Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 483: Four Ways to Boost Your Mindfulness Muscle | Joseph Goldstein
Episode Date: August 8, 2022These days, the word mindfulness has become a buzz phrase but very often people don’t know what the word actually means, much less how to practice it. One simple definition of mindfulness i...s the ability to see what’s happening in your mind without getting carried away by it. The benefits of doing so are vast and profound— from decreased emotional reactivity to being more awake to what’s actually happening in your life.Today's guest Joseph Goldstein talks about a classic Buddhist list called the four foundations of mindfulness, which lays out various techniques for developing mindfulness within your practice.Goldstein is one of the premier western proponents of Mindfulness. He co-founded the legendary Insight Meditation Society alongside Sharon Salzberg and Jack Kornfield. He also wrote a book called Mindfulness: A Practical Guide to Awakening.In this episode we talk about:The historical context for the four foundations of mindfulness Why he thinks the Buddha loved listsWhy the Buddha placed mindfulness of the body first on the listThe steps to mastering mindfulness of the bodyThe meaning of the word embodied and how that’s different from our usual mode of being in the worldHow and why to do walking meditationsWhat are feeling tones and why are they importantPractices for cultivating mindfulness of mindAnd we talk about some of the mantras that Joseph uses when teaching Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/joseph-goldstein-483See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Listen, Dan, I just have to tell you, I didn't get much sleep tonight, so nothing too difficult.
My mind is not, it's usual sparkly self.
You didn't get much sleep last night, you mean?
So basically you're saying, throw you nothing but softballs.
Exactly.
I don't know that I can make that promise.
Well, this is your podcast.
They're going to come after you, not me. What are we talking about? What do you want to talk about?
We're talking about the four foundations of mindfulness.
Yeah, but I'm happy to not do that and just to wing it.
Whatever you want to talk about.
I think it gives us a nice framework and then we can wing it within it as that's known.
Yeah. And also, these recordings get edited, right?
So if there's, whatever.
Yes.
Okay.
Yes.
If you start drooling, right?
Exactly.
Or nodding off in the middle of what you're saying.
Right.
I'll try not to take that personally.
All right.
So if you're comfortable, then I'll dive right in.
Yeah.
Hey, gang, jumping in here to say that this is the 10% happier podcast and I'm Dan Harris.
And that the voice you've just been listening to, the other voice, not mine, is that of my
meditation teacher, friend and mentor, Joseph Goldstein.
Loyal listeners will have heard Joseph on this show before or heard me shamelessly
name drop him or quote him or tell stories about him on many, many episodes. And as many of you
may already know, for both Joseph and me, verbal jousting is a kind of love language, which I think
you can hear reflected in the pre-show banter that we, for the fun of it, included here.
Despite, or maybe because of the fact that I am an incurable-wise-ass, Joseph has for
years advised me, taught me, and dropped all sorts of transformative wisdom bombs into my
life.
And today, he's going to do that for you.
We more or less decided on the fly to focus this episode on a classic Buddhist list called the four foundations of mindfulness where the Buddha lays out
many different techniques for developing mindfulness. The four foundations are just that the foundations upon which you can build your meditation practice whether you're a newbie or a seasoned
practitioner. Joseph is one of the premier Western proponents
of mindfulness.
He co-founded the legendary retreat center,
the Insight Meditation Society,
alongside Sharon Salisberg and Jack Cornfield back in the 1970s.
Joseph also wrote a whole book,
which I heartily recommend called Mindfulness.
He's written many books,
but that's an especially good one.
But while mindfulness has become something of a buzz phrase these days, I fear that very
often people don't know what the word actually means, much less how to practice it.
One simple, serviceable definition of mindfulness is the ability to see what's happening in
your mind right now without being carried away by it. The benefits are vast and deep from being more awake
in your life to decreased emotional reactivity.
In this conversation with Joseph,
we talk about the historical context
for the four foundations of mindfulness.
Why he thinks the Buddha loved lists so much.
Why the Buddha placed mindfulness of the body first on this particular list,
the steps to getting better at mindfulness of the body, the meaning of the word embodied
and how that's different from our usual mode of moving through the world, how and why
to do walking meditation, what are feeling tones and why they're really important in your
meditation practice, practices for cultivating mindfulness of mind.
Joseph will explain what that actually means.
And we talk about some of Joseph's mantras,
these little phrases he uses in his teaching
that have been incredibly helpful to me
and many other people.
Before we jump into today's show,
many of us wanna live healthier lives, but keep
bumping our heads up against the same obstacles over and over again.
But what if there was a different way to relate to this gap between what you want to do
and what you actually do?
What if you could find intrinsic motivation for habit change that will make you happier
instead of sending you into a shame spiral?
Learn how to form healthy habits without kicking your own ass unnecessarily by taking our healthy habits course over on the 10% happier app. It's taught by the Stanford
psychologist Kelly McGonical and the great meditation teacher Alexis Santos to access the course.
Just download the 10% happier app wherever you get your apps or by visiting 10% calm.
All one word spelled out. Okay on with the show.
Hey y'all, it's your girl Kiki Palmer. I'm an Okay, on of the show, I'm a fan of the show, I'm a fan of the show, I'm a fan of the show, I'm a fan of the show, I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show,
I'm a fan of the show, I'm a fan of the show, I'm a fan of the show, I'm a fan of the show, I'm a fan of the show, I think it makes sense if you're up for it, maybe to give us a little bit of historical
context on where this comes from in terms of the Buddhist scriptures, et cetera, et cetera.
I believe it comes from a lecture the Buddha was said to have given that's now called
the Satipatana Suta.
Very good, Dan.
I'm proud of you.
I was going for the Gold Star.
Always, actually. Yeah. going for the gold star. Always.
Yeah, so that's exactly right. There is this one discourse, you know, in the collection of the Buddhist
teachings called the Sate Patana Suto, which is often translated as the four foundations of mindfulness.
And it really lays out in quite a comprehensive way, many different techniques for developing mindfulness.
And it really covers, it's quite amazing actually,
in a very limited number of pages,
it really covers all the different aspects
of our experience and how we can be mindful of it all.
So it's quite a powerful discourse.
And it's one that's used in Buddhist countries.
It's extremely popular, especially in the tradition of teravada Buddhism, which is in Burma,
and Thailand, Sri Lanka. It's a revered discourse. Often people learn it by heart and chant it.
So it has a very important place in the whole Buddhist canon.
It is interesting because mindfulness, as you know, very well, has become this buzz word
over the last decade.
You know, this book's on mindful parenting, mindful, loyering, mindful sex on and on.
And often I think the word is used in ways that reflect the user's utter lack of understanding
of what mindfulness actually is and how to do it. But here we have this several-page long guide, 2600 years old, that actually breaks it all
down and teaches you how to do it.
No, exactly.
And there is a lot of both subtlety to it, and as I said, a wide range of application.
We're going to go through the four foundations.
And we've done this a lot on the show where we tackle a Buddhist list.
Why was the Buddha so into lists was this some you know undiagnosed OCD what was going on with all the lists.
Well my sense is that it's because it was an oral tradition none of this was written down for hundreds of years.
down for hundreds of years. And so just as a mnemonic device, you know, as a way of teaching and then having the monks and non-s and laypeople who are listening, as a way of easily remembering,
you know, through repetition and committing to memory becomes easier if there's a structured
list. And I find that myself. It's a nice little list. It's easier to remember it all.
Editors at Digital News Outlets have taken this to heart because they're constantly doing
the five sexiest Tom Cruise scenes and whatever. Have you made that list? I have not. I don't
know where that came from. I'm going to change the subject now to the actual list at hand.
Number one, the first foundation of mindfulness, if memory serves, because I don't
have in front of me, but this will be a good test of whether I'm a good student of yours. But if
memory serves, the first foundation of mindfulness is the body. Yes. And the more I practice and the more
I reflect on these teachings, I really have a growing appreciation of why the Buddha placed this first, because it's such an accessible field of our awareness.
You know, it's not something that's so subtle or we have to go looking for it.
The body is a very apparent, lived experience.
And what I found is that by practicing mindfulness of the body,
until it becomes almost second nature, through the repetition of more formal practice,
it then becomes much easier to carry mindfulness throughout the day. Because if we're well-practiced in it,
and the body is always with us, we can actually apply the teachings not only in formal meditation sessions, but through
all the activities of our lives each day.
It just feels like a very easy way and an accessible way to actually be cultivating mindfulness
in a way that is profound. The Buddha talked about how mindfulness of the body
leads to nibana, leads to enlightenment. So just this, if we really master just this one foundation
of mindfulness, it has far reaching and profound consequences. How would one go about this mastery? What are the initial steps one can take to be more mindful of the body?
In the discourse, he lays out quite a few different arenas of bodily activity that we
can pay attention to.
And as I mentioned a few of them, it'll become obvious that throughout the day we can go
from one to another.
So for example, the first thing that's mentioned is mindfulness of breathing, which is kind
of a core practice, informal meditation.
It's very often the starting place, the starting place and the way the ending place as well.
It can take us a long way.
And so we learn how to
be mindful breathing in, we know we're breathing in, breathing out, know we're breathing out. Of course,
as my first teacher, Munejiji said, it's simple but not easy, as anybody who has undertaken the
practice knows, because even though it's a very simple exercise, just feel the breath coming in,
going out, but what people find very commonly is that after one or two or three breaths,
the mind starts to wander, you know, and then it's becoming aware of that and coming back to the breath.
And we do that repeatedly. Until over time, you know, the mind begins to settle and we can have a greater continuity
of mindfulness with the breath.
And everything begins to relax, begins to settle in that increased concentration.
Some people, as you well know, find that trying to focus on the breath or feel the breath
can produce anxiety.
So there are other techniques, other arrows in this particular
quiver.
Mm-hmm. Before we go to the other arrows, I'd like to highlight basically two different ways
of being with the breath, because one of them, I think, for many people, alleviates that
anxiety or that efforting or getting a little too tight when we attend to the breath.
And this other way of being with it actually comes out of a line in this discourse,
a little later on in the discourse where the Buddha says,
be mindful, and then in the equivalent of quotes,
there is a body, then to the extent necessary for clear knowing
and continuous mindfulness.
So it's that phrase, there is a body
which we may have spoken about before
and I've been using a lot in my teaching
to use it almost like a mental note or a reminder.
So we might be repeating that phrase,
intermittently, there isabade simply as a way
of helping us to settle into the awareness of the whole body posture.
So rather than narrowing the attention, like to the tip of the nose or even to the movement
of the abdomen, you know, instead of narrowing it, we're keeping a larger framework that is a body.
And then, within that larger framework, becoming aware of the sensations of the body breathing,
but not necessarily narrowing the focus on it. We're keeping the larger frame of the whole body
and simply feeling the sensations of the body breathing within the
larger frame. And what I found and many students in keeping the larger frame, it seems to allow
for the breath just to continue in a more natural way because we're not zeroing in on it. You know, we have another reference point of stability
that is the whole body.
And then staying grounded in that,
the body is breathing by itself.
So it doesn't need our effort to breathe.
And by giving the larger framework,
we're allowing for this natural function of the body
to take place.
Just aware of the body breathing.
And that's why in the instructions, and this, this may be a subtlety,
I don't know if people are picking up on or not, but when I give the instructions,
I try to frame it this way.
Okay, there's a body settling into the awareness of the whole body.
Then I say, you may become aware of the body breathing.
And then as the body breathes in, know you're breathing in. As the body breathes out, know
you're breathing out. Instead of saying, when you breathe in, know you're breathing in,
because just in a very subtle way, again, it takes the eye, it takes the self out of
it. And it's just acknowledging, yeah, the body is breathing. Simple, it's been breathing
our whole lives. We don't have to do anything, we don't have to interfere with it. So that's
the point of this larger framework. But as you say, there are other areas of attention
for us to be mindful of with respect to the body.
Another one that's mentioned in the discourse is just to be aware of our body pastures.
You know, when we're walking, to know we're walking, when we're sitting, to know we're
sitting, when we're lying down, to know we're lying down, standing, no we're standing. And this also is a very useful instruction because it's a reminder
that we can be meditating in any posture. You know, sometimes people have the idea,
oh, meditation means sitting in some formal way, which of course includes that. but we can be mindful in any posture. And I think integrating that understanding
is very helpful as we're trying to bring this practice into our lives. Part of this particular
aspect is the walking meditation, which is its own, both formal practice and also applies
just to every time we take a step.
So that's another activity of mindfulness.
And then the Buddha talks about just mindfulness of general activities.
You know, whatever we're doing, brushing your teeth, be mindful of brushing your teeth, opening doors.
I can't remember the exact phraseology in the sutra, but when going forward, when going back, when bending, when reaching, when you're just all the normal activities of our lives.
Can we be mindful of it?
And again, because the body is so apparent, it's not difficult to do.
It's difficult to remember to do.
So that's the key point, really.
You know, mindfulness is not hard. It's remembering to be mindful. That is the challenge.
You said a bunch of things in there that I want to go back on. First of all, did they brush
their teeth in the Buddha's air? Or did they have your brushes? Well, his oral bee named after the
Buddha, like, look, so brushing the teeth is not in the suitor, but when I was practicing in India, and this
is something that probably was used back in the Buddhist time, many people don't use toothbrushes,
they use a neem stick, a neem is a kind of tree, it's a branch that has, I don't know whether
it has some medicinal qualities or not, but they actually use just a thin, neem stick or something to brush the teeth.
So that might well have been used in the time of the Buddha and is still
used today.
So you think you're being a wise guy, but still the Buddha's right,
right on top.
I'm not going to get away with anything today. So the other thing you mentioned was walking meditation. I don't want to let that slip by because there may be listeners who
are new to meditation and don't know walking meditation. So perhaps you could describe that.
Yeah, so this is really important. This has been such a meaningful part of my own practice
in a couple of ways.
One that the formal times of walking meditation,
which I'll describe, there's just a lot of insight
that comes from it.
And people often think that,
oh, the sitting is the real meditation
and walking is just to give yourself a break between sitting,
but that is really a misunderstanding.
The walking is powerful and leads to really, can lead to deep understandings in and of
itself. There's one thing I learned. It took me quite a while to learn it in my own practice,
but it made a huge difference in the walking meditation. It was probably a couple of years in my practice until I realized this.
You know, as you know, very often when we're talking about meditation, we're using watching language,
watch, notice, note, observe. You know, so it's all the language of looking at something,
not necessarily looking with the eyes, but it's that sense of
being outside of it and observing it. And for many years I would be walking in that way,
kind of observing the movement, you know, in the touch of each step. And then at a certain point,
I realized that a more skillful language rather than observing or noticing was feeling the
movement rather than observing it. Because observing is from the outside, it's almost
if we're tracking it, whereas feeling it is from the inside. And it just became so much more effortless.
So for those people who are listening and are interested,
just maybe we could do one five second experiment.
If you just move your arm and feel the movement,
you know, you're just moving your arm in any way you want
and you feel it.
So I think that you will have the sense of how easeful that is.
It doesn't take any major effort.
Because we're on the inside feeling it rather on the outside trying to track it.
So when we take a step, if we just feel the movement of the feet or the legs, and we can feel it going at a more
or less normal pace, just feeling it stepping, stepping, stepping.
If we continue in the walking practice for a while, we can slow down a bit so we can feel
more subtleties in the movement.
And it really is feeling the sensations of the movement.
And this is a progression, you know, at first for people who are just beginning,
maybe it's just feeling the movement itself,
the feeling of lifting the foot and placing it.
And that's where we're aware of. But as we settle into that,
then we begin to feel the actual sensations in the movement,
the lightness, the heaviness, the vibration, stiffness, the pressure.
All of those sensations which let us know that we're moving.
So that's dropping in in a slightly deeper way.
And that's really where we want to head,
to be feeling the sensations of each movement, each touch.
And this is one of the things I call my rapassana mantras,
just these little reminders.
It's like an inner coach.
So in walking, and a very helpful inner coach
is simply each step, each step.
Because if we have the idea, okay, I'm going to be mindful and feel the movement of the
next 10 steps, that's probably too much for our attention span, we're culturally have a tension deficit disorder. So we have to work within
our capacity. I think everyone has the capacity to feel the movement and sensations of one step,
just moving and touching. And then again, moving and touching, Moving and touching. So just to have that in my each step.
So then it becomes quite effortless and easeful and enjoyable.
Because we're really in our bodies.
We're embodied.
And that's very different than our usual mode of being in the world.
One little literary reference here.
It's aligned by James Joyce James Joyce describing one of his
characters, he says, Mr. Duffy lived a short distance from his body. But in some way, we are all Mr.
Duffy. You know, we're so into our heads about what we're doing and what we need to be doing. And this gets translated
a lot into the experience and the feeling of rushing. Now how often through the day, we're
rushing and we can rush at any speed. We can rush moving quickly. We can have that feeling
of rushing moving slowly, but it's that toppling forward we're ahead of ourselves. That's one of the reasons I I love
this foundation of mindfulness. The mindfulness of the body just brings us back
into the body instead of that toppling forward or leaning forward. Yes so
that's brief description of the walking practice. It's not complicated. It's
helpful for people for the formal
practice to find a path maybe 10 or 20 steps in length. You know, someone is going back and forth.
But the more we practice in that way, what I found is that mindfulness of the walking
and the movement really over time becomes the default setting.
And so now, whenever I'm walking any place, it just feels so natural to feel the movement,
to feel the touch.
Without effort, it's just, it's something that happens when it's well-practiced.
You get better at remembering.
Exactly.
And until it's just there.
You know, it's like riding a bike, you know, once you have the
skill, you don't have to keep relearning.
Of course, it can take a while to really develop the skill to that extent, but it definitely
happens.
I've seen it in my own experience.
Just to put a fine point on it for people who've never done walking meditation before,
you can find a patch of land or a real estate
within your abode.
Maybe it's whatever you've got,
but it doesn't need to be much.
It can be 10, 20 feet, as you said.
And I believe you said, and then you can walk,
in my experience and opinion,
there are at least two ways to do this,
but probably way more.
You can walk very slowly and maybe even make a little note of lift, move, place, lift,
move, place or not.
Maybe you don't need the mental note, maybe you don't like that, but you're just walking
very slowly.
It can be extremely slow, painfully slow, comically slow.
If you go to a meditation retreat, which some listeners probably haven't, but it looks, and I believe I've said this publicly before,
when you look at a bunch of people doing walking meditation,
it looks like the population of some sort of asylum
have been disproaged out of a bus
onto the property of the retreat center.
And it's very strange.
Zombies, yes, whatever unflattering metaphor you want to use. And yet, it's very powerful. I would, yes, whatever on flattering metaphor you want to use.
And yet it's very powerful.
I would also say that I personally have never liked that very slow walking.
I actually like to walk something closer to a gentle stroll.
It doesn't resonate so much for me to get super focused on the lift move place. It's more just letting the mindfulness
wash through the body as it's moving along.
I don't know if that makes me a bad meditator,
but that works for me.
So let me just refine that a little bit.
This is the opposite of a gold star,
if anybody's listening close,
just pointing that out.
So within a walking session, it's possible actually to combine it all. And it's often very helpful
for people to start out at a more normal pace, you know, just stepping, stepping or left, right.
Whether one uses the note or not. And then there can be a gradual slowing down so it feels less forced. Because
as we're becoming more mindful at just a normal pace, then at a certain point, just to become
aware of it in two parts, just the lifting and placing and lifting and placing. And then maybe
just for the last 10 minutes or so of a session to experiment to see what is like okay kind of drop
Back even further into what you described you know the very slow of lift
move
place
And then for people who really want to explore that there's also six part working
So I would suggest that people really experiment and find
what works. And at different times, different speeds will both feel natural and be helpful. So I
think it's worth exploring all the different speeds. So then one has all of them in the toolbox.
The important part is the mindfulness. It's not about the speed.
Coming up, Joseph talks about the second and third foundations of mindfulness. Plus,
we talk about one way to counteract the very common tendency to judge ourselves
in meditation after this.
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Okay, so speaking of mindfulness, perhaps let's move on to the second foundation of mindfulness.
Yes, so do you remember what it is?
That's why I'm by pause.
Yeah, I like it.
The second foundation, which is really an important part of the whole teaching,
in understanding how it leads to liberation, how it leads to freedom,
is mindfulness of feelings.
Now, this takes a little clarification because in English,
we use the word feeling to mean a lot of different things.
Feelings can be emotions, it can be just, you know,
I feel hot, I feel cold.
So we use that word in a lot of different ways.
It has a very specific
meaning in the context of Buddhism and just for those who are interested, the polyword
that's used for this very specific kind of feeling is veida, but one doesn't need to
remember that. Generally, in teaching, we generally try to translate Veydna as feeling tone to differentiate
it from emotions, which is another in English, another word, meaning of feelings.
So feeling tone of Veydna refers to the quality in each moment's experience of it being either pleasant, unpleasant or
neutral. So this is a really interesting thing. I think mostly I'm we're all aware of experiencing
pleasant or unpleasant things in our lives, but we probably haven't really noticed, or notice very often, that this feeling tone is arising in every moment of
experience, a sound, a sight, a smell, a taste, a touch, a sensation, different mind states. Each one
arises with a feeling tone. Now becoming mindful of this is so critically important,
becoming mindful of this is so critically important because it's these feeling tones
when we're not being mindful of them.
Condition unwholesome mind states.
Pleasant, when we're not mindful of the pleasant,
it very often conditions
grasping or clinging or wanting or greed or lust, depending on what the object is.
If it's unpleasant and we're not mindful, and I'm sure we're all very familiar with this, it conditions aversion in the mind.
Something painful arises, something unpleasant, we don't like it. You know, we try to push it away. And neutral feeling tone, neither pleasant nor unpleasant,
very often just conditions delusion or ignorance,
because there's nothing much impactful happening
in terms of feeling tone.
We space out, we're not even paying attention to it.
So unless we begin to be mindful of these feeling tones,
we're just continually reconditioning
these unwholesome mind states, you know, of greed, hatred, and delusion.
Mindfulness of them, and this gets very interesting in the practice.
You know, when something pleasant arises and we're focusing on the second foundation,
we might note, oh pleasant,
we're all been to it, we're not pushing away, we're not denying it. We have the full experience
of the pleasantness of it, but in being mindful of it, we're not grasping, we're not clinging,
we're not attached to it. The same thing with unpleasant, when we are just, oh unpleasant unpleasant. We experience
it, but we're not upset by it. You know, it's not conditioning aversion to it or hating
it or wanting to get rid of it. And then on the more subtle level, becoming mindful of
the neutral tone, this has such broad implications. First, that these unholds the mind states of themselves a source of suffering.
What does it feel like when we're caught in the grip of desire and wanting and clinging?
It doesn't feel good.
One way of testing this out for people is this a very simple way of confirming for oneself the suffering of grasping, the suffering of
lusting, even though especially with pleasant things, pleasant vaydena, there is a
certain pleasure associated with it, which is why we're lusting after it. But a very
interesting exercise is the next time the mind is caught
up in some lustful fantasy, and it could be lustful for any of the send stores, right? It could
be sexual desire and a whole sexual fantasy, which can be very strong, but it could be for
anything. It could be for a good meal for the next vacation or whatever. So the next time
the mind is caught up in that,
we're really lost in whatever the fantasy is, and then to notice the moment when it passes away,
which it always will, because everything is impermanent. So at a certain point it's going to pass away,
and right in that moment, if one can remember, notice the difference in the quality of your
experience of when you were lost in the fantasy, and when the fantasy is gone and the
mind has come back to awareness. For me, it always feels like I've just been let out of
the grip of something. So even though in the midst of it, I thought it was all pleasant,
but in the release from it, the sense of openness and spaciousness and freedom is so apparent.
So it's just a very immediate way of testing all this for oneself. And this is so crucial to the whole teaching of the Buddha.
He never said you have to believe this. He always, with all of his teachings,
said, check it out. See for yourself whether this is true, whether it's helpful,
whether it leads to let's suffer in. And so with everything we're talking about today,
again, the suggestion is just try it, try it for yourself and see. So this is the
basic framework of mindfulness of feeling. It goes into other more subtleties. And for those who
are interested, I'm going to give a little plug for my book now. Yeah, I'm glad you are because
you go very deep on this in the book. Yeah, several times. And so this last book, mindfulness, a practical guy to
awakening, it's a in-depth discussion of this whole
discourse. And it goes into a lot of detail on each of the
foundations. So we're kind of skimming the surface in a certain
way, but people who find some interest might look at the book
and you'll see many more subtleties involved.
It's a great book. And like I said, I've read it many, many times and so I left many,
many notes all over the various pages. So I'm glad you gave that plug. Let me just stay with
Vadenov for just a second. If people are interested in doing a specific meditation practice, a
formal meditation practice, where they learn to get better at seeing pleasant, unpleasant,
neutral. Do you have any recommendations there?
There are two ways that come to mind. One is simply to wait four times when the pleasantness or unpleasantness is particularly strong. If you're feeling some pain in the body,
so the sensation itself is mindfulness of the body. But the unpleasantness of it,
the painfulness of it, that's Vedna, that's the feeling tone. So at that time, it's just
very obvious. And at those times, to really focus or to have the intention to take interest
and be exploring, what is the actual experience of unpleasantness.
And so we bring kind of inquiry to this experience of Venn,
oh, this pain, painfulness or unpleasantness feels like we're really sensitizing ourselves
to what it means, what the Venn is referring to.
And at those times when it's strong, it's not hard to do. We can feel like quality of it being painful. And likewise, with pleasant
self as I'll just give you an example of actually, this is leading to a whole story which elaborates
on kind of some of the subtleties of being mindful of feeling tone. So this goes back quite
a few years. I had gone on a week vacation to the Caribbean,
and I was just on this beautiful Caribbean island. It was really beautiful. And it's like
everything was pleasant. Pleasant sight and pleasant sound and the soft breezes. And it's like
it was just pleasant. It was so noticeable to me for a little time, oh, pleasant, pleasant, pleasant.
So there are times when the pleasantness is just so obvious that it's worth paying attention
to its quality at that time. Okay. So then this is the rest of the story. So I was down there
in January, spent my week in this pleasure realm, and then Came back to Barry, Massachusetts in January
It was freezing. We went a cold spell. I don't know. It was like 20 below zero or something
You know with icy wind and painful painful painful
You know the contrast was so obvious, but then I discovered something
So interesting about my mind. As I was being mindful,
both of the pleasant and the unpleasant, I realized that in a very fundamental way, when I was being
mindful, the awareness didn't care. Pleasant, unpleasant, The function of awareness is simply to know. Oh, knowing pleasant,
knowing unpleasant. And it was so interesting to realize that the pleasure or discomfort
need not have an impact on our sense of well-being as it usually does. You know, we feel good when things are pleasant,
we don't feel so good when things are unpleasant,
but this mindfulness, being mindful of these
range of feeling tone, and then realize,
yeah, awareness just knows.
So that was really liberating to me.
And, you know, sometimes one forget
and gets caught up in a reactivity. Oh, I like
this. I don't like that. But the more we practice it, I think the more we abide in that
sense of ease, regardless, you know, pleasant, unpleasant, because for all of us in our lives,
these are these are part of what the Buddha called the vicistitudes. Just the worldly winds of change, pleasant, unpleasant,
we all experience both in our lives. And how do you want to go through it,
caught up, or with some access to a place where you can experience it all with some equanimity?
A.K.A. mindfulness. Yes. So the second foundation of mindfulness is just a very powerful part of
the whole unfolding. And as I say, a key element in liberating the mind, liberating the mind from
suffering. Close listeners, I have heard these loaded phrases that Joseph has used a couple
times about liberation and freedom, et cetera, et cetera. I'm going to come back to that. We'll
get to it. But let's keep plowing through the list of the four foundations of mindfulness. Let's do number three,
which of course I've forgotten.
Dan, there are only four. I know. Don't rub it in.
That's okay. Until I started teaching, you know, when I first was getting interested in Buddhism, I was
still in the Peace Corps.
This goes back 50 years.
And I was reading about the eightfold path.
I couldn't remember all those eight steps.
I had to give talks on it before I could actually remember them all.
So I am based on it.
Okay.
So the third one is mindfulness of the mind.
And again, there are different aspects to it,
but the most basic one, the Buddha is saying, be mindful when the mind is filled with lust,
and when it's not filled with lust. And what concepts are agreed for lust, but in the text,
it's often translated as lust. Be mindful when anger is present, and when it's not present.
Be mindful when delusion is present, when we're just
spaced out or dull.
Be mindful when it's not.
So there's a lot to this, because first the Buddha is pointing out
the importance of discerning those mind states that in Buddhist
jargon are called skillful, or wholesome, or beneficial, and those mind states which are not.
So this is a fundamental aspect of wisdom, we have to begin to understand what in our minds, what's arising
that becomes the cause of suffering both in the present and in the future, and what
mind states lead to greater happiness and greater freedom.
And so this foundation of mindfulness is the beginning, mindfulness of the mind.
We begin to discern the difference between the beneficial and harmful in terms of our
own mind states.
There's a subtle point here which I think is worth mentioning.
Sometimes people as they are particularly in the beginning, as they're
first beginning the practice and we become aware of the craziness of our minds. They're
just all over the place with lots of different wholesome and unwholesome and all mixed together. But we first begin to see the different unwholesome,
our unskillful patterns in the mind,
like we or anger, hatred, delusion.
It's an easy step to go from recognizing,
oh, this is an unwholesome state,
to then thinking, I'm such a bad person for having it
or for a to arise.
And I don't know that's a particular Western psychology I'm such a bad person for having it or for a two-erise.
And I don't know that's a particular Western psychology or not, but it's pretty common.
And so unless we're aware of that tendency, it can easily lead to self-judgment.
And very commonly, as people are reporting their meditative experience. Very commonly people will talk about the endless self judgements that are
arising. You know, I can't do this. It's too hard. I'm such a terrible person.
And I went through this myself in my early years of practice. I would be going
to speak with my teacher, I'm an injury and I was seeing all these unholds and
parts of my mind, telling him what a, and I was seeing all these unholds and parts of my mind, telling
him what a bad person I was, and basically he just laughed, not in a demeaning way, but
just why are you taking this so seriously? It's not personal. Right. So we just want to be careful,
mindfulness does not mean judging. Mindfulness means just the awareness something
is present or it's not present. And with that balance of mindfulness without self-judgment,
then it allows us to just make wise choices with the wholesome beneficial quality. Oh, these
are worth cultivating. With the unwholesome of the ones that cost suffering was
Oh no, these I can practice letting go of or abandoning
So this mindfulness of the mind when we're being mindful rather than self-judgmental
It really is the whole basis for the cultivation of
wholesome states which that's really another way of saying
those qualities of mind which bring happiness, which bring peace. So this is all part of mindfulness
of the mind. A way of practicing it would be either just to wait until it become obvious,
just to wait until they become obvious, when we're really caught up in lost or greed,
or caught up in aversion,
and then we're feeling that reactivity in the mind.
And so when we are aware that it's predominant,
we focus our attention on settling back
and noting, slash noticing,
oh, greed is present. My anger is present.
At other times, when something may not be predominant, there's one Burmese teacher who,
his name is Saita Otejaneer, who has a very, I think, useful inner coaching phrase for just this.
He'll suggest people just intermittently ask, well, well right now what's the attitude in my mind?
Right, so even if it's not so predominant and to be unavoidable, but just even in more ordinary
mindsets to ask that question, it begins to train us in paying attention to the quality of our minds.
What's the attitude? I'll give an example of just how effective that can be.
So one time I was just sitting and meditating
and feeling my breath.
And though it was just very simple, very ordinary, nothing special was happening
and then I remembered this question,
okay, I'm just feeling the, what's the attitude in my mind?
And it was so interesting just by asking the question, I felt my mind relax back from a
wanting that I didn't even know was there.
As I was feeling the breath, unbeknownst to me at the time, there's just some subtle wanting of more concentration
or more calm or something, you know, that leaning into what's the attitude? And I felt my mind
relax back. So one less aspect of mindfulness of the mind, it's not only noticing when greed or anger, hatred, delusion are present, it's also
noticing when they're not present.
What's the mind like?
When it's free of desire, free of anger, free of delusion.
And this is something that often people pass over.
You know, we tend to emphasize what we might call the negative aspects or the
painful aspects.
And then we forget to really be mindful when the mind isn't a good place.
With wholesome qualities, they have to be tended to as well.
We need to become mindful of them as well.
And by being mindful of the positive mind states, you're reinforcing them.
Yes, you're strengthening them. And again, mindfulness means being aware of them and really
experiencing them without attachment. So feelings like love or generosity or calm or concentration
or calm or concentration, or all of the skillful states of mind, we want to be mindful, include them in our field of mindfulness, so that we are also learning that they too are impermanent.
They're wholesome, but we don't want to be attached to them because they also are rising and
passing away. Coming up, we hit the fourth foundation of mindfulness. Plus, Joseph talks about the
rather grandiose sounding word liberation and how we can all get a taste of it right after this.
You invoke the name of Saida Utejanea the Burmese meditation teacher as you know,
because your my teacher, Tejanea has been quite influential for me.
I don't never met him, but via our mutual friend, Alexis Santos, another meditation teacher
who teaches in the Tegenea style here in the US, and Alexis and I are buds, and he's also
taught a few retreats that I've sat. And Tegenea uses a series of questions and phrases that
students drop into their mind while they're practicing, including what's the attitude in the mind. treats that I've sat. And so TGNA uses a series of questions and phrases that students
drop into their mind while they're practicing, including what's the attitude in the mind.
But there's another one that strikes me as very much relevant to this third foundation
of mindfulness, the mindfulness of mind, which is, and this is the little phrase that
TGNA uses is, this is nature. You described very eloquently earlier
this common thing that happens in the mind,
at least in the west of, we notice a thought might be
maybe just like a quick little burst of bigotry.
We go right to a story about what kind of person we are,
often mindlessly, I mean always mindlessly,
but it's very nature these stories are mindless and
it's reinforcing this idea that there is somebody here at all and in the worst possible way. And
just to say to yourself once and well, this is nature, it cuts right through that. This isn't you,
this isn't your little creation. This is the universe
that happening right here in your mind. And that's actually, it's an awe-inspiring thing
to contemplate. And it's very practical because it gets you out of the stories that can
basically ruin your life.
Yes. Yes. Now, I'm glad you brought that point up because in a way that phrase, this is nature
is a friendlier expression than saying it's all impersonal. It means the same thing, right?
But often people hear, oh, it's all impersonal and they think it implies some kind of withdrawal or detachment or it may not inspire people so much.
But to say this is nature, which is really the same thing,
but I think that phrase is very revealing and appealing and helpful.
I just got to know I'm back in gold star territory.
Let's go to the fourth foundation of mindfulness, which I think I
might remember is this mindfulness of the Dhammas? Yeah, good. You actually, Dan, you have
so many gold stars, you're going to need a whole wall for them. Well, now you're reinforcing
a whole story. So, yes, so this is a very interesting category.
This fourth foundation.
So it's all often it's not even translated usually in English.
It's just called mindfulness of dormant.
So the definition of that, somebody translated it as categories of experience.
And so I'll explain it a little bit.
This foundation of mindfulness just includes
a lot of different aspects of the teachings.
For example, it includes being mindful of the hindrances,
being mindful of the factors of enlightenment,
being mindful of the four noble truths.
So it's just taking these broad categories
and gives instruction for being with each one of them.
Now it's interesting because, you know,
instead be mindful of the hindrances,
didn't we do that with the third foundation?
You know, mindfulness of greed, mindfulness of anger.
Well, in the fourth foundation, it's just understanding how
these minds states function. So it's not only being mindful of them, but understanding of
a function as hindering concentration. That's why they're called hindrances or the factors
of enlightenment, you know, or the wholesome factors of mind, which also we experienced in the third foundation
mindfulness of mind, but we're understanding, yes, they function as the vehicle for awakening
or liberation.
And then, of course, all of this is laid out very clearly in all of the teachings about
the four noble truths, which is also included in this fourth foundation.
So it's quite comprehensive, this aspect of the discourse.
So it's kind of a list of lists?
Yeah, yes.
But again, just to remind people,
the purpose of it is not simply to memorize lists.
The purpose is to actually take each one and see how they apply
to our own experience. Because each one is pointing to something, right? They're pointing to
something crucial in understanding ourselves. So we don't want to just know, oh, the 500's,
I know what they are. You know, and we'd rattle off the list of five and then forget about it.
It's really to take the list and to explore for oneself what they're pointing to in our
own experience.
And this is what just reveals so much about our lives and the nature of our experience
and what creates suffering and what leads to happiness. So the list is just a convenient way of systematizing all this.
I'm still not quite confident that I fully understand this. And obviously there's so much to
the fourth foundation of mindfulness because all of these lists contained within it are
huge areas of study in and of themselves, the four noble truths, the seven factors of enlightenment, the five entrances, et cetera, et cetera.
So let's maybe like take a small bite here and what's a practice that those of us who are in the shallow end of the pool could take out of the fourth foundation of mindfulness and do in our lives. Okay, so a couple of things come to mind.
Let's just take, for example, the list of the seven factors of awakening.
So in this, the Buddha is describing seven mental qualities,
which, when well cultivated, and matured,
result in liberation, result in enlightenment.
So that these are important qualities to know.
Things like mindfulness and energy and investigation and rapture and calm and concentration and equanimity.
So what's interesting about applying this is first just to begin to recognize each of these in ourselves. And then we can begin to see which ones are stronger in us,
which one needs really more development.
And of course, they'll all need development, to some extent.
But, you know, we may find ourselves more in tune with one or the other.
And so then we could just really explore those that are less familiar to us.
Just as an example, so calm is one of the factors of enlightenment. So then we could just really explore those that are less familiar to us.
Just as an example, so calm is one of the factors of enlightenment.
And it's one of the ones that I think is often overlooked.
It's not as jazzy as rapture, or concentration or wisdom.
Calm is kind of prosaic, but it actually is not the feeling of calm, which actually many people
never experience. You know, we live in such a speedy culture, and we're so caught up in
our lives. It's quite remarkable through the practice of mindfulness. There are times when
There are times when we really experience what calm means, calm in the mind, calm in the body, and it is delightfully restful.
So we're learning, we learn about, oh, what this is, and then learn how to practice, you
know, developing and not only in meditation, but in our lives. So one aspect
is just learning about what each of these seven qualities are, even getting just the first
taste of them. Then one of the interesting things here is that these seven have to be in balance
because three of them are energy arousing and three of them are energy tranquilizing.
Right. And so as we learn about them, then we see, okay, what's needed now, you know, is
there too much excitement. So then we need to emphasize the calm, the concentration,
the equanimity. If we're too much on that side, if we're too calm, you know, going to dullness,
If we're too much on that side, if we're too calm, you know, going to dullness, then we need to arouse the other factors of investigation and energy and rapture. Now what's interesting is is the key to so much.
Not only does it bring forth all these qualities, but it also over time brings them into balance.
Just one other kind of very quick teaching in this fourth foundation in terms of the four
noble truths of, you know, the truth of Dukar, which is sometimes translated as suffering, but
unreliability, unsatisfactoriness, the cause of it, the end of it, and the noble eightfold
path, which is the way to the end.
So I just want to highlight one little aspect of that, which in a way is so obvious when
we think about it, but we rarely think about it. So one aspect of what causes suffering
is attachment to anything because all experiences are arising and passing. Everything is impermanent,
everything is in flow. When we're attached to that, which in its nature changes, we suffer.
Somebody once called it rope burn.
You know, if you're holding on tightly to a rope and somebody's pulling the rope through your hands,
you get rope burn.
Well, the somebody pulling it through your hands is the truth of impermanence.
It's not staying stable, it's not lasting.
But if we're holding on tight to what is impermanence. It's not staying stable, it's not lasting. But if we're holding on tight
to what is impermanent, we suffer. And this doesn't take so much to understand,
it's certainly conceptually. But we really want to see this for ourselves and how the letting go,
then, brings us to a place of ease. So that's a very quick summary of the four
novel truths, but I think it points to the essential element of what causes suffering and how we can
be free. Okay, so you just use that word again free, and you've talked throughout about liberation,
freedom, enlightenment. In the remaining time, we're not going to be able to do a comprehensive
discourse on the subject, but I've been torturing you on this issue for a long time, we're not going to be able to do a comprehensive discourse on the subject,
but I've been torturing you on this issue for a long time, which is so much of Buddhism is just
so natural and it's common sense. I've heard it referred to as advanced common sense, you know.
And then upended on top of all of these incredibly practical, so incisive mental exercises and ways to live and ways to
view the world. Appended to it is this notion of you can have freedom, liberation, awakening,
enlightenment, so many words. So how are those of us who are new to this or not new to it, but
haven't tasted what's apparently on offer as dessert here? What are we to make of that claim?
and tasted what's apparently on offer as dessert here, what are we to make of that claim?
Yeah, so it actually is pretty simple.
And I think people can have a taste of it
even before the full realization of it
because the Buddha talked of liberation
in one really simple way,
the mind that is free of greed and hatred and delusion,
you know, where these qualities have been uprooted from the mind.
Enlightenment really refers to the uprooting of these qualities of mind that cause a suffer,
but even before they're uprooted, right, we have many moments of the mind that is free of you know moments free of greed and free of anger free of hatred
Which we talked about earlier you know in terms of mindfulness of the mind and so this gives us a taste of
What liberation is about so it's not just some metaphysical abstraction
we're actually
We're actually tasting the mind that is free, even for a short period of time,
of those qualities that cause suffering.
And the Buddha described all of his teachings condensed it into one very simple phrase.
He said, all that he teaches is suffering and the end of suffering.
That encapsulates the whole nature of the teachings
and what it's about. And so we could say enlightenment is really the complete end of suffering,
but even before that we have many moments when the mind is free of suffering because the
suffering is all connected
to the unholstent states of mind.
So, help point us to how we would know if we're in a moment
where there is no greed or lust,
or hatred, or aversion,
or delusion, or ignorance about what's happening right now. Well, I think just what we talked about before in asking that question, just whether it's
in formal meditation session or just throughout the day, just asking that probing question,
well, what's the attitude in my mind right now?
Somebody described it as the unholds of states as pulling in which is greed pushing away
which is a version and running around in circles which is delusion
So when we're asking the question, what's the attitude in the mind?
Like I did when I was just watching the breath. I
Realized that I was trying to pull something in. You know, there was greed for more calm.
Or, you know, if we're working with some pain and we ask the question, what's the attitude?
And we notice, oh, it's pushing away.
I don't like this.
I want it to go away.
So then we know there's a version present.
If we're just going running around in circles in our minds,
we know it's delusion. And when those are not there, like in that moment, when I let go of that
leaning in and just settled back in just a moment of breathing, not wanting anything.
So that's a moment free of that. And we can feel that for ourselves.
that's a moment free of that, and we can feel that for ourselves.
It's the same going back to an earlier suggestion about noticing times when the mind is caught up in some lustful fantasy for anything, and then noticing the moment
when it ends. So right there is a very powerful way of seeing the difference, mind filled with lust, free of lust.
And the difference in the experience is so vivid and so apparent.
And I love that because it makes all of this practical.
This is not theoretical.
We can test it for ourselves in our own experience.
There's one other exercise.
This is one that I find very interesting, which highlights when there's delusion in the moment or non-delusion.
Because that's the one that's perhaps the hardest to distinguish, you know, agreed or anger whether it's present or not.
With the little practice we can get pretty good at noticing that.
So one practice which I started doing which I found so revealing and so interesting
was to take a short period of time and not even in formal meditation. Just I was doing this when
I was just going for a walk. And I set the intention to really watch
out for the very quickly passing thoughts that went through my mind. So they weren't big,
they weren't dramatic, they weren't problematic. They were just these ordinary quick thoughts,
maybe less than 10 seconds or 15 seconds. And what I saw was first how frequent they are.
15 seconds. And what I saw was first how frequent they are. And mostly there are noticed because they don't stand out in any particular way. You know, they're just
this ordinary mundane kind of thoughts. So the first thing I noticed was there are
a lot of them. You know, that that normally I'm not even paying attention to. And then
the second thing I noticed was for the time that I was lost in them,
which might be very brief, you know, maybe 10 seconds or 15 seconds, for that time,
it was like being in a dream state, right? I was not aware in that moment that I was thinking,
and I was not aware of anything else. I was just submerged in the mundane content of whatever the thought was. So it's
like just dropping into a dream state and then 15 seconds later waking up from it and watching
this difference between being in a dream state and being awake. It was like a clear recognition
of going from delusion to wisdom,
from being asleep to being awake,
so that can give a very meaningful experience
of what delusion and wakefulness mean, right?
In this very ordinary activity of our minds,
I have found this really interesting to observe.
And it points to one more thing that I think would be a helpful reminder for people, particularly
in their formal meditation practice, because we get lost and thought a lot.
And then we come back to the breath or whatever we're attending to.
And very often there will be a judgment, and maybe a quick loss to gain.
You know, and then we either beat ourselves up for it or not, but there's a kind of self-judgment there.
So instead of emphasizing, the having been lost, every time we're lost and then come out from being lost, why not emphasize, oh, awake
again and emphasize the experience of the wakefulness rather than the judgment about having been lost.
So then we're really inspiring ourselves over and over. Oh, good, awake again, awake again,
awake again. And so it's really keying us into
what wakefulness is about and what it feels like and the value of it. So that's just I think
could be a really helpful exercise to do. Yeah, you said this to me. And the last retreat I was on
and I've been doing it ever since. It's extremely helpful. And it does counteract this tendency that
we've discussed several
times during the course of this discussion to judge ourselves and criticize ourselves.
Justin closing just to say thank you for coming on. It's always so fun and it's always great
to have you on even when you mock me, which I know is straight out of the Dharma.
Listen now I talked about your wall of gold stars, Dan.
Yeah, but I think there were some sarcasm.
about your wall of gold stars, Dan. Yeah, but I think there were some sarcasm.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, genuinely, genuinely.
It's been a pleasure.
It's always fun to talk about the drama with you.
Likewise, likewise.
Thanks again to Joseph Love having him on the show.
Thank you as well to everybody who worked so incredibly hard to make this show a reality,
two and a half times a week.
They include Gabrielle Zuckerman, DJ Cashmere, Justin,
Davey Lauren Smith.
Our senior producer is Marissa Schneiderman,
Kimmy Regler is our managing producer,
and our executive producer is Jen Poient,
scoring and mixing by Peter Bonaventure of Ultraviolet Audio.
We'll see you all on Wednesday for a brand new episode with a great
Dharma teacher who's making her second appearance on the show,
Mushim Ikeida.
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