cessation of suffering, knowledge of the way leading to the cessation of suffering." Please see the article on “The Four Noble Truths” in the Buddhist Wisdom section of this webpage: http://www.wisebrain.org/articles.html.
  • 2. The Noble Eightfold Path 2 © Rick Hanson, 2007 The Unwholesome and the Wholesome Right view also entails understanding what is unwholesome and avoiding it, and understanding what is wholesome and doing it. What did the Buddha say were the causes of the unwholesome? They are any and all forms of greed, hatred, delusion, and the belief in a separate self. What did the Buddha say were the causes of the wholesome? They are equanimity and renunciation, compassion and lovingkindness, wisdom, and releasing the "conceit" of self. You might like to consider the causes of the wholesome and unwholesome as they occur in your own mind and life. For example, you could take a day or a week and investigate one cause in particular, such as all the manifestations of greed in your mind - or alternately, all the manifestations of compassion. The Chain of Dependent Origination Last, right view means understanding what the Buddha called "the chain of dependent origination." In its essence, this means simply understanding that everything is the result of causes, a restatement of the law of karma. In personal terms, this means that if you foster certain causes in your life, good things will result for you and others; on the other hand, if you foster other causes, bad things will result. Wisdom is knowing which is which! In the formal, detailed statement of the chain of dependent origination, the Buddha gave a complex, circular, intertwining, and sometimes mind-boggling description of why things are the way they are. This description can be daunting at first glance. Take your time with it, and learn more about what the specific terms mean that the Buddha uses. Its depth and power will become clearer for you, and probably very useful. This is the chain, with thirteen links: • "Taints" (sensual desire, ignorance, and sheer existence) lead to: • Ignorance (not realizing the Four Noble Truths; presuming a separate self), leading to: • "Volitional formations" (wholesome and unwholesome intentions expressed through the body, speech, or mind), leading to: • Consciousness (linked to the five bodily senses and the mind), leading to:
  • 3. The Noble Eightfold Path 3 © Rick Hanson, 2007 • "Name-and-form" (the cognitive and physical aspects of individual existence), leading to: • The six sense bases (sight, touch, mind, etc.), leading to: • Contact (the meeting of three things: a sense organ, an object appropriate to that organ, and the consciousness associated with that organ; with the five senses and the mind, there are six types of contact), leading to: • Feeling (meaning not emotion, which is a "mental formation," but the tone of an experience as pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral), leading to: • Craving (for forms, for mental phenomena, etc.), leading to: • Clinging (to sensual pleasures [including avoiding pain], to views, to rites and rituals, and a sense of separate self), leading to: • Existence (in one of the realms of Buddhist cosmology, ranging from hells to heavens), leading to: • Birth (through reincarnation, in one of those realms of existence), leading to: • Aging and death, and then carrying karmic tendencies which are: • Taints . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . There are repetitions and feedback loops within the chain of dependent origination. That means you can change your fate at many "links" within the chain. In particular: • Reducing ignorance sends huge positive ripples through the whole system. • If you can have equanimity toward your feeling reaction - toward whether something is pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral - you can interrupt the tendency toward craving, clinging, etc. Right Intention Introduction This is sometimes translated as "right resolve," which conveys the determination, firmness of aim, heartfelt conviction, and persistence that are central to right intention.
  • 4. The Noble Eightfold Path 4 © Rick Hanson, 2007 Intention of harmlessness This is a broad aim of not causing pain, loss, or destruction to any living thing. At a minimum, this is a sweeping resolution to avoid any whit of harm to another human being. The implications are far-reaching, since most of us participate daily in activities whose requirements or ripples may involve harm to others (e.g., use of fossil fuels that warms the planet, purchasing goods manufactured in oppressive conditions). Further, in American culture there is a strong tradition of rugged individualism in which as long as you are not egregiously forceful or deceitful, "let the buyer beware" on the other side of daily transactions; but if your aim is preventing any harm, then the other person's free consent does not remove your responsibility. Taking it a step further, to many, harmlessness means not killing bothersome insects, rodents, etc. Even as you feel the mosquito sticking its needle into your neck. And to many, harmlessness means eating a vegetarian diet (and perhaps forgoing milk products, since cows need to have calves to keep their milk production flowing, and half of those calves are male, who will eventually be slaughtered for food). Nonetheless, we need to realize that there is no way to avoid all harms to other beings that flow inexorably through our life. If we are to eat, we must kill plants, and billions of bacteria die each day as we pass wastes out of our bodies. If we get hired for a job, that means another person will not be. But what we can do is to have a sincere aspiration toward harmlessness, and to reduce our harms to an absolute minimum. And that makes all the difference in the world. Intention of non-ill will Here we give up angry, punishing reactions toward others, animals, plants, and things. If such attitudes arise, we resolve not to feed them, and to cut them off as fast as we can. Please see the article on “Ill Will to Good Will” in the Buddhist Wisdom section of this webpage: http://www.wisebrain.org/articles.html. Intention of renunciation Renunciation is founded on a disenchantment with the world and with experience, based on right view. You see through all the possibilities of experience: you see their ephemeral, insubstantial, empty qualities, no matter how alluring or seemingly gratifying. You see the suffering embedded in the experience, the "trap," as the Buddha put it. And you see the happiness, peace, and love available in not chasing after pleasure or resisting pain.
  • 5. The Noble Eightfold Path 5 © Rick Hanson, 2007 Based on this clear seeing, you align yourself with the wisdom perspective and with the innate, prior, always already existing wakeful, pure, peaceful, and radiant awareness within yourself. In so doing, you renounce worldly things and worldly pleasures. If they pass through your awareness - a sunset, a child's smile, chocolate pudding, Beethoven's 9th - fine; just don't cling to them as they disappear as all experiences do. Renunciation is NOT asceticism, or privation for privation's sake. It is a joyous union with the path of happiness that happens to include a relinquishing, casting off, abandoning, walking away from any seeking at all of worldly gratifications. At its heart, renunciation is simple: we just let go. Ajahn Chah: "If you let go a little, you will have a little happiness. If you let go a lot, you will have a lot of happiness. If you let go completely, you will be completely happy." Right Speech Abstinence from false speech Do not knowingly say what is not true. But note that this does not mean you have to tell people everything. The Buddha said that whatever we say should pass three tests at a minimum, and often a fourth: Is it true? Is it useful? Is it timely? (And the fourth: Is it welcome?) Abstinence from malicious speech This links to the intention of non-ill will. Malice has to do with intention, but those intentions are often unconscious or fleeting. If you are about to say something but you're getting a funny feeling, you probably shouldn't say it. Abstinence from harsh speech "Harsh" is a matter of both content and tone. Sometimes the best course is to say something that is true, useful, and timely - even if not welcome - and the art is to say it in a clean way. Imagine a video camera is recording you and will be played back later; act in such a way that you will not squirm but will feel at peace with what you see. Or try out what you might say (or write) with others and get their feedback about harshness, including some that might just be leaking through in spite of your filters. Abstinence from idle chatter This probably originated as an admonition to monks and nuns, but it is also worth considering in householder life. How much of the time are we jabbering away to no
  • 6. The Noble Eightfold Path 6 © Rick Hanson, 2007 good purpose - not even our own well-being - wasting time and energy, consuming the attention of others, avoiding what's really important? Extending these standards to thought Much thought is internal speech: the verbal processes of the mind. Consider abstaining from false, malicious, harsh, or idle thinking! Right Action Introduction These are restatements of three of the five basic precepts. Abstinence from the destruction of life At a minimum, this means not killing human beings through murder or through war. For example, unlike other major religions, there has never been a war in the name of the Buddha. It is also often taken to mean (especially for monks and nuns) not eating meat from an animal that was killed specifically to feed you; on the other hand, if (hypothetically) a chicken were killed for a family's dinner and some meat was leftover and placed in a nun's begging bowl, she could eat it. As with the intention of non-harming, the literal meaning of the abstinence from the destruction of life has far-reaching implications. Do you never eat vegetables that have been raised with pesticides? How about vegetables grown organically with pesticide control via the introduction of bugs that eat (and kill) pests? How about vegetables with no pest control at all but harvested by people who can't help but crush tiny insects as they walk about the fields wearing leather shoes? Since absolute harmlessness is impossible, the question of balance is a serious one. Abstinence from taking what is not given Beyond the obvious action of not stealing, it's interesting to reflect on broader notions of not taking what is not freely offered. What about glancing at a letter sitting out on another person's desk; were its contents freely offered to you? Or looking at the photo of an actress sunbathing snapped by a paparazzi; did she offer you her image voluntarily? There's $10 lying on the sidewalk: do you pick it up? Abstinence from sexual misconduct Obviously, this means not engaging in infidelity, rape, molestation, or incest; for monks and nuns it goes farther and includes touch, being alone with a member of the opposite sex, etc.
  • 7. The Noble Eightfold Path 7 © Rick Hanson, 2007 But there are also realms of sexuality that involve shades of gray. For example, when is sexual exploitation involved in seduction or even flirting? We often know in our bones if we are starting to cross a line in which we are using another person for our own purposes, especially if there is any element of deception - but sometimes it's not so clear. How about cajoling or pressuring our mates for sex when they'd rather go to sleep; is that misconduct? Or consider viewing pornography. If you believe the people in the images are being exploited in some way - even if their participation is ostensibly voluntary - are you engaging in sexual misconduct if you participate in their exploitation by buying the magazine or simply clicking onto the website? Practice is about wrestling with these questions mindfully, with a skeptical eye on the element of clinging, not robotically adhering to some fixed rule. If there is any whiff of clinging, grasping, or aversion in the action, it's probably best avoided - and this applies to each of the elements of the Eightfold Path. Right Livelihood Introduction Some of the Buddha's general instructions on householder life are included here, particularly as they pertain to making a living or accumulating wealth. Obviously, many of the considerations of right livelihood and family life would not apply to monks or nuns, who are "homeless," celibate, do not handle money or own property, and never ask for payment of any kind. Avoiding Wrong Livelihood The Buddha talked about many of the central themes of his teaching in terms of their negation, such as impermanence, not-self, and non-clinging. He did the same in his explicit description of what constitutes right livelihood: "These five trades should not be taken up: trading in weapons, living beings, meat, intoxicants, poisons." [BW, 126] The Sources of Welfare and Happiness in the Present Life Additionally, the Buddha offered guidance for how a householder should engage the world that have clear implications for right livelihood. "Four things lead to the welfare and happiness of a family man or woman: • The accomplishment of persistent effort - Whatever may be the means by which a person earns a living, he or she is skillful and diligent.
  • 8. The Noble Eightfold Path 8 © Rick Hanson, 2007 • The accomplishment of protection - The person sets up protection and guard over the wealth acquired by energetic striving, amassed by the strength of his or her arms, earned by the sweat of his or her brow, righteous wealth righteously gained. • Good friendship - Wherever one dwells, one associates with people who are of mature virtue and accomplished in faith, moral discipline, generosity, and wisdom, and converses with and emulates them. • Balanced living - A person knows his or her income and expenditures and leads a balanced life, neither extravagant nor miserly, so that income exceeds expenditures rather than the reverse. Just as a goldsmith or his apprentice, holding a up a scale, knows, 'By so much it has dipped down, by so much it has tilted up,' so a family man or woman leads a balanced life." [BW, 124-125] "Four other things also lead to a family man's or woman's welfare and happiness in the present life: accomplishment in faith, moral discipline, generosity, and wisdom: • Accomplishment in faith - The person places faith in the enlightenment of the Buddha • Accomplishment in moral discipline - The person keeps the five basic precepts (no killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, false or harmful speech, or intoxicants leading to carelessness) • Accomplishment in generosity - The person dwells at home with a mind devoid of the stain of stinginess, freely generous, open-handed, delighted in relinquishment, devoted to charity, delighting in giving and sharing. • Accomplishment in wisdom - The person possesses the wisdom that sees into the arising and passing away of phenomena, that is noble and penetrative and leads to the complete destruction of suffering." [BW, 125-126] Note the framing of faith, morality, etc. as accomplishments, as character traits in which one can become increasingly effective, skillful, and masterful. This reflects the fundamental theme in Buddhism of a progressive process of growing skillfulness. In other words, we all have the opportunity for spiritual realization - even of the highest sort - and we are the ones who are responsible for making use of that opportunity. The Proper Use of Wealth "With wealth acquired by energetic striving, amassed by the strength of his or her arms, earned by the sweat of his or her brow, righteous wealth righteously gained, the noble disciple undertakes four worthy deeds:
  • 9. The Noble Eightfold Path 9 © Rick Hanson, 2007 • He makes himself happy and pleased and properly maintains himself in happiness, and he does the same for his parents, wife and children, workers and servants, and friends and colleagues. • He makes provisions against the losses that might arise on account of fire and floods, kings and bandits and unloved heirs; he makes himself secure against them. • He makes the five kinds of offerings: to relatives, guests, ancestors, the king, and the devas [religious spirits]. • He establishes a lofty offering of alms to those ascetics and Brahmins [noble beings] who refrain from vanity and negligence, who are settled in patience and gentleness, who are devoted to taming themselves, to calming themselves, and to attaining Nibbana - an offering that is heavenly, resulting in happiness, conducive to heaven. For anyone whose wealth is expended on other things apart from these four worthy deeds, that wealth is said to have to waste, to have been squandered and used frivolously. But for anyone whose wealth is expended on these four worthy deeds, that wealth is said to have gone to good use, to have been fruitfully applied and used for a worthy cause." [BW 126-127 ] Avoiding the Dissipation of Wealth "Wealth has four sources of dissipation: womanizing, drunkenness, gambling, and evil friendship." [BW 125 ] The Happiness of a Householder "There are four kinds of happiness which may be achieved by a layperson who enjoys sensual pleasures, depending on time and occasion: • The happiness of possession - When a person thinks, 'I possess wealth acquired by energetic striving, amassed by the strength of his or her arms, earned by the sweat of his or her brow, righteous wealth righteously gained,' he or she experiences happiness or joy. • The happiness of enjoyment - When a person thinks, 'I enjoy my wealth and do meritorious deeds,' he or she experiences happiness or joy. • The happiness of freedom from debt - When a person thinks, 'I am not indebted to anyone to any degree, whether small or great,' he or she experiences happiness or joy. • The happiness of blamelessness - When a person thinks, 'I am endowed with blameless conduct of body, speech, and mind,' he or she experiences happiness or joy." [BW 127-128] How to Cultivate Right Livelihood
  • 10. The Noble Eightfold Path 10 © Rick Hanson, 2007 • Mindfulness of the body - By remaining aware of the body, you can stay present with the people and the activities involved in your work. • Not clinging to self - By relaxing attachment to "me and mine," by not getting identified with views, by seeing oneself and others as simply parts of one whole thing, then one will be more likely to be caring and moral in one's work. • Avoiding harms to oneself and others - We typically focus on avoiding harms that have to do with outcomes, with the results of our work, and that is certainly good. Additionally, consider avoiding the harms that have to do with the process or manner of our work, such as how we represent ourselves in the world, or do business, or speak with customers or colleagues. • Tend to the mental dimension - Note the frequent reference to blameless conduct of mind. It's relatively easy to act well in one's speech and outward behavior. But being blameless in thought or inner feeling: hmm, that is a much greater challenge - yet having a blameless mind will probably bring much greater benefit to you and others than blameless speech or behavior. • Focus on the fundamental causes (and that's all anyone can really do): "Buddhism teaches us to make earnest efforts in the things we do, but our actions should not be mixed with desire. They should be performed with the aim of letting go and realizing nonattachment. We do what we need to do, but with letting go. We do our work according to our responsibilities [rather than because of a wish to get something]. If we act like this, we can be at ease. . . . It's a matter of making causes. If the causes are good, the result is bound to be good. If we think like this, there will be lightness of mind. This is called right livelihood." Ajahn Chah, Being Dharma, pps. 118-119 Right Effort Introduction Right Effort is one of the three elements of the Path that focus particularly on your internal states of being (the others are Right Mindfulness and Right Concentration). Preventing and Abandoning the Negative, Cultivating and Maintaining the Positive "And what, monks, is right effort? Here, monks, a person generates desire for the nonarising of unarisen evil unwholesome states; he or she makes an effort, arouses energy, applies his or her mind, and strives. He or she generates desire for the abandoning of arisen evil unwholesome states . . . He or she generates desire for the arising of unarisen wholesome states . . . . He or she generates desire for the continuation of arisen wholesome states, for their nondecline, increase, expansion, and fulfillment by development; he or she makes an effort arouses energy, applies his or her mind, and strives. This is called right effort."
  • 11. The Noble Eightfold Path 11 © Rick Hanson, 2007 [BW, 239] Unwholesome States At root, these are conditions of greed, hatred, and delusion -- even in their subtlest forms. Such states also encompass sloth and torpor, restlessness and remorse, and doubt (from the Five Hindrances), and wrong view (e.g., belief in a self). These are considered "evil" because they lead to bad results for oneself and others. Wholesome States These include non-greed, non-hatred, etc., as well as more affirmatively described conditions of generosity, diligence, insight, wisdom, equanimity, lovingkindness, concentration, bliss, and joy. Cultivating Your Garden Right Effort is an ongoing, conscious, and wholehearted application of energy and attention to cultivating the garden of your mind and heart. But what helps you - or could help you - keep weeding and pruning, planting and fertilizing, day after day after day? Each person has their own answers, but traditionally the Buddha offered three great resources (sometimes called refuges) to help you keep at the path of Awakening: • The Buddha - Both as a wise teacher you can have general confidence in and as a symbol of the natural wisdom and goodness we all have at the core of our being • The Dharma - Both the teachings of Buddhism, evaluated by each person for themselves, and ultimately, reality itself with all of its mysteries • The Sangha - Both the vertical dimension of our teachers and the horizontal dimension of fellow practitioners gathered together on the path The Noble Eightfold Path: Right Mindfulness © Rick Hanson, 2006 "I teach one thing: Suffering and its end." -- The Buddha The Eightfold Path is the fourth of the Buddha's Noble Truths: the way that leads to the uprooting of the causes of suffering, and thus to increasingly stable and profound peacefulness, wisdom, virtue, and happiness. The heart of each element of the Path is non-clinging, the fundamental cause of the end of suffering.
  • 12. The Noble Eightfold Path 12 © Rick Hanson, 2007 Right Mindfulness Introduction Right Mindfulness is one of the three elements of the Path that focus particularly on your internal states of being (the others are Right Effort and Right Concentration). What Is Mindfulness? Mindfulness is simply a continuous, non-judgmental, accepting awareness of your inner and outer world - especially your inner one: the flow of experience. It is a very grounded awareness, not some kind of lofty mystical state. Why Be Mindful? Mindfulness feels good in its own right: relaxed, alert, and peaceful. Additionally, studies have shown that it lowers stress, makes discomfort and pain more bearable, reduces depression, and increases self-knowledge and self-acceptance. Mindfulness is required for the "observing ego" everyone needs for healthy functioning. It detaches you from reactions to see them with gentle clarity and perspective, helping you change old patterns and respond more skillfully. The mindful acceptance of a difficult experience, opening to it without resistance, often allows it to move on. Mindfulness brings you into the present, the only place you can ever be truly happy and free. All this is reason enough to cultivate this quality in our lives. Further, the Buddha described mindfulness, when fully developed, as the direct path to enlightenment and the end of suffering: "This is the one-way path for the purification of beings, for the surmounting of sorrow and lamentations, for the passing away of pain and dejection, for the attainment of the true way, for the realization of Nibbana - namely, the four establishments of mindfulness. "What are the four? A person dwells contemplating the body in the body, ardent, clearly comprehending, and mindful, having subdued longing and dejection in regard to the world. He or she dwells contemplating feelings in feelings, ardent, clearly comprehending, mindful, having subdued longing and dejection in regard to the world. He or she dwells contemplating mind in mind, ardent, clearly comprehending, mindful, having subdued longing and dejection in regard to the world. He or she dwells contemplating phenomena in phenomena, ardent, clearly comprehending, mindful, having subdued longing and dejection in regard to the world." [In the Buddha's Words., p. 281] "Contemplating body in the body" (or feelings in feelings, etc.) means being simply aware of immediate, experiential phenomena as it is without conceptualization or
  • 13. The Noble Eightfold Path 13 © Rick Hanson, 2007 commentary. Just the sensations of the rising breath in the belly. Just the subtle feeling of a sound being mildly unpleasant. Just the sense of consciousness being contracted or spacious. Just a single thought emerging and then disappearing. Just this moment. Just this. This pure awareness - which becomes increasingly absorbed by its objects with growing concentration, to the point that there is vanishingly little difference between the observer and the observed (see the handout on Right Concentration) - is a kind of spotlight illuminating the nature of mind and reality in more and more breathtaking detail. This brings insight into the causes of suffering, and into the causes leading to the end of suffering. (In Pali - the language in which the teachings of the Buddha were first written down - the word for insight is "vipassana.") Mindfulness is the counter to our habitual state of mind, which is beautifully characterized in this story: A renowned Thai meditation master was once asked what his take on the world was. His concise summary was, “Lost in thought.” Imagine being in a lovely and peaceful meadow, with a train full of thoughts and feelings and desires rolling by in the distance . . . Normally, as this train approaches we tend to become fascinated, drawn in some significant way, and we hop on board and get carried away . . . lost in thought. On the other hand, mindfulness allows you to see the train coming but have the presence of mind . . . to stay in the meadow! And whenever you get swept along by the train, as soon as you notice that, whoosh, you return immediately to the peaceful meadow, to the refuge of mindfulness. Where Is Mindfulness to Be Established? The Buddha named four "establishments, "foundations," or "frames of reference" of mindfulness (depending on how the original term is translated): • Body, both as an objective entity and as a subjective experience of sensations, sights, sounds, smells, and tastes • "Feelings" which mean not emotions but the tones of pleasant or unpleasant or neutral that come with every experience • "Mind," which means consciousness and states of consciousness • "Phenomena," (sometimes translated as "formations") which means all the other contents of mind, including thoughts, emotions, desires, images, plans, inner conflicts, views, murky psychological dynamics, transference from childhood, etc.
  • 14. The Noble Eightfold Path 14 © Rick Hanson, 2007 Mindfulness in Meditation Meditation is the preeminent opportunity to practice and to cultivate mindfulness. This is a progressive process in which " . . . the mind is steadied internally, quieted, brought to singleness, and concentrated," leading to liberating insight. Buddhism is a 2500 year tradition of dedicated practitioners using skillful means to achieve these deepening states of awareness. And recently, research on the brain has both corroborated and enriched that tradition with findings that have practical implications for how to have meditation be as effective as possible. Some of these findings are specific to steadying the mind . . . or to quieting it . . . or to bringing it to singleness . . . or to concentrating it. Others are more general, and these are presented in the rest of this article. Think of these as practical tools that you can pick and choose among to find whatever might be helpful. Continuity of Mindfulness But mindfulness is not reserved just for some special period of meditation in the day, but is to become as continuous as possible, whether sitting, standing, walking, or lying down . . . or doing acts of the body, speech, or mind . . . . or answering the telephone, responding to emails, arguing with a family member, doing the crossword, eating, watching the news on TV, and so on. Consider this story from the book, Knee Deep in Grace (p. 83), about Dipa Ma, the great Indian teacher - and housewife and grandmother: "Dipa Ma was a living example of how to live in this world, of how practice and the mundane activities of our day-to-day existence can be made one. She insisted that the practice be done all the time, and that we do the things we do throughout the day without making them into problems. Dipa Ma wanted to know, "How awake are you in your life? Are you just thinking about being mindful, or are you really doing it?" Dipa Ma said that even while she was talking, she was meditating. Talking, eating, working, thinking about her daughter, playing with her grandson---none of those activities hampered her practice because she did them all with mindfulness. "When I'm moving, shopping, everything, I'm always doing it with mindfulness. I know these are things I have to do, but they aren't problems. On the other hand, I don’t spend time gossiping or visiting or doing anything which I don’t consider necessary in my life." For more information about ways to weave mindfulness throughout daily life, please see the article at www.WiseBrain.org/articles.html titled “Continuity of Mindfulness.” Some of the key factors promoting mindfulness are summarized below.
  • 15. The Noble Eightfold Path 15 © Rick Hanson, 2007 Being Awake When you can, meditate during the times when you are maximally alert within your own sleep-wake cycle. (Of course, this is irrelevant on a retreat where you are meditating 10 or more hours a day.) Minimize drains on your wakefulness, such as lack of sleep, fatigue, illness, hormonal conditions (e.g., thyroid problems), or depression. In sum: take care of yourself. Pay attention to physical factors, rather than trying to muscle through them or beat yourself up for not being able to overcome them. Being Alert Several factors increase alertness: • Posture - Provides internal, somatosensory feedback to the reticular formations that lead to alertness. Being upright says to the mind: "Wake up!" • "Brightening the mind" - Here you deliberately activate an internal sense of energizing and enlivening your mind. In physiological terms, this is probably linked to a surge of norepinephrine, which helps you feel both alert and relaxed. This is distinct from epinephrine - adrenaline - which indeed wakes the whole body up, but also has a kind of jangly, fight-or-flight quality to it. And adrenaline decays into secondary metabolites that remain in the body for hours and have a stressful, disturbing quality to them. Sometimes you may want to trigger an adrenaline-based surge of "darn it, focus, get here now!" in order to wake yourself up. But only in small doses, and consider the "brightening the mind" approach instead. • Oxygen - Oxygen is to the brain what gas is to your car. By taking several deep breaths, you increase the oxygen saturation in your blood and thus "push the pedal" with your brain. Feeling Safe To help us survive, the brain is naturally vigilant, routinely moving attention across the environment to look for threats. Feeling safe encourages the brain to withdraw the sentries from the battlements, so to say, and put them to work internally (e.g., keeping watch on the breath). For example, there is the Buddha's recurring instruction to find a place of seclusion - i.e., safety - and then sit down at the base of a tree - where he found his own
  • 16. The Noble Eightfold Path 16 © Rick Hanson, 2007 enlightenment - with your back to it, protecting your most vulnerable flank. Other traditional practices help one get used to, and thus relax about, perceived threats - such as meditating on the jungle side of a well or simply being alone in the forest at night. And some practices have a welcome side effect of helping one to overcome fears, even if that is not their primary purpose (e.g., charnel ground meditations, lovingkindness meditation). Some methods for feeling safe: • Diaphragm breathing • Relaxing the body • Imagery • Taking refuge • Disputing or detaching from worries or other views that make you anxious Feeling Happy Commonly used Pali words that refer to positive emotions are "sukha" (happiness, contentment, tranquility) and "piti" (rapture, bliss). These are also two of the five factors that cultivate deep states of concentration, including those known as the "jhanas." Positive feelings: • Have vigor and pep, and thus foster greater alertness • Activate the parasympathetic nervous system, which reduces the distractions of the "fight-or-flight" sympathetic system, and brings relaxation and attention to the body • Increase overall resilience, so you're less likely to be bothered by something when you meditate • Counteract negative emotions, which consume attention (plus feel lousy) Feeling happy is skillful means! Here are some ways to generate positive emotions: • The "soft smile" recommended by Thich Nhat Han triggers feedback loops within the emotional circuitry of the brain, activating the feelings associated with smiling. • Metta practice - compassion, lovingkindness, etc. - bathes you in positive emotion. • Remember past states of positive emotion ("taking in" them helps support this memory). Then access that bodily/emotional memory to rekindle the positive feeling.
  • 17. The Noble Eightfold Path 17 © Rick Hanson, 2007 Right Concentration Introduction Concentration is a natural ability that everyone has, and everyone can get increasingly better at it. It's like a muscle: by exercising it, you make it stronger. To do that, alas, we must accept "failing" over and over again. For most people, especially those new to meditation, it is difficult to stay engaged with more than a few breaths in a row - or less! - without the mind wandering off to something else. So it's especially important to find that middle way between being uncaring and being harsh with yourself. When your mind wanders, try not to be self-critical, but simply get back into full awareness of the next breath. It's not what happened in the past that matters but what you do now and now and now. Benefits of concentration Cultivates the will. Trains the mind to a greater steadiness, thus aiding both sila and insight. Overcomes the hindrances (greed/lust, aversion, sloth and torpor, restlessness and remorse, and doubt). The deepest states of concentration known as "jhanas" or "samadhis," eliminate the hindrances for the temporary (i.e., impermanent) duration of the state; this is one of the rewards of the jhanas/samadhis. Breeds conviction and faith: The deeper states of concentration are not ordinary states, and when you experience them, it becomes palpably clear that the fruits of practice include increasingly stable, profound, wonderful, joyous, magnificent conditions of the heart and mind. Factors of concentration • Applying your attention - This is the deliberate focusing of attention on an object, whether a teacher's presentation, the sensations at the upper lip, or interesting stillness between two thoughts. • Sustaining attention - This means staying with the object of attention. Sometimes the metaphor of rubbing is used, like two sticks rubbing together, staying in contact throughout. Sally Clough, a Spirit Rock teacher, combines applying and sustaining attention (especially applicable for the breath) into a single metaphor from ice skating: applying attention is like planting your foot, and sustaining it means gliding along; then at the end of the inhalation (for example), you plant your foot
  • 18. The Noble Eightfold Path 18 © Rick Hanson, 2007 again ( = focusing on the exhalation) and then glide along the length of the exhalation, staying in contact with every part of it. • Rapture - A strong sense of bliss, often felt particularly in the body, often with an energizing, upwardly moving sense to it. • Happiness - Also a definite, unmistakable feeling, that sometimes shades into a quality of contentment or perhaps tranquility. • One-pointedness - This is the mind brought to singleness, in which there is a kind of unitary state in which all elements of experience are experienced as a whole; there is often a sense when this factor arises of a kind of ka-chunk, of all the pieces coming together. Æ These factors can vary in their intensity from sitting to sitting. In particular, the factor of rapture can be experienced over time as a bit jangly and too intense, and give way increasingly to the factor of happiness. Æ Try to register a clear sense of each factor, so that you know what it feels like and can find your way back to it again. Æ To an extent (and which usually grows with practice), you can invite, call up, or invoke each factor. Traditionally, you can say in your mind, "May rapture (or happiness, etc.) awaken (or arise, or be present)." If it comes, conditions are ripe. If it does not come, be patient and keep cultivating the causes of its arising and have faith that it will come. Æ Getting tense with yourself or impatient will not serve. Relaxation and happiness are the immediate causes of concentration. Striving is a form of clinging. Access concentration This is a state in which the five factors are present, but you haven't yet tipped fully into the jhanas. Applying and sustaining attention take little effort; the mind is quite quiet, with thoughts apparent as discrete entities, coming and going; the body commonly feels both light and grounded. Get to know this state well so you can readily settle into it. The jhanas These are progressively deeper and more subtle states of deep meditative absorption. There are four "form" jhanas, in which there is still a clear sense of ordinary physical reality. Then there are the four "formless attainments," which can - if the causes are ripe - culminate in Nibbana.
  • 19. The Noble Eightfold Path 19 © Rick Hanson, 2007 Descriptions vary regarding what is a jhana and what isn't. In our experience, these are unmistakable, remarkable, non-ordinary states of being that have a self-evident persuasiveness when they come upon you. In the Buddha's description, which is repeated verbatim or with minor changes throughout the Pali Canon: "And what, monks, is right concentration? Here monks, secluded from sensual pleasures, secluded from unwholesome states, a person enters and dwells in the first jhana, which is accompanied by thought and examination [i.e., applied and sustained attention] with rapture and happiness born of seclusion. With the subsiding of thought and examination, she or she enters and dwells in the second jhana, which has internal confidence and unification of mind, is without thought and examination, and has happiness and rapture born of concentration. With the fading away as well of rapture, the person dwells equanimous, and mindful and clearly comprehending, he or she experiences happiness with the body; he or she enters and dwells in the third jhana of which the noble ones declare: 'He or she is equanimous, mindful, one who dwells happily.' With the abandoning of pleasure and pain, and with the previous passing away of joy and dejection, the person enters and dwells in the fourth jhana, which is neither painful nor pleasant and includes the purification of mindfulness by equanimity. This is called right concentration."