I’ve just returned from teaching a retreat in
Ireland. It was a pleasant weekend attended by a good number of people. The theme, one
that I’ve touched on before, was ‘Unseating the Inner Tyrant’. You can probably
guess, but if you’re in doubt about what I’m referring to … Do you ever find
yourself dominated by a chain of thought that tells you that you’re not good
enough, and don’t deserve much? Are you convinced that other people look
down on you? Does your mind recite memories of things you did wrong in dramatic
detail? Do you find that when you admire someone, you simultaneously feel
unworthy of them? Or that, although you really ought to be a success and help
the world, you’re never really going to achieve anything? That voice, that attitude, is the Tyrant. If there is such a thing as freedom, peace and ease – it must entail dethroning this Tyrant from our minds.
Freedom is an aspiration that many people can
resonate with; as a practice it means meeting and overcoming our inner
tyrannies – whatever their urgings. There are many, often contradictory: along
with preoccupations with duties and obligations, and the sense that ‘I should
calm down’, come the feelings of inadequacy and guilt that lock the door of the heart.
‘I’m never going to get clear,' they say, 'or be happy. There’s something wrong with me.
I’m like this because I messed up.’ This is why we should take Angulimala, the serial
killer who became an arahant, as our patron saint. As I outlined in my posting
of August 2013,[http://sucitto.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/the-good-bad-and-clear.html]he
can certainly be said to have messed up; and yet his murdering didn’t amount to
an insurmountable obstacle to awakening. This is because, according to the Conch Blower
sutta (Connected Discourses, 42.8) what sticks bad actions to us aren’t the
actions themselves, but their stickiness. Action based on clinging – to
sense-data, impulses, views and the notion of self – is sticky and because of this leaves
residues. So we have to deal with these residues, which are left as a vague stuck mess called 'I am this'. The practice of clearing these residues is one of clearing the identification with actions and their results.
A major obstacle to this clearing is denial (which shields a notional self), the bluster that tries to shrug off, justify or blame one's actions on other people. Another obstacle is guilt (which creates a sinful self). What both of these reactions have in common is that they obstruct an investigation of the emotions and psychologies that constitute that apparent self. To investigate the lack of control and the unskilful action as it is amounts to skilful remorse and conscience; these neither justify nor burden a self, because they relate to the actions, not the identity. They are healthy and have to be responded to; firstly by an acknowledgement that is free from justification and judgement; secondly by the avowal to understand any error and refrain from such actions in the future; and thirdly by widening and softening the mind with kindness, compassion, appreciative gladness and equanimity to all concerned – including this heart and mind. We have to acknowledge that our minds get overwhelmed and aren't entirely our own. This is not an easy process, but one that one can train in.
A major obstacle to this clearing is denial (which shields a notional self), the bluster that tries to shrug off, justify or blame one's actions on other people. Another obstacle is guilt (which creates a sinful self). What both of these reactions have in common is that they obstruct an investigation of the emotions and psychologies that constitute that apparent self. To investigate the lack of control and the unskilful action as it is amounts to skilful remorse and conscience; these neither justify nor burden a self, because they relate to the actions, not the identity. They are healthy and have to be responded to; firstly by an acknowledgement that is free from justification and judgement; secondly by the avowal to understand any error and refrain from such actions in the future; and thirdly by widening and softening the mind with kindness, compassion, appreciative gladness and equanimity to all concerned – including this heart and mind. We have to acknowledge that our minds get overwhelmed and aren't entirely our own. This is not an easy process, but one that one can train in.
The Buddha’s message then is that it’s not justice
that sets things straight, but clarity and empathy. We are asked to look steadily at how deeds, words and attitudes feel, and then to align our intentions to the
good heart. Then it’s apparent that the first important thing to set straight
is the ‘black and white’, the hard line that cuts off our empathy. Because when
empathy is cut, there is no harm that a human will not to do to another. On the
other hand when there is empathy, we are enriched with the great heart of
tolerance, love and compassion. That heart isn’t strait-jacketed by obligation;
it’s a joy and a refuge from bitterness, guilt and greed. So with
perceived wrong-doings, the empathic heart is willing to acknowledge and be emotionally present without reactions. That’s the first necessary step; then
comes the feeling, and the remorse of ‘this was not worthy of my good intentions’. This can then be followed by a compassion that embraces our impulses with understanding.
Sometimes guilt is imprinted not so much by what
one has done as by social shame or stigma. That experience or dread of being barred from
fellowship generates an Inner Tyrant: the Judge. Another socially-oriented
drive orients around what one should be and do. I call this the Benevolent
Dictator: the obligation to be responsible and help the family, or the world (from
one’s own viewpoint). In both Judge and Dictator, unexamined perceptions of self
and other give rise to compulsive drives. Some core assumptions also remain uninvestigated. That is, we may assume that we should never fail, but be perfect (I have to get it absolutely right); or we may be dominated with goal-obsession (I
have to get to the good thing in the future because I can’t accept how I am
right now); or with missionary zeal (I have to fix other people, and I know and
possess exactly what they need). These attitudes are signs of an Inner Tyrant. The Tyrant may also be hidden under the adulation of others – 'who’re
so much better than I am'. In Buddhist terms such compulsive drives are called 'becoming' (bhava). ‘If only I was
this; if only he wasn’t like that – then I’d feel satisfied,’ it says. That's the Inner
Tyrant. It believes in unexplored assumptions and fantasy projections; and it turns
the potential for an aware and compassionate life into the weight of a debt that can never be paid off. Because the Tyrant is never
satisfied with or appreciative of what has been done. In fact the Inner Tyrant
finds satisfaction, appreciation and contentment dangerous, naive, and even lazy:
‘Don’t you see what a mess you/they/ the world is in! You can’t sit around
being content for the rest of your life!’
Take note of the tyrannical voice: ‘never’,
‘always’ ,‘the rest of your life’ and ‘everyone thinks’ are standard
references. The Tyrant always presents perceptions and impressions as solid
truth, and based on that operates in terms of black and white realities,
prophesies and judgements. Justice and ‘what they/I deserve’ are common
slogans, messages that blaze through the minds with such conviction that
we never examine their logic – and how they sour us. Once infected by the
Tyrant, the mind can justify any action; particularly a wrathful response to
perceived evil. Hence Crusades, missions, jihads, witch-hunts, pogroms, torture
and jails. The Tyrant often masquerades as the Just God. Justice? – too
often it's a mask for self-interest and revenge.
Crippling though the Inner Tyrant is, it acquires
even more strength when it is supported by, or morphs into, the Outer Tyrant of
political or religious repression. This has been the case in Ireland where the
tyrant of British domination was succeeded by the Catholic Church. The
Church at first offered a religious identity (tyrants offer security and a
stable identity) but also condemned as sinful all sexual activity apart from
marital sex without contraception and without abortion. Not that condemnation
has ever stopped sexuality; rather it has driven the sex drive underground –
only to have it resurface as clandestine sex, or abuse of one kind or another.
All of which, it transpires, has been practised, denied and swept under the
carpet by bishops, priests, monks and nuns. An estimated one in four of
the population of Ireland have been affected by sexual abuse. Along with
child-abuse, perhaps the grimmest accounts are of the ‘Magdalenes’, unmarried teenage
girls who became pregnant and were then incarcerated in convents in ‘magdalene
laundries’ as unpaid washerwomen for the rest of their lives. It’s bad enough
when the Outer Tyrant is the member of another nation; jaw-dropping when
American police can shoot unarmed black fellow-citizens dead in the street;
almost beyond belief that parents can condemn their own children to an exile in
which they will be treated like scum for the rest of their lives. But it’s not
unbelievable, and certainly not uniquely Irish (Magdalene laundries existed in
Britain and Australia) – but when the Outer and Inner Tyrants merge under the
aegis of Divine Will, justification is beyond question. Men get slaughtered and
incarcerated as a ‘threat’ or ‘the enemy’ of course, but if the deviation is in
anything sexual which involves a woman, it is she, even if she is the victim, who will feel
God’s wrath. In any religion. A brother will murder the sister whose crime was
to be raped, parents cast out their daughter who associates with a member of the
wrong caste or family, and so on. All justifiable to cleanse the family’s name.
It may seem impossible to lose empathy around
such a central and shared feature of being human as sexual desire – after all, how else
did we all get here? – but the Tyrant can bring that around. Because passion is
a threat to order, both internal (the solid self, in control) and external ( the solid government, in control). A human dilemma lies between repression and passion:
repression is repugnant and eventually ineffectual, but passion is dangerous. Yet from an awakened point of view, that are both born of ignorance, of an inability to stand beyond the power of desire. True enough, males of most species regularly fight
and kill each other when in the grip of sexual desire, and it is on account of
projected desire that women get repressed, abused and locked up.
Throughout history, people have attempted to
channel sexual desire into socially manageable containers – none of which
are innately secure. No Tyrant, however Divine, can manage and contain
feeling; repression is inadequate to the task, and sublimation into sport and entertainment only a stop-gap measure. It’s certainly difficult enough to both meet and stand beyond that which we dislike, but
even more tricky when it comes to desire and lust. But that’s what’s required:
a skilful channelling entails acknowledgement of the luminous power of desire,
and of its ability to flood the body and distort the mind. ‘Standing beyond’ comes
through restraint, then empathy: respect for one’s own body, heart and mind and
that of another. This takes contemplative skill. Whereas a tyrant will either
repress desire or justify it, a meditator can soften and widen the energy channels
in the body and transfer that energy into the heart. As a process, that
means acknowledging the specific desire, dropping the images that it brings up, focusing on the body energy
and softening and widening that energy with breathing.
Clearly (to me), celibacy offers many benefits in
terms of supporting simplicity, curtailing competition, jealousy, infidelity,
performance anxiety and sexual abuse – but celibacy is a choice. It’s not a
compulsion based on aversion to nature. It has to be accompanied by a huge
affirmation of the human ability to include nature and transcend ignorance. Without that
understanding and contemplative skill, celibacy becomes arid; it doesn’t ripen
into a fullness of being.
Meditation offers a resolution of the conundrum
of passion. All compulsions grab the heart and deprive us of freedom; without
meditation, people just use the Tyrant of blame, repression and punishment to
ward off the Tyrant of compulsive desire. When we're thrown between these two forces, we lose self-respect, empathy and clear understanding. But when we
operate in terms of present-moment experience, and a clear and empathic
approach to meeting the energies of fear, rage and desire as they happen to us,
then there’s a way out of the tyranny. The energy of desire can then be held
and correctly channelled, not into prophesies or assumptions of what others
think or God wills, but into the full fruition of the heart.
I have been looking for an practice besides corpse contemplation and the 32 parts contemplation to overcome lust, and the acknowledgement, dropping imagery, and moving the energy into the heart seems the most promising route I have encountered yet. Its actually what I have been doing instinctively all along.
ReplyDeleteBut I have a question: will it take me to full release from lust? Aka the second path and fruit (along with overcoming other sense desires and I'll will/hatred). Or is an insight into the nature of the body through the 32 parts contemplation absolutely required? I understand on the surface level that the body is temporary, conditioned phenomenon, and not self, but have not had a full liberating insight into it. The 32 parts contemplation doesn't resonate with me and I don't seem to get anything out of it. Also, corpse contemplation doesn't really gross me out or generate dispassion in me. Instead I have begun focusing on investigating the khandhas and my relationship to them and how they interact with each other. So my question is: will the repeatedly dropping of lust and eventual indifference/dispassion for it, coupled with understanding of how feeling, perception, and volitional action work take me to the next level? (Along with the dropping of aversion and other sensual desires)
Well, whatever works. Contemplation of the unattractive aspects of the body is a standard contemplative practice. I believe it is a foundation, but one that has to be built upon by investigating and handling the energy and feeling of lust. After all it isn't bodies per se that we enjoy, but the feeling and energy that they can evoke ( and, as one gets familiar with one body, fail to evoke).
ReplyDeleteAs Thanissaro Bhikkhu writes (in Mind Like Fire Unbound, P56) 'as a more balanced perception of the body develops,one may make use of the second prong of the approach: turning one's attention from the object of lust to the act of lust itself...and so removing any sense of identification with it.'