exquisite. "we are what we think, having become what we thought". 
this post is worthy of analysis which creates syntesis, relatively. 

<font color="#ff0000">never trouble trouble till trouble 
troubles you.</font>


________________________________
From: empty0grace <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2011 9:00 PM
Subject: [Zen] The Nature of Right-Mindfulness: a Theravada Perspective


  
The Nature of Right-Mindfulness: a Theravadin Perspective
 
I thought I might post this since we have been discussing the nature of 
mindfulness. Here is one possible Theravada perspective. Mindfulness itself 
cannot be defined because it belongs to the realm of ultimate realities: 
actualities that cannot be broken down into finer subjective experiences. 
However, the classical Theravada way of discussing absolute realities is to 
discuss them in terms of their functions and characteristics. 
 
"The function of mindfulness is to keep the object in view by neither 
forgetting it nor allowing it to disappear." (U Pandita: In This Very 
Life). This explains the literal meaning of the word sati (Pali) or smrti 
(Sanskrit) as remembering. Sati is the remembering of what needs to be 
remembered in any situation. It remembers the object, objects or processes of 
contemplation (mentality/materiality) and also what we are doing. When you have 
the experience of going off to do something in your home, and then forget what 
it was you had set out to do, or when you begin to say something and then 
forget what it was that you were going to say, you have lost your sati/smrti. 
It is often confused with concentration. A meditator can have very strong 
concentration, and still have a lapse of mindfulness. This is what happens when 
we have been on retreat for some time and our mind loses the breath, and we go 
off fantasies, lust or anger. Have you noticed how
 powerful those moments of anger or lust can be on retreat, or how vivid the 
fantasies? That is because the mind goes into them with all the power of the 
samadhi that has been generated in the prior days. It is like a heavy fast 
moving train jumping the track. The mass or weight of the train is the samadhi. 
The momentum is the energy in the mind, and the jumping off the track is the 
lapse of mindfulness. 
 
Mindfulness also has the function of protecting the mind. Somewhere in the 
Dhammapada (sorry I don't have time to source it), the Buddha said 
something like: "Just as rain cannot enter a well thatched roof, 
defilement cannot enter the mind one who is fully mindful." Continuity in 
the state of mindfulness therefore brings with it a great purity.
 
Non-superficiality is an important characteristic of mindfulness. As 
mindfulness deepens, the objects of contemplation, in this case the flow of 
mentality and materiality, are increasingly penetrated. At first the breath is 
coarse and not clearly felt, but over time mindfulness reveals the finer 
currents of sensation that make up the breath, just so with every other aspect 
of both five aggregates. Just as a stone sinks to the bottom of a river, 
mindfulness leads consciousness and understanding to gradually penetrate and 
eventually completely permeate our experience. 
 
The Buddha said, "Mindfulness is everywhere useful." It is the one 
mental factor that will develop all of the necessary wholesome mental factors 
that support awakening. For example, the continuous application of mindfulness 
rouses energy in consciousness. The continuous setting up face to face with the 
objects of contemplation develops samadhi, and as the mind penetrates its 
present experience more and more deeply with the maturing of mindfulness, more 
and more is seen and understood. In this way mindfulness develops understanding 
and insight. As experience deepens and wisdom reveals the four noble truths, 
the mind gains trust, sadha/sradh, and begins to rest in its experience. The 
settling of the mind under the influence of samadhi and trust brings 
tranquility. These last three together bring intense lucidity and purity to the 
mind, which in turn enable more wisdom. In this way all of the 37 requisites of 
enlightenment are developed. I would
 say therefore that mindfulness, if supported by sila, (virtue, morality) is 
the womb of bodhi. 

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