‘This is how you should train yourself: “Kindness …
compassion … appreciative joy … equanimity as my release of awareness, will be
developed, pursued, made into a vehicle, given a grounding, steadied,
consolidated, and well-undertaken.”’ A. 8: 63
Begin with yourself
Why prioritize goodwill towards myself? Because this is where
it gets most direct and real. You can imagine other people – when you're so
inclined and for chosen periods of time - but you're faced with yourself night
and day. And in practising with your own mind states, you’re meeting stuff that
isn’t publicly available; you’re gradually liberating your heart from
self-criticism, despond, guilt, anxiety and perfectionism; and you're sampling
the results. And as goodwill transforms the heart through which you experience
the world, this changes your whole world. That includes how you experience
other people. (Believe it or not, your experience of other people is not an
accurate representation – it’s tainted by your own mental attitudes.)
Get the real thing
So what is this ‘mettā’? Loving-kindness and goodwill
are its more attractive features. But be careful! A big ‘I should be’ lurks at
the tail-end of these concepts, and ‘should be’ doesn't get you there. That’s
the snag. We can all imagine what and how we should be – but how do we come to
terms with, and stop feeling bad about, who we seem to be – or more accurately,
about what's happening in our minds? How do we meet painful memories that we
‘should have got over by now’; or anxiety attacks that we know are ungrounded
and irrational? If you learn to set up a way of being present and sensitive to
any of that, the chances are you're practising the real thing, no sugar
coating.
Another hint: it doesn't always feel that good. ‘Love’ sounds
nice and sweet, but mettā isn't a feeling, it’s an inclination. Its
energy is associated with giving, healing or nourishing that which seems needy,
sick, exhausted or dried up – in oneself or in others. Its fundamental
inclination is non-aversion. So one result, and aim, of that is to enable one
to be aware of various forms of ill-will (more on that later) without blaming
oneself or others, and without concealing, or even fixing it. In this way,
goodwill makes it possible to meet and not react to some unlovely stuff. In
such a meeting, the suffering of fault-finding, resentment and despond can be
transmuted into compassion and deep understanding.
In terms of liberation, mettā sustains the heart in
its efforts to expel the dart of suffering. That is, we may indeed want to stop
suffering, and we may acknowledge that the craving to have some mind-state that is
constantly cheerful and bright is a basis of suffering. We may even get to see
that craving to escape from the painful, pathetic or ugly aspects of mind is
also suffering – but then what do we do about this messy stuff? In terms of
insightful attention, it’s a matter of differentiating between what is
affecting the heart-mind and the heart-mind that is being affected. (The basis
of Buddhist meditation is a ‘stepping back’ or disengagement (viveka) from
events and moods in the mind – a step that reveals the watchfulness and
spaciousness that are the essence of the heart-mind.) Following on from this,
replacing the aversion to suffering with goodwill to the heart that gets
affected by it is a powerful strategy. Just be with the disappointment, loss,
irritation (etc.) – and empathy will start to arise. When empathy arises in the
watchful space, it enables us to abide with a steady heartfulness – and
also to realize that a lot of our difficult mind-states will peter out if we
don’t add negative energy to them. ‘All conditioning energies (sankhāra)
are subject to change’: the way of release involves us going against the set
patterns that these energies catalyse. With regards to negativity, this entails
replacing the blaming and the tribunals with goodwill.
No deals
Goodwill is one of the 'measureless' (appamāno)
abidings, because it is an intention that doesn't measure who deserves it, and
what the results should be. Appamāno also means ‘non-conceiving’, so
the lawyer and the accountant mind-sets have to go. It's a free-will offering
of empathic presence with what is happening. In the presence of pain it
transmutes into compassion (karunā) in the presence of skilful
qualities, it becomes appreciation and enjoyment (muditā) and in the
overview of kamma it becomes equanimity (upekkhā). Overall it doesn't
ask for results, it's ‘abundant, exalted and immeasureable’ : it's free and
there are no deals. This is revolutionary.
Why bother, I'm OK?
Goodwill may seem like an accessory to practising for
liberation, but all four aspects are taught as ‘doors to the Deathless’ (M.52).
That is, they're on a par with the four jhāna. Goodwill and its
associates operate in the same way as samādhi in that they fortify the
citta to the extent that it can rest free from craving. That’s the door; to
pass through that door requires insight, but insight has to be held at the door
– of the craving to be some fixed thing – in order to open it. Because it can acknowledge
all mind-states without complaint, goodwill can provide that support.
Moreover, if you aren't fully enlightened, the chances are
that your heart is affected by ill-will, or one of its undercover forms or
latencies. The revealing and undoing of these hidden potentials is one of the
aims of mettā. It's about more than being a nice person.
For instance, let’s imagine a well-meaning person: ‘I wouldn't
hurt a fly, but from time to time I do get annoyed by idiot politicians. I live
in a moral way (as best I can) and so I think criminals deserve punishment on
account of the terrible things they've done. I’m a friendly person; so of
course, I wouldn’t like to make a nuisance of myself and be a burden, so I
don’t feel comfortable about asking anyone to help me. No way: I should look
after myself, pay my way and set a good example. Yes, I feel that I should live
up to others’ expectations – although I don't really know what they are; so I
look out for warning signs – like silence or any signs that others aren't at
ease – because that means that I’ve done or said something wrong, or I’m not
welcome. So I keep up a patter of lightweight conversation, produce some good
humour, and excuse myself if I run out these. And when I get home, I review
what I've done or left undone to check if I might have got something wrong, and
I think of how I could get it better next time, although with looks like mine
and my lack of social skills, then to be honest, I'm never going to be as
popular as ... But maybe it's just my kamma to be like this, after all, when I
was a kid I did lie to my father – several times in fact; maybe that’s why when
I try to meditate my mind never calms down. I’m probably not going to get
enlightened anyway, so what's the point? Anyway, I may be neurotic at times,
but I can get by OK on my own.’
All this is comes from a mind that isn’t resourced with
goodwill. Check it out: if people in public office are failing in their duties,
or if members of a society are threatening the safety or well-being of others,
an appropriate response is suitable. But do the shortcomings of other people
(let alone the malfunctioning of machinery or systems) have to evoke a response
of anger or vengefulness? Go down the list: Isn’t the assumption that other
people will receive you or your needs with displeasure a sign of inferred
ill-will? As well as anxiety over performance, self-criticism and acceptance of
defeat? Then add to this imagined list other features such as: regarding any
minor mistake or social gaffe to be a major sin; creating overviews of your
activites that dwell on undeveloped or unwelcome states as ‘This is what I am’;
creating deadlines; comparing yourself with others; or, in relationship with
another, assuming that you have to make it work for them, sort them out, or fix
yourself to suit them.
The point is that if you’ve been bullied, dumped, deceived or
looked down upon, you’ve experienced the hostility of others and been shaped by
that. If you haven’t been brought up in a context of safety and free from the
need to prove you’re good enough – your heart will dip into the shadow of
shame, anxiety, and inadequacy. And trying to be strong, or win approval, or
trying to be nice at the expense of presenting how things are for you right now
– isn't going to make you feel warm, relaxed or comfortable. Because you
haven’t dealt with the results of the actions of others, potential hostility is
carried in the heart as a set pattern. That is we have an assumption of what
others might say or expect; and because much of our personality is created by
the responses of others, our personal self doesn’t know the fullness of the
heart-mind. We don’t know ‘who we are’ other than as a personality that's been formed to
deal with others. Accordingly, we may hold a view that we aren’t good enough
unless we’re universally approved of or understood, and that unless these
impossibles are achieved, we will be, and be seen as, inadequate, flawed,
unworthy and undeserving of the affection or respect of others. But how good
does anyone have to be in order to be worthy of respect? What’s the grade and
who sets that standard? Unless you practise mettā towards yourself,
then you’re liable to cultivate a form of kindness to others that is based upon
trying to be a good person, or on assuming that it’s your duty to forgive and
help others. The truth of the matter is that you’re operating from a
well-meaning but false basis. You haven’t cleared your own heart – how are you
going to clear anyone else’s?
Practice: receive it and give it out
In terms of practising goodwill towards oneself, the first
step is to get as settled as you can in your body in a wakeful and aware way.
Access and get interested in the ground beneath you, or more
accurately, the contact with the floor, or the surface against which your legs
are resting. Acknowledge that its support only requires you to rest on it. Do
that. How does that resting into support feel? I’ll call that experience
‘ground’. Dwell in that; keep returning to that simple sense of support,
relaxing the inclination to do or understand anything. Instead, practise
receiving ground. As is often the case in meditation, the mind gets restless and
feels it should be doing something else; so keep returning to the sense of your
body being supported by ground. Take plenty of time; liken this to relaxing in
a warm bath. The bath doesn’t mind how grubby you are; it’s there to receive
you.
Gradually build up the perception of the space that
immediately surrounds your body. Notice that the space in front of you is free
from obstruction and free from intrusion. Like ground, this space doesn’t ask
anything of you. You don’t have to be good for the space to wrap around you.
It’s not a very refined point or sensation, it’s just the absence of pressure.
Dwell on how that feels, let your chest and breathing open into that space.
Extend the perception of space to include your back; also
acknowledge and get interested in the space above your head. Nothing is
pressing down on you. There’s nothing that you have to understand, develop or
become. You may acknowledge that with a thought, but above all get the mood,
get it in the heart, and absorb into it.
In any of these processes, the mind can struggle with their
simplicity, their lack of detail. If so, add some imaginative touches: bring to
mind a helpful image (such as sitting in warm water or in a light or a cool
place); recollect an occasion when another person helped you – in fact
recollect many of those occasions. When such a recollection is established,
dwell in how it feels, and let the image of the person (etc.) fade. How does it
feel to receive goodwill? Hold back for now for praising the benevolent person,
or ‘paying it back.’ Just dwell in receiving the goodwill.
When that mood becomes stable, so that you can feel the
effects in your body, contemplate it as a mental state. The mood can steady
into a ‘sphere’ or domain. Then you can invite your impressions of others into
that domain. Begin with those who easily fit: people you already feel grateful
to, or respectful of – benefactors, supports and guides. Then on to those
who evoke a sense of compassion, and those whose goodness you feel uplifted by.
With people you feel neutral towards, or people in the public
sphere, it’s helpful to recollect that they have personal lives with wishes,
failings, strengths, concerns and sorrows. And with difficult people, soften
the focus on their difficult aspects, take in the broader picture (as above).
Imagine them asleep, or having an illness, or going through any one of the 101
mundane experiences that make up the background of your life too. Above all,
don’t allow bitterness, spite or fear take over your heart. It can also be
helpful to imagine them walking towards you, and stopping them at a distance
that feels safe or from where you can sustain non-aversion (if more positive
inclinations aren’t possible). Hold them for a long time in that sphere of non-aversion/non-resistence until
you can sustain a sense of steady spaciousness whenever you bear them in mind.
This doesn’t mean that you condone their actions. In fact it should also inform
you of the need to maintain a safe distance from such people. In time your
non-aversion may bring around changes in the other person’s behaviour; at any
rate by your not bristling or caving in, you stay open to that possibility.
Finally, in the cases of strongly embedded negativity, it can be helpful to practise this by inviting an attuned other person into a shared, dialogue form. In this case, as you express a difficult mood or habit, the role of the other is not to fix or analyse what is being reported, but to maintain their own viveka: to simple acknowledge what is being said, and from time to time to catalyse their goodwill by asking ‘How does that feel?’ The basis of goodwill is the simple empathy to send out that question; its frution is to be able to unwaveringly receive any response.
Finally, in the cases of strongly embedded negativity, it can be helpful to practise this by inviting an attuned other person into a shared, dialogue form. In this case, as you express a difficult mood or habit, the role of the other is not to fix or analyse what is being reported, but to maintain their own viveka: to simple acknowledge what is being said, and from time to time to catalyse their goodwill by asking ‘How does that feel?’ The basis of goodwill is the simple empathy to send out that question; its frution is to be able to unwaveringly receive any response.
This reflection has been very helpful for me because I never really understood that my being hard on myself caused me to be hard on others. If I acknowledge my difficult background and that I am a person with wishes, failings, strengths, concerns and sorrows. And feel comfortable with that. Then I can feel some emphathy for others instead of ill will.
ReplyDeleteI have people a number of people that irritate me. I see myself just being in a cool place seeing past their foibles, and just seeing a human being that struggles as I do. Usually the cause of the irritation is not something that the other person is directing towards me. It is just their way of being in the world.
Thank you Ajahn