Mike -

You had asked me for comments on the article below.  My response is: It
is an outstanding piece of work. I could go through it paragraph by
paragraph, one point at a time, and comment; but first, what is your
overall assessment, and are there any specific isssues you would like to
discuss?

--ED



Mike had posted:
The Jhanas: Meditative Absorptions     Jay Michaelson
<http://www.realitysandwich.com/user/jay_michaelson>
The jhanas are states of heightened concentration that have been
cultivated by Hindus and Buddhists for three thousand years. They are
altered states, full of bliss and, I would say, holiness, and they play
a central role in the Buddha's Eightfold Path ("right concentration"). 
Having recently completed a two month retreat devoted to cultivating the
jhanas, I will here, after a few introductory notes, describe my
experiences of the jhanic states and describe what I believe to be their
significance for spiritual practitioners.

1.         What I did, and why I did it

I wish to make three introductory notes about why I did it, what I did,
and how it compared with other things I've done.

First, I want to explain why I undertook this rigorous practice, which
involved sitting still for extended periods of time (usually, 90 to 120
minutes), and spending the entire day doing nothing but observing the
sensations of the breath at the nostrils, even while walking, eating, et
cetera. I had three reasons, and discovered two additional ones during
the retreat.

In my meditation practice, my real goal is liberation from the delusions
of ego and the clinging nature of the mind: to learn to let go of
clinging. On the Theravada Buddhist path, liberation comes from insight:
directly seeing and knowing that all phenomena are empty of substance,
impermanent, and fruitless to cling to. Insight, in turn, depends on
concentration; you've got to get really quiet to see these
characteristics clearly.  In one Buddhist metaphor, concentration
sharpens the sword of the mind, which can then be used to cut apart
delusion.  So I went to learn concentration skills as a kind of
prerequisite for a longer retreat, which I subsequently completed in
Nepal.

I also did jhana practice because jhana itself helps insight.
Distractions and hindrances are suppressed in jhana, and the experience
is deeply purifying and refreshing; one emerges with an extremely sharp,
clear, and quiet mind, ready to do the rigorous, moment-to-moment
noticing that leads to insight.  Third and finally, I did this work
because I was curious about jhana itself. On earlier retreats, I
experienced what many meditators experience when their minds become
concentrated: deep contentment, bliss, gratitude, love, and awe at the
beauty and miraculousness of ordinary life. Jhanas are like those
concentrated mindstates squared, amplified, distilled -- and I wanted to
see what they were like.

Along the way, I discovered two additional purposes to the practice. One
is the deep "purification of mind" that is required to enter jhana: you
really have to see and let go of all of your stuff, which in my case
included a lot of grief, confusion, loneliness, ego, expectation, and
just plain chatter. Every moment is an opportunity to let go of all this
stuff, and I had a number of extremely powerful openings that perhaps
I'll write about some other day.  In addition, the jhanas were
themselves a powerful lesson in letting go. They are like everything I
had dreamed about from the moment I became interested in spirituality as
a young adult. Imagine your greatest dreams fulfilled, in oceans of
light, bliss, love, and mystical union. Now imagine that you have to let
them go. This is the lesson: that even the greatest of states arise and
pass. You can't hold onto anything conditioned, even the dearest and
most precious experiences imaginable. This insight alone was surely
worth the price of admission.

So, what is jhana practice?  There are different schools of thought
among Buddhist teachers as to what constitutes a jhana and how to
cultivate it. Some hold that discursive thought and perception of the
outside world must completely stop for a jhana to be truly taking place.
In this model, a jhana is a totally absorbed state of mind; the
meditator is only aware of the object of meditation (more on that in a
moment), and nothing else. Even the passage of time is not noticed in
such an absorbed state. Other teachers, however, will say that a jhana
has commenced as soon as its factors are in place and an obviously
altered state of mind has arisen.

My own practice was a hybrid of these two approaches. I studied with
perhaps the Buddhist world's leading expert on jhana practice, who holds
the more strict view. Yet after a full month of rigorous concentration,
I was unable to achieve total absorption as his practice demanded. I
would enter clearly altered states, but would still be aware of strong
bodily sensations and the sense of time. Therefore, after one month, I
switched to the more moderate approach, which I had learned earlier. I
still cultivated the jhana in the "strict" method: I concentrated on the
sensation of breath at the nostrils until the mind formed a mental image
of the breath -- a white cloudy light called a nimitta. The nimitta
would then become my exclusive focus of concentration. But I proceeded
through the first four jhanas even though the absorption was not total.
My experiences, as profound and powerful as they are, should thus be
understood as only partial in nature. I am a beginner -- some might say
a failure -- not a teacher and not an expert in these practices.
(For detailed description of jhanic states and practice, please read
Shaila Catherine's Focused and Fearless, the best contemporary book on
the jhanas. The best online resource is my teacher Leigh Brasington
<http://www.leighb.com/> 's website, where you can learn more about the
stricter approach.)

My third and final prefatory note is that I actually do have a fair
amount of experience with mystical states, and these blow all those
experiences out of the water. With the possible exception of ayahuasca,
I have never encountered anything like this -- and I have spent many
years meditating, davening, doing energy work, and engaging in a
wonderfully wide range of ecstatic and contemplative practices. Without
being too arrogant about it (which would be an ironic reversal of the
point of spiritual practice!), I think I know whereof I speak.

When I described some of my experiences to a friend, she remarked that
they sounded similar to what Elizabeth Gilbert describes in her book
Eat, Pray, Love. I had precisely the experiences Gilbert describes on my
first meditation retreats, six years ago. They are world-shattering,
mind-altering, and profound. They provide a direct experience of what
generations of mystics have described in glowing mystical terms. I do
not wish to minimize them, and have described them in this magazine's
pages in the past.  But the jhanas were far, far more powerful and more
profound -- perhaps an order of magnitude more. They're like the
qualities of those earlier experiences, well, concentrated, refined, and
distilled. If what Gilbert, and I in those earlier essays, described is
like a lovely Hershey's Kiss, the jhanas are like a rich, hot molten
chocolate cake. Get it?


2.            Oceans of light

With those provisos out of the way, I will now describe my experiences
of each of the four basic jhanas. (There are actually eight jhanas, but
the other four are less essential to insight practice. Moreover, while I
had some limited experiences with them, they require their own essay.)
While the descriptions that follow may seem hyperbolic and overblown, I
assure you that I am deliberately understating and underdescribing the
experiences. Every writer who describes the jhanas does this. I don't
want to condition your experience by telling you too much, and I don't
want to heighten your expectations should you undertake jhana practice
yourself (which I hope you will).

First Jhana

The first jhana is like the "big wow," an awesome peak experience that
arises after the mind has finally settled on the object of concentration
with focused, sustained, one-pointed attention. Bodily or emotional
rapture called piti may arise, suffusing the body with bliss or filling
the mind with awe --sometimes the feeling is more "gross" and embodied,
other times more subtle and purely mental. In my experience, the nimitta
would become radiant, awesome, and beautiful, and grow to fill my entire
field of vision, and surround my body; the experience was like a
glowing, energetic light surrounding and cocooning my whole being. It's
quite captivating. There is also a sense of seclusion -- of finally
being safe from the chattering mind. From my Jewish spiritual
perspective, this was like holiness as the big amazing awesomeness, full
of mysterium tremendum and radical amazement. It's Niagara Falls, the
Grand Canyon. Like many mystics, I'll use erotic analogies as well; the
first jhana is like having sex, before orgasm: panting, arousing,
ah--ahh---ahh--- that sort of thing.

Eventually, though, the first jhana begins to feel like too much effort.
You have to work to keep it up. This is its advantage -- if you didn't
work, you wouldn't get in -- but eventually, after anywhere from fifteen
minutes to an hour or more (my longest was one hour), the mind gets
tired of ecstasy, excitement, and bliss and moves naturally onto the
second jhana.

The transition between jhanas is always from gross to subtle: the more
gross factors drop off, revealing the more subtle ones underneath. In
the case of first-to-second, the factors of applied and sustained
thought drop, and the other factors --rapture, joy, and one-pointedness
of mind -- reveal themselves more. Usually this "drop" is conscious;
after a few weeks of practice, I would feel a kind of mental itchiness
when it was time to move on, and would consciously resolve to let the
factors drop and the others predominate. A few times, though, the drop
happened automatically; the mind would just bail out. Eventually, the
four jhanas are kind of like four rooms in a house that you've come to
know; you don't even have to make the resolve clearly, because you know
the territory, and can recognize it and adjust quite naturally.

Second Jhana

In the second jhana, the feeling tone shifts to joy -- "drenched in
delight" in Shaila Catherine's words. Effort drops away, and the mind
rests one-pointed on its focus. I experienced the second jhana as being
like swimming in a mikva of light -- in my journal one time, I wrote
that when the nimitta expands, it is a "waterfall of shimmering light
that fills your body with joy." Again, sometimes this was a semi-bodily
sensation, other times purely mental. There was often a bright light in
my eyes as well--more on that below -- and sometimes a deep sense of
healing. This is it, you're here, you can trust and let go. The sexual
analogy here is to the time of orgasm itself -- not the first moment,
but the longer period of time if, like me, you like really long and
drawn-out orgasmic states. It's like that gorgeous sexual feeling of
letting go: not ah-ah-ah, but ahhhhhh. Sometimes it really felt as if
the light were kissing me, penetrating me, filling me. This is God as
lover; the fascinans, the erotic partner envisioned and embodied by
mystics. It's really something.

Believe it or not, the mind eventually finds all this ecstasy, even
without effort, a little gross. Piti becomes too showy; it's almost
exhausting. Now, when I was first learning the jhanas, I would spend
several days with each one before moving on. Part of this was to really
nail down the jhana; the Buddha said that someone who moves on too fast
is like a foolish cow wandering from pasture to pasture. But another
part was that it took me a while to get disenchanted with these states.
For several days, I couldn't imagine anything more wonderful than the
second jhana. But eventually, disenchantment sets in -- once again, an
insight that is, itself, worth the price of admission. Eventually, the
mind gets disenchanted with anything. So the grosser factor of rapture
drops away, leaving behind only joy and one-pointedness.

Third Jhana

If the second jhana is like an orgasm with God, the third jhana is like
resting comfortably on the breast of the Goddess; its dominant sensation
is contentment. Here, the love is less erotic and more familial; it's
like being cradled by your mother -- that kind of "ahh." The light I
experienced was golden, radiant, and warm. Many times, I cried and felt
healed. Other times, I was still and concentrated. And sometimes, I felt
like a little boy sitting by the window, with sunshine streaming in. In
the third jhana, piti is relinquished, and sukha, joy, becomes
predominant. Sukha is quieter and more subtle than piti, it's less
embodied, and more like an emotional, intellectual joy with a honey-like
embodied component. Meditators know sukha from whenever the mind in
concentrated and everything just feels lovely. The mind is content. What
could ever be wrong with the world? Of course, sukha is so lovely that
we naturally cling to it, which means we suffer when it's gone -- that's
what's wrong. But for me, I spent about three years cultivating sukha,
thinking it was enlightenment, and being devastated when, a few days
after retreat, it seemed to disappear.

Fourth Jhana

Finally, there is the fourth jhana--the real point of it all, it
sometimes seems. In the fourth jhana, even joy passes away. The
experience is totally neutral: just "Ah," as in "Ah, I see." And yet, it
somehow -- just is. I can't quite describe it; there's a powerful sense
of equanimity, a closeness to the object, and not much else. Somehow,
this state is the most beautiful at all, even though it is totally
colorless, bliss-less. The erotic flavor is not even post-orgasmic; it's
post-post. The mind is clear, the restlessness is gone. It doesn't feel
good anymore, but in some deep profound way, it feels extremely good and
peaceful that it's not even necessary to feel good. This is not awe, not
love; it's just What Is. It's a love beyond love; satisfaction without
joy or even contentment.

For me, the fourth jhana is really the point, because it leads to one of
the deep insights of the jhanas: that God is not in the fire, or the
earthquake, or the flood. There's a tendency that all of us have to
deify and thus idol-ize certain states. Oh, that gorgeous warmth of
lighting candles. Oh, we were so high during that drum circle / yoga
session / whatever, that was really it. But that's not it. It is what's
always here; Ein Sof, everything. If it wasn't always here, it isn't it.
Even the fourth jhana isn't it -- it's a state, with equanimity and
focus that are conditioned, and thus pass away after a time. You can't
cling to it either.

Ramana Maharshi said, "Let come what comes, let go what goes. See what
remains." That is the essence of enlightenment right there, I'm telling
you. The way leads nowhere. There is no state that is it. This is it;
just this. Not feeling special about this, not feeling relaxed or wise
or anything in particular -- although sometimes those feelings may arise
in the wake of letting go. Just is.

Now, does that mean that mystical states -- including the jhanas
themselves -- are without value? No, not at all. By fulfilling this
spiritual seeker's wildest dreams of joy and rapture, the jhanas point
to the limitations of states, chiefly their transient nature. And in my
next post, I'll describe in some detail the benefits as well as the
limitations of spiritual states of all kinds, mundane to marvelous.  For
now, I hope I've tempted some of you to consider jhana practice, because
it can blow your mind, change your life, and offer new perspectives on
the mind.   If you're interested in learning more, some resources are
below:



* Website of one of my teachers, Leigh Brasington
<http://www.leighb.com/>

* Website of American students of Pa Auk Sayadaw
<http://www.jhanasadvice.com/>  who now teach on their own

* The Pali Canon
<http://www.palikanon.com/english/the_jhanas/jhanas00.htm>  on jhanas

Source:   http://www.realitysandwich.com/jhanas_meditative_absorptions
<http://www.realitysandwich.com/jhanas_meditative_absorptions>



Reply via email to