Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - Three Strategies for Getting Over Yourself | Joseph Goldstein
Episode Date: July 19, 2023Every year, Joseph Goldstein does a three month silent meditation retreat by himself at his home in Massachusetts. In this conversation you're about to hear, Joseph had just emerged from one ...such retreat with a bunch of thoughts on what are called the three proliferating tendencies or three papañca to use the ancient Pali term. These are three ways in which we perpetuate an unhealthy sense of self. Joseph has explained that you can think about the process of going deeper in meditation as a process of lightening up or getting less self-centered. You're about to get a masterclass in doing just that. For the uninitiated, Joseph is one of the co-founders of the Insight Meditation Society in Barre, Massachusetts. His co-founders are two other meditation titans, Sharon Salzberg and Jack Kornfield. Joseph has been a teacher at IMS since it was founded in the seventies and he continues to be the resident guiding teacher there. In this episode we talk about:The framework for understanding the three proliferating tendencies; the basic building blocks of our experience in the worldSix things that make up what the Buddha called “the all” What non-self means and why it's essential to the Buddhist teaching of liberationThe two levels of truth: conventional and ultimateWhy language is so important in conditioning how we experience things How the three proliferating tendencies provide a very practical guide to understanding how we manufacture our own sufferingFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/tph/podcast-episode/joseph-goldstein-364-rerunSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This is the 10% happier podcast. I'm Dan Harris.
Hello everybody, today on the show we've got some strategies for getting over yourself.
This is part two of our best of Joseph Goldstein series
that we're running this week.
Joseph is a fan favorite on this show.
He's also a personal favorite of mine,
given that he's been my meditation teacher
for more than a decade.
He's also a great friend.
Every year, Joseph does a three month silent meditation retreat
by himself at his home in Massachusetts.
In this conversation you're about to hear,
Joseph had just emerged from one such retreat,
with a bunch of thoughts on what are called
the three proliferating tendencies,
or three propuncias,
to use the ancient term in the language of Polly.
These are three ways in which we perpetuate a sense of self.
And I'm not talking to hear about a healthy sense of self,
but an unhealthy sense of self,
kind of like the Beatles sang about in that song,
I, Me, Mine, as Joseph has explained to me and many other people before, you can think about the
process of going deeper in meditation as a process of lightening up or getting less self-centered.
And so you're about to get a masterclass in doing just that. For the uninitiated, Joseph is
one of the co-founders of the Insight Meditation Society and Barry Mestchusitz
His co-founders are two other meditation titans Sharon Salisberg and Jack Cornfield
Since IMS was founded thousands of people from around the world have come through to learn about mindfulness from many many teachers
Many leaders in the field IMS is an incredible place so many amazing offerings and it's beautiful
We'll put a link to their website in the show notes if you want to go check it out, which
I urge you to do.
Anyway, Joseph has been a teacher at IMS since the place was founded in the 70s.
He continues to be the resident guiding teacher there.
He's also a founding teacher over on our companion meditation app.
He helped us create our flagship courses for learning the basics of meditation, as well
as some advanced courses on compassion and also stress.
In this conversation, we talked about the framework for understanding the three proliferating
tendencies, the basic building blocks of our experience in the world, six things that
make up what the Buddha called the all.
I love that expression, the all.
What non-self means and why it's essential to the Buddhist teaching of liberation,
the two levels of truth, conventional, and ultimate.
This is actually incredibly important to understand.
Why language is so important in conditioning how we experience things,
and how the three proliferating tendencies provide a very practical guide
to understanding how we manufacture our own suffering.
Have you been considering starting or restarting your meditation practice?
Well, in the words of highway billboards across America, if you're looking for a sign,
this is it. To help you get started, we're offering subscriptions at a 40% discount until September
3rd. Of course, nothing is permanent. So get this deal before it ends by going to 10% dot com slash 40. That's 10% one word all spelled out dot com slash 40 for 40% off your
subscription. Hello, Joseph. Hi, Dan. Thanks for coming back on the show.
I haven't luckily nothing I've done in the last, uh, whatever 12 months as you've
been on the show has sufficiently alienated due to that you've, uh, banned me for life.
No, it's a pleasure to be here, Dan. So I had the pleasure of watching some talks that you
had given recently where you were talking about what are known as the three proliferating factors. I think I have that right. Am I using
the terminology correctly? Yeah, proliferating tendencies. Yeah. Well, what do you mean by that?
And then what are they? Okay. So first, just out of general interest, I just want to mention
the poly word for that proliferating tendency, poly is the language of the ancient Buddhist
texts, because it's one of those terms that comes up frequently, even in our modern discourse
on the teachings. So just to familiarize, you know, our listeners to that term, it's
papancha. And I like the poly because it's sort of is Anamana Pya. It sort of sounds like what it is, Papantra.
It's just the mind proliferating and elaborating
from the bare elements of our experience,
from the building blocks of our experience,
we then build whole worlds,
and then get enmeshed in one way or another in those worlds.
And so there are three main tendencies,
which lead us in that direction.
It's very helpful to become aware of them
to distinguish between them
and to learn how to free ourselves from them.
If not completely, at least to have more wisdom
in relating to them when we see them arising.
So that's basically what Papandcho
of this proliferating tendencies of mind.
Just it expands in quite a powerful way
just the complexity of our lives,
particularly with regard to how sufferings created and how we can become a little more free.
When I've used the word historically, I must be using the Sanskrit version
because I have often said proponcha.
It sounds like that difference between polyine and Sanskrit, which are very
close. I love the term proponsha or poponsha, however you want to pronounce it or spell
it. And I've heard it translated as the imperialistic tendency of mind in the end that you, you
take a data point from the present moment, like you stub your toe and you colonize the
future with this whole like,
why am I always the guy who stubs his toe? You know, this is going to hurt forever.
And what you're talking about here are these three sort of runaway trains of
proponsha that are really three of the main contributors to how we suffer as humans.
Yeah, I liked your description up.
And we need to stop being imperialists in our own minds
to curb those tendencies.
So let's go through the tendencies.
Yeah, should we take them one at a time?
The first one is craving.
Maybe before we do that,
just set the large of framework behind it all.
It's expressed in one very succinct teaching of the Buddhas
which he actually gave to his son, Rahulah.
So it has a kind of touching aspect to it
that the Buddha's leading his own son,
you know, on this path of liberation. And there's a whole story behind it where the Buddha is telling
him, everything should be seen with perfect wisdom. This is not mine. This I am not, this is not myself. So not mine, not I, not myself.
Everything should be seen in that light.
And so the propane to the three proliferating tendencies
are connected to the sense of mine, or belonging to me,
or to I am, I am this or that, or to the view of self. So that's the underlying
framework for understanding the proliferating tendencies, not mine, not I, not myself. So the not mine is connected to craving, taking things to belong to me.
So the a million examples of this, we do it all the time. So I'll just give one example from
a meditative practice and I begin to see the freeing aspect of it. You know, if we're doing walking meditation, for example, and we're being pretty mindful
of the movement in the touch, it would be quite common to have,
one that almost say a subliminal or a very faint overlay of a sense of leg.
You know, we're walking leg or foot. overlay of a sense of leg.
You know, we're walking leg or foot.
So even if we're feeling the sensations of the movement
in the touch, it's very commonly a very quiet overlay
would be that sense of, oh, leg, foot.
But actually, we don't feel the foot.
We don't feel the leg. There's no sensation called leg.
We're feeling hardness when we're touching the ground or maybe movement.
So leg is the concept. Once we already have that concept leg, very commonly, we would think of it as my leg.
So right there, we're getting involved in, this belongs to me. This is mine.
And when it's mine, we have all kinds of wanting or cravings about it. I want whatever's mind to be this way or that way,
or not to change, or all kinds of things come out of that belief that things belong to me. So this
is a very simple example just in walking, but just imagine how many times this plays
out in one's life.
What's wrong with claiming my own leg as mine?
What's wrong with it is that it's not your living in delusion.
Once again, then. So for example, if we really deeply embedded in that
both view and sense of it being mine, then there are a couple of things. One is we're going to suffer when things
happen to it that we don't want it to happen. Let's leave the example of the leg, but we can just
take the whole body, you know, taking the body to be mine, to be longing to me. Well, the more attached we are to that view, how do we feel as the body ages?
As it gets sick, as it dies, that's going to create a lot of suffering.
Whereas if we see the body, you know, just the physical elements, which make up the body
as being just an aspect of nature. It's non-personal. It's just these physical
elements in certain configuration, fulfilling their functions, subject to the laws of impermanence
and change. When we see it in that way, we were not claiming it to be mine, then as it goes through the inevitable changes. This is not like it
happens to some people and not to others. All of our bodies go through this process.
Then we're really at ease. We're in harmony with nature rather than creating a papancha, creating a mental proliferation,
which adds to the basic experience of what's happening, this idea, this is mine.
And you can see that when that's strong, then it leads to a lot of craving of how we would like the body to be.
And just how much of our society is built on advertising things
that appeal to our sense of what we would like our bodies to be like.
But because we take it to be me, we take them to be self, we take it to be mine.
So it has a lot of consequences, you know, as we play out our lives.
So craving is one of these Papancho slash Papancho. Let's just say Papancho let's use the polish. Okay, let's just do what Joseph says as usual.
So cravings.
There's no craving in that.
So that's craving. The next is conceit.
Yeah.
So this is really interesting.
First, it's to understand that in the Buddhist terminology,
conceit means something a little different than our usual understanding of what
it means in English. Because in English, generally, we use that word to mean a very inflated
sense of oneself. So, one is conceded. The poly word for conceded is Manna, M-A-N-A.
So in this Buddhist usage of that word,
and how it's been translated in English as conceded,
is much broader.
Most basically, it refers to this deeply,
deeply felt sense of I am.
It's just the I amness, which manifests in a few different ways.
It can manifest I am in comparison to other people.
So I'm better than, I'm worse worse than I'm equal to just some comparing function
is all considered conceit because even when it's in a negative way, you know, oh, I'm not as good
as that person, that's still revolving around that I am sense. So that's one way the conceit manifests in comparing. And it would be interesting to notice
not only the obvious times when that's happening, you know, where it's really very, very clear in our
minds. But my sense is that it happens a lot often under the radar.
And it might be interesting just to notice
when we're interacting with people,
particularly people maybe that we're,
you know, don't know that well,
or perhaps a meeting for the first time,
just to see if there's any undercurrent
in that meeting of comparing, maybe comparing personality or comparing intelligence
or comparing looks or whatever, you know, kind of going on in the background that I think is often
unnoticed, but still exerting its influence on our minds. So that's one aspect of conceit, just this comparing.
And the other aspect is the I am over time.
So when we're thinking of how I was in the past,
or how I am in the future, in the present, or how I will be in the future. So that also is an
expression of conceit. So it's pretty pervasive, and it's a contraction. As soon as we
become identified with that proliferation in the mind, the I aming. It's not a pleasant state,
it's not a quality of happiness.
It just feels like this contraction of our being.
I think there are many people listening to the show
who are familiar with basic Buddhist concepts
who will completely understand what you're talking about,
but there may be others who are new to this
and are thinking, what is this guy talking about?
What do you mean I am as a cause of pain?
Of course I am.
I look in the mirror and I see me.
So why is that a problem?
So first, in order to kind of come to some
fuller understanding of all this.
I think it's helpful to talk about the basic building blocks of our experience, because
then the proliferation will become more apparent.
So what are the basic building blocks of how we experience ourselves in the world?
Well, it's quite a measuring because it comes down to some very simple things.
And the Buddha talked about this. He gave one discourse, which he called the all. So he described the all, which is everything, in six phrases. So just that's pretty
amazing. Okay, so what is the all? What is the all? The eye, invisible sound, the nose and smell, the tongue and taste, the body and sensations and
the mind and mind objects, thoughts, emotions, images.
So there's just these six things.
Sight sounds, smell, taste, touch and objects of mind.
And the Buddha challenged people, does anybody experience anything outside of these six things?
So I find this quite amazing, you know, because very often we think our lives are so complicated and, you know, they're such confusion. But really, all that's ever happening is one of these six things.
So in some way I see it as like our lives, everybody's lives.
It's like a six piece chamber orchestra that's playing the music of our lives.
So what makes the music either harmonious and beautiful or
discordant on not the first five, you know, the sights
sound smell, taste, or touch, there's no problem in any of them.
Some are pleasant, some are unpleasant, but that's all fine.
The complexity and the confusion and the suffering comes in our mental response to these six things,
how we're relating to them.
And the Buddha pointed out those ways of relating that cause suffering and those ways of relating to these six very simple things
in ways that create peace, create happiness for us. So the point in talking about I am, is an important doorway into freeing ourselves from a lot of suffering.
So I just want to read something.
Grasping and cherishing, that which does not exist, is the center of all our suffering. So we have created this sense of self, which is the last of the three
Papanchas, the view of self. We've created this view of self and made it into
something substantial in our view. And then we cherish it, and we hold on to it,
and we do all kinds of things. But as it says, we're grasping and cherishing that which does not exist because all it really
exists are those six things of side smells, tastes, sensation in different mind objects.
Are we getting clearer or more confused?
Let me just ask a question.
Let me just channel, you know, the channel you sell.
Yeah, the me of your or just to do a service to some listeners who may be newer to this.
Yes.
Okay, so if it's a six piece chamber orchestra and my sense of myself is, this is a beautiful
phrase from my friend and colleague, the Buddhist teacher, Jay Michelson, if my sense of myself is, this is a beautiful phrase from my friend and colleague, the Buddhist
teacher, Jay Michelson, if my sense of self is born in that blur of these six aspects
of the all and to claim any of it as mine is as an, to quote another Buddhist teacher
who I first heard of through you, If to claim any of it as mine
is a misappropriation of public property and causes suffering, where does that leave me? I mean,
because I still, you know, you need to function in the world as me. Yes. Okay. I think before addressing
that specifically, and you may have to remind me again of the question
after I finish this little digression.
I'm getting old then.
I think I just like to spend a minute or two
talking about the view of self or what self means. Because everything we've been talking about the view of self or what self means, because everything we've been
talking about really rests on that understanding or misunderstanding. So the
example I like to give in terms of explaining what non-self means. And this kind of understanding of non-self is absolutely central to the
Buddha's teaching of liberation, of freedom, of great happiness. So it's an essential
point to begin to explore. It's not that easy to understand because it's counterintuitive, you know, just as you said,
what do you mean there's no self? Of course, you know, here I am, and I need that to navigate in the
world. So the example that I'd like to give, especially in these last couple of years, is that of a river.
You know, so we all know what a river is, and it's this body of flowing water.
And there are lots of rivers, and we give the rivers different names.
But is there anything that is a river separate from or different than or independent of the flowing water.
No, river is simply a designation.
River is a designation for that process of water flowing in a particular channel.
So river is not a thing in itself. It's just a word we use to designate that phenomena.
Self is just like river. Self is a designation for this changing process of mind body elements.
Self is a designation for the all, which is in constant change, constant flow,
just like the water that we call a river.
In understanding non-self,
it doesn't mean that something is there,
that suddenly disappears.
You know, and sometimes sometimes people I think have that
that feeling, oh my god, if I really understand no self, you know, what's going to happen? I'll
disappear in a puff of smoke because something. And of course, it's not that at all. It's simply understanding that the word self does not refer to any substantial
meaning of itself. It's just a designation for the flow of changing elements.
Okay, so once we understand that, then the I am, do you know in a river, do you know what an 80 is?
The water is flowing downstream and then it kind of hits some obstacle and part of the
water flows back and it can kind of go around and around and around.
So if one is canoeing or rifting or something and you get caught in an eddy,
you just go around and around until something gets you out of it and you're back in the stream.
So the I am, the I am is the conceit, is like an eddy in the stream, in the flow of our experience.
Eddie in the stream in the flow of our experience. We're going along, going along, and then the mind
of just the flow of that or the mixing metaphors here, the flow of the river or the six piece chamber orchestra just playing the music, you know, it's going along fine. But then we get caught up
fine, but then we get caught up in some mental fabrication. And we get caught either in that comparing mind or lost in past, lost in future, all revolving around something that
actually isn't there, revolving around this mental creation of IAM or self, which, as I just said, is really just a designation
for the flow.
Okay, so then I do remember your question.
Okay, so we're not caught in this Papantra,
you know, of mine or I am or a view of self,
how do we actually navigate? Being this river of changing a flow, how do we navigate in a way
that's skillful? And of course, all of the Buddhist teachings are really about that. He's
about that is offering us a ways of living in this flow of impermanence, of constant change and movement, but in a way that brings about harmony, a way that brings about peace, which is really just
another way of saying, how can we live in harmony with the nature of things, with nature. And so here's where another aspect
of the teachings comes in, which is really important. I mean, this is fundamental.
That our actions, whether it's physical actions, you know, our body or in speech or actions of our mind, that all our actions have consequences.
So they're not happening in isolation. You know, they could say that there are ripple effects
from everything we do. And the Buddha just pointed out what kinds of actions
it out, what kinds of actions bring about suffering to ourselves and others, and what kinds of actions bring about peace for ourselves and others.
So once we learn that, then that's the blueprint or the template for living in the world,
not needing this sense of I amness, the solidification or contraction in order to live effectively and happily.
And in fact, the freer we are from that contraction, the happier we will be.
How can I be held responsible for the consequences of my action if I don't exist.
You think you're going to stump me.
We could get into a little, a little thing here, Dan.
But just in the very way you ask the question, forgive me for saying this, but reflects the delusion of the question. Because how can I take responsibility
for my actions if I don't exist? So in the very first part of the question, you're already
positing the eye. So if it really didn't exist, you wouldn't be positing it in the first
phase. But that having been said, I just had to just had to play with you a little bit. It's much more a question. The consequences of one's actions is that simply a conventional way of saying that the
flow of our lives, the unfolding of our lives, the flow, is happening lawfully. And so the present will condition in one way or another what happens in the future.
The sense of eyes, not at all necessary to understand that actions have consequences.
If there's the understanding that a certain action, and this is using the Buddhist teachings. For example, if it's based in greed or it's
based in hatred, that the result of that action is going to be some kind of suffering down the
road, either immediately, you know which we feel, or perhaps not, but down the road, it will be a seed
for future suffering. So that's all there's no I know sense of self-needed to understand that
cause and effect relationship. And so if there is the desire for greater peace or happiness rather than a desire for suffering,
we should pay attention to the causes behind those different results.
And none of that has to do with an eye or a self.
It's just the law of nature.
You plant an apple seed, you're not going to get a pear tree.
So what kind of seeds are we planting? What kinds of seeds are being planted? We don't need the eye
in there at all. And we're going to get to that the use of the passive voice because you've got a very
what I found to be very powerful practice built around that.
Just staying on this question of not self, one framing that's helped me, I think understand
this, begin to understand this is talking about things on a relative level. This is these are terms of art here, a relative level,
and an ultimate level.
Can you explain those terms of art,
and do you think I'm onto something here in terms of this
being a way that we can kind of grapple with the notion
that we are more gerundial than now?
That's good, Dan.
I've never been called a gerundial than noun. That's good, Dan.
I've never been called a gerund before.
So, yes, this understanding of, in some schools of Buddhism, it's called the two levels
of truth, relative truth and more ultimate truth.
Another word that I like to use instead of relative
is just conventional, conventional truth, and we could say more ultimate truth. So on
the conventional level, we use the term self and I and you, and you know, there's just
this very ordinary way of understanding things. And for the purpose of communication, that's totally appropriate.
So I'm not at all suggesting that as we begin to explore for ourselves and maybe even have some
experience of what non-self means, we don't give up conventional language. We know, we're very awkward to say, oh, this process of the mental
physical elements is feeling hunger. I'm hungry. So it's to understand that it's totally fine
and appropriate to use conventional language. The problem is that for most of us, or most of the time,
The problem is that for most of us, or most of the time, we are seduced by that language into believing that that is the more ultimate reality.
Language is really important in terms of conditioning how we experience things.
And it's very, very common,
as I just said, to be seduced by the conventional language of I in mind,
into believing that that has some substantial reality,
as opposed to being just a convenience of communication.
Let me give you an example of how understanding the
Papacha of concede, of understanding that, and how it's working and recognizing it, can
free the mind from a lot of unnecessary suffering. So this just happened to me on a recent retreat, but it's
very fresh in my mind. So I was on a self-retreat at home and doing a fair amount of sitting
and walking, but not super intensively. I would be doing quite a lot, but at other times I would be doing a little reading
or perhaps some writing projects. But on one afternoon I just found myself frittering away some time.
I don't even know what I was doing now, but I wasn't doing anything very mindfully or constructively.
And so when I recognized this, I began to get down on myself a little
bit. A little self-judgment came in here on retreat and Buddhist meditation teacher,
what are you doing just fridding away this time? I was definitely feeling some kind of just suffering involved in that self-judgment, you
know, and for that short period of time, not feeling great about myself.
And so I saw myself caught in this.
But I'm familiar enough with all these teachings that at a certain point, for me at that time,
it didn't take that long. I was maybe five or 10 minutes of wallowing
in the self-judgment.
But then, as often happens, when I'm suffering a lot,
it peaks my interest.
Is that what's going on here?
Why is my mind in this place of suffering?
And I realized that it was just a situation of I aming. You know, I'm so
bad because I just wasted all this time, I, I, I, as soon as I recognized the mindset of set of concede. Now that particular defilement of mind rather than focusing on
the story of, you know, spent all this time,
it was really a waste which created that
bad feeling. As soon as I reckon, oh this
is just conceded work. I'm just, what I am
am immediately in the recognition of that, the whole mindset.
Just let go.
I was back in the present moment because I was recognizing the basic element that was
causing the suffering.
It wasn't the fact of ridding the time.
That was just what it was.
And it was, and obviously it wasn't some great sin,
but still it was enough to create that feeling in myself.
But as soon as I let go of the self-story,
the IAM story through recognizing that,
oh yeah, this is just conceit-working.
This is just this particular papancha.
Psh, the whole thing released.
And so there's a very practical application
of this, everything we're talking about
is not just about Buddhist theory or Buddhist philosophy.
It's really about understanding
how suffering is created in our lives
and how we can be free
on a very precise level in terms of understanding how our mind is working.
Coming up, Joseph talks about three practices that can give us a taste of the freedom from
craving, conceit, and wrong view, and a tip for reducing over-efforting by using the passive
voice.
This has actually been a huge technique for me,
personally.
I believe you've got three practices, at least from what I've heard in your recent public utterances on
this subject. Three practices that help us deal with the three proliferating factors of craving,
conceit, and wrong view. And the first of these practices, you already kind of referenced,
which is kind of using our language to kind of reverse engineer an insight into our molecules.
And the linguistic change you're suggesting is the passive voice. Can you talk about that?
Yeah. Just a little sidebar here. I just finished listening to a really interesting book
called The Code Breaker by Walter Isaacson and was all about the fairly recent discoveries of what's called CRISPR, which is basically tool for gene editing,
you know, and actually editing DNA, which has tremendous implications for perhaps curing
or preventing disease. And, you know, to be able to get in on just as you said on that cellular level, you know, and edit something that creates
problems is now happening in biology. So I liked your... This is a kind of gene editing.
You know, we're getting in there to see, okay, what's in the DNA of our understanding?
And can we edit out those genes that create suffering? So one way of editing,
one little practice we can do, which could give a sense of that, is an application of a linguistic
framework of how we are describing the world to ourselves in language.
Now, mostly, we use language in the active voice.
There's a subject, you know, a verb and an object.
So I'm walking to town, eating some food, or, you know,
just a very simple, basic grammatical construction
of active voice, a subject performing in action.
The passive voice does something very interesting, and that is the passive voice takes the subject out of it.
So just as an example, in the active voice we might say, I'm hearing a sound, I am, right there.
Right there, we've built in the I amness, we've built in the sense of self, just in our language,
you know, ordinary conventional language. To begin to play in the passive voice, we would say a sound is being heard or a sound is being known.
And so the passive voice takes the subject, I, out of the equation.
And I have found this to be an extremely valuable frame for meditation,
for a whole variety of reasons.
One is it puts us more in alignment
with the actual state of affairs, right?
We're not positing a designation,
a conventional designation,
to be an essential element of the experience, which is what we're usually doing just in our
ordinary use of language. So we use the passive voice in framing our meditative experience, and then
all of our experience of things are being known. It's a way of really touching into the effortless nature of meditation.
If there's an eye that is trying to do something, so then there's an efforting involved for
that eye. And especially at the beginning of people's
fact, this but even later on as well, that efforting quality, which is
different than arousing energy, that's a different thing. I'm talking about an
unskilful efforting or forcing or expecting all those are rooted in the eye.
As soon as we drop into the passive voice of things being known,
we can really settle back, we've taken the eye out of it,
and new experiences are arising by themselves in each moment.
There's no one there doing anything, there's not an eye there, the all.
You know, those six things are just arising, one after another, a side of sound, a smell.
And so a very simple meditative exercise, which I think would give people a real immediate sense of what this means,
is just to spend five minutes, ten minutes, not a long time, just short period of time,
either in sitting or in going for a walk. This can be done in any time. Holding the question,
a walk. This could be done in any time. Holding the question, just holding the frame of the question,
moment after moment, what's being known? And then settling back, and just recognizing what is being known, moment after moment. Oh, a sight, a sound, a sensation, a thought, a sound, the sensation, the thought, the sound, sensation, thought, sound. So it's all happening
by itself. It's all just flowing along by itself. And things are being known if we have
set that intention to pay attention in this way. We set that frame, what's being known,
and then settle back it and see how effortless it is, and it also really
highlights the impermanent nature, because when we're settled back in that way, and just aware of
what's being known moment after moment, without an attempt to control it in any way, or even to direct it,
way or even to direct it. It's immediately obvious how things are just appearing and disappearing moment after moment. I don't know how much weight this will carry, but just to give it some
an endorsement here, but I struggled so much in the early stages of my practice and to this day with over efforting and the intensity and duration
of those struggles has been really reduced by using the passive voice.
What is being known?
Just asking myself that question and watch what happens and it's not I am trying so hard
to be all over my breath like a rabid dog.
It's more like the I'm feeling a breath and the
breath is being felt and there's nothing for me to do. It's already happening. And yes, maybe
distraction comes up, but I see that and then go back to things being known on their own.
It's incredibly helpful. And I know we've got a couple of other techniques to help us with the
And I know we've got a couple of other techniques to help us with the
Papacha Factors and I want to take a quick break and we'll come back. We'll talk about those
Much more of my conversation with Joseph Goldstein right after this
Okay The process known as Dan is back.
Before we go on, something occurred to me in the break that I thought might be helpful to mention.
When people are both first beginning the practices, but also sometimes well into the practice.
It can sometimes feel a little discouraging as we watch our minds
to see what in the Buddhist terminology are called the defilements,
or those unskillful patterns of mind that just goes suffering,
in one way or another, for ourselves or others.
And I remember when I first began practicing in India,
and I was seeing my mind, you know,
with great clarity that I had seen
before I started meditating.
And I saw all these unskillful patterns, you know,
of different manifestations of desire,
or wanting, or greed, or aversion, you know,
or annoyance, or whatever, whatever it may be.
And I remember running to my teacher in an injury.
I don't think I expressed it this way, but basically the sense was, I'm such a terrible person.
Look at all these terrible things that are rising in my mind.
And so it can lead to a lot of self-judgment
or discouragement about the practice.
Why do I want to sit and see all this stuff?
Well, something really interesting happens.
And it could happen either quick or slower, depending
how quickly one understands this.
But we can get to a place in the practice where we're actually delighted to see all this
stuff because we would rather see it than not see it.
So for example, now, when I see a manifestation of conceit of I aming one way or another.
I am delighted.
It's like, I see you.
I caught you.
You're not going to seduce me anymore.
So it's actually uplifting and encouraging and joyful,
to be seeing the workings of our mind with clarity
and with mindfulness.
I just wanted to put out to the listeners that
even though they may be seeing things which,
you know, of course, are problematic in one way or another,
but the very seeing of them is enlightening.
And it's a way that we get lighter and lighter and lighter.
Because as we see them, we are not so caught by them.
If we don't see them, then they just run riot in our lives.
I've heard you mentioned this before, and I've seen it play out in my own mind, and I really agree.
It just got me thinking again just to get back to these challenging questions I was asking
you before about the idea of the illusion of the self or the not self doctrine in Buddhism
that that are there no aspects of the self that are useful.
In other words, what if you catch the thought of I Joseph I'm going to reach out to a friend who's suffering. I
Joseph, I'm going to write a book that might help a lot of people. I Joseph, I'm going
to write a Dharma talk that might teach people important concepts that they could use to
improve their own life. Is there no mana that is good mana? This goes back to something we were talking about earlier.
Using that language conventionally is completely fine.
That's how we communicate.
I could very well say and have said many times,
oh, I have this project I'm really excited about. I really want to get involved in it.
All of that's fine. You need to use that kind of language just for ease of communication because this is how things are conventionally understood.
No problem at all. You know, we do do that. It's just to understand that even as we're using that language, we don't want to be caught
by it or seduced in the belief or in our minds, construct a substantial reality to what
is in itself just a designation for part of the process.
So the designation is helpful when we use it.
But what happens is we take the word,
we take the concept, the designation to be the reality itself.
Instead of seeing, yeah, this is just a shorthand way of saying, an idea arose in the mind, energy came to act on it.
You know, and we could we could describe the same thing without the use of that language, but it's just very awkward.
Right.
So the use of the language is fine.
The I am language.
So the use of the language is fine, the I am language, but we want to understand that it's just conventional.
It doesn't really refer to anything in and of itself, but mostly people don't make that
second step.
Mostly we're lost in the world of concept and convention, and we haven't really understood the building blocks of experience.
So it'd be, for example, in science, like just as we look at the physical world, take any
simple physical object, like a glass or anything. So conventionally, we think a glass exists.
And for a lot of practical purposes, there's no problem with that.
We use a glass. But if scientists got caught by that, they would never have been motivated
to look, okay, what is it that we're actually calling glass, right, and developing the tools to investigate that question.
What is it that we mean by these designations? And then whole new worlds open up.
Imagine the excitement of the first person to look through a microscope.
And then nowadays, of course, it's even incredibly more sophisticated than that.
Whole new dimensions of reality open up
when we're not imprisoned by our attachment
to the concept glass,
even though on a conventional level
it's a useful designation.
So it's the same thing.
So we use it, but we don't want to be limited
by that concept. And this is
really what the Buddha's teaching is all about. It's, okay, what's underneath it all? What
are the basic elements of experience and how do they function?
You use the word elements right there. We're in the middle of going through three little
pieces of Joseph homework that we can all do to get
under the hood here to go beyond these kind of limits that are pretty deep in our wiring in our DNA.
These puphuncha factors. And so there's one of the practices is built around a Buddhist concept of
the elements. Tell us about that. Okay.
So, each of these topics could be hour long dogs.
So I'm gonna try to kind of abbreviate it all.
First, just need a little explanation
of the Buddhist framework for understanding the elements.
Because when we think of physical elements, we might think of our chemistry class, of the Buddhist framework for understanding the elements.
Because when we think of physical elements, we might think of our chemistry class,
in the periodic table of the different elements.
The Buddha in that time,
whether he actually knew all of that or not,
of course I don't know,
but in those times they used a very simple framework
for describing the elements.
So just a different designation for the physical elements.
And it was fairly common in ancient times
to think of the elements in terms of Earth air, fire, water.
That's how they would describe the elements.
Now, obviously, there are certain limitations in that in terms of the understanding of chemistry,
but they are very practical in terms of having a simple designation for how we experience
different physical phenomena. So, for example, the Earth element is a designation for just the experience, the sensation of hardness,
hardness of softness. So that's an immediate felt experience, which we all have.
So the Buddha just designated that as, oh, that's the earth element or movement, right, would be the air element, or
warmth, the coolness would be the fire element. So that's what
the terms, earth air fire, what it referred to, right? And
they're helpful because it's just a very simple shorthand for describing our physical experience, free of popantra,
of desire and craving and conceit and wrong view.
So this is the way that I was playing with it on retreat, and it was really quite amazing
to me. And again, it points to the power of language,
whether it's spoken language or the language
in our own minds, you know,
as we're describing or interpreting
to ourselves what we're experiencing,
the words we use are going to condition how we experience it.
So, again, this is something that normally we're not paying attention to.
We think, oh yeah, we're experiencing the truth of what's there.
Not realizing that whatever language we've using to describe it is affecting how we're experiencing it.
Okay, so all of that is background.
I was just outside just doing walking meditation.
And again, this was not in a very slow pace.
It was just kind of a normal pace of walking,
but it could be done at any speed.
And as I said before, when I was describing the mind and belonging to me, you know, in walking
even though I was being mindful and I was feeling the sensations of the movement in touch,
I was noticing that I would say almost subliminal sense of I'm walking or my leg. It wasn't an explicit statement in my mind, but I could feel,
it's like a translucent veneer on the experience, hardly noticeable, but having just read this one particular discourse of the Buddha to
his son, Rahula, in which he was describing this very practice as a way of counteracting the
Papantra of I mean mind. He said practice seeing the physical experience in terms of the elements.
Okay, so I just read that.
So in the walking, I just started every time I would move, you know, move the leg,
I was just very lightly, okay, our element.
And then when I touched the ground, earth element, just that, that's
all I just changed the language. But connecting those words to the experience, so it wasn't
just kind of words going through my mind unrelated to the walking. It's like really connecting the words to the experience. It was amazing what happened.
Just such a simple thing, just simple change of language, moving, or air element, earth element. It became so clear that the Earth element or the air element didn't belong to me,
that the belonging to me, like my leg or my foot, completely fell away. It was just
Earth element. It was just the air element. It doesn't belong to anybody.
Earth element, it was just an irrelevant, doesn't belong to anybody. And the whole sense of I am fell away, even though we might say, you know, I'm walking,
I am walking.
Would we ever say, I am the irrelevant?
No.
That's right.
Just the change of language removed that veneer
of I mean mine.
And it dropped the whole experience
into simply being the elements being known.
That's all that was there.
The eye disappeared, the eye aim disappeared, the mind
disappeared. And even if it's just for a few moments at a time, right? So I suggest, you know,
if people are interested, they might try this and play with it. It doesn't have to be a big project.
It can be, take five minutes or ten minutes, you know, of walking and just play with this and see
five minutes, a 10 minutes of walking and just playing with us and see if any of what I've just said resonates with your own experience. But for me, it was so striking and so immediate
to see how the application of the understanding of the elements was the antidote to I mean mine.
This might be just a good chance to give the background story
to the Buddha's teaching to his son, in which he described exactly what I just said,
to use the elements. So they were going for arms round into a village,
to go collect food.
So the Buddha was walking ahead and Rahulah's son was walking behind him.
And Rahulah was looking at the beautiful form of the Buddha, you know, who was said to embody
physical perfection as well as perfection of heart and mind, and Rahulah was kind of taking pride in the fact that he had a resemblance to the Buddha.
You know, he was his son.
And of course, the Buddha, through his power of mind, knew what was in Rahulah's mind.
So, he stopped, he turned around, Rahulah.
And that's when he gave this teaching, everything
should be seen with perfect wisdom.
This is not mine, this is not I, this is not myself.
So all the pride that roh-luh was taking in his physical form, my body, looks like this
and isn't this beautiful.
Now the Buddha is saying, see everything with perfect wisdom, not mine, not in not myself.
And then he went on to explain one way of accomplishing that is through this meditation on the
elements. Because as I just said, when we do that, the IME mind just falls away.
We're back just in the basic six elements of experience.
That's all.
It's just those six things being known moment after moment.
So it's tremendously liberating and freeing.
And even if we're not living in that space all the time,
I think it's very powerful, even
if we have brief moments of it, because that's like planting the seeds, ongoing flowing
stream of a deeper understanding.
And those seeds are really important, because then we're not completely captured by the world of
conventional and concept.
You know, we're kind of poking holes in that.
And they're powerful.
That really begins the process of liberation.
In the time that remains here, let me prod you to describe the third exercise, which,
if I recall, has to do with seeing how quickly
everything that comes up in our mind passes away.
We go through different stages in practice, and even at any stage that we may be at, of
course, one of the fundamental insights is that things arise and pass away.
Things come into meeting and vanish.
So this is not difficult, either to understand or to say.
I think a good part of the time on minds are focused on what's arising. So each new arising experience captures our attention, arising, arising, arising.
But we could as well focus on the disappearing side of things, because they're doing both.
But I think our minds have been very conditioned in general to always be
captured by the newly arising object. But something very different happens when we start to focus
on the disappearing aspect. Because when we're just focused on the arising aspect,
Because when we're just focused on the arising aspect, that's very easy for us to get attached to,
to have aversion to, to claim as being self.
We do all kinds of things in relationship
to seeing a new object arise.
Something completely different happens
when we're focusing on the disappearing.
So how to do that in a way that's really vivid.
Again, one time I was just out for a walk.
I was an ordinary walk,
being as mindful as I could be.
But it wasn't like a slow, meditative walk. It was just an ordinary
walk. And the thought came to my mind, well, what happened to the step of five minutes ago?
It's gone. I mean, it's completely gone. Really gone. there was nothing of it left. And then I said, well, what about one minute ago?
God, what about 30 seconds ago? Gone. What about one second ago? It's gone. And so I just brought my mind up
to the very lip of the flow of, it's like water over waterfall.
You know, gone, gone, gone, gone, gone.
So I brought my mind right to that point of things just disappearing, disappearing, disappearing, disappearing.
And it was quite amazing. It's like being in that experience of things disappearing.
It's impossible to hold on. The thing is gone by the time
we could even hold on to it. And so the mind has let go of any kind of grasping or attachment
or even wanting, things that just continually disappear. And so we get into a kind of free flow, just a free
flow of experience without getting caught up in any of the eddies that I mentioned, you know,
of getting caught in some kind of attachment or reaction to the present moment experience,
and then circling around that, and then building up all the papancha about it.
No, it's just gone, gone, gone, gone.
And the felt experience of that is so liberating and interestingly enough, and I, this I don't
really quite understand yet. It's somehow being in that space activated what in the Buddhist terminology is called
the heart center.
You know, there are different energy centers in the body, you know, in each one has its
own kind of manifestation.
So I think we all have just an intuitive sense of what the heart center means, you know,
the felt sense of an open heart. Interestingly enough, that's what was activated when I was
just in that place of the continual disappearing, falling away, falling away, with its consequent lack of any clinging to anything.
So I think all of that contributed to that feeling
of the heart space of it.
Yeah, it was a very free space,
even though in just hearing the words,
it might feel, I don't know,
or if people here just are falling away,
falling away, falling away, yeah away, there's no stability.
It might feel a little frightful.
That was not the experience of it at that time.
There's one image that might be helpful also in understanding how we experience this greater
awareness of things disappearing, of falling away, because we can have different
relationships to that, you know, or different felt experiences of that at different times.
Somebody once told me of this example, it's somebody free-falling out of a plane. So, you know, people do this kind of for sport,
but this is not in a sports situation.
So just imagine somebody falling out of a plane
one way or another, the circumstances
are not really germane to the example.
And then perhaps is the first experience of exhilaration, you know,
just the exhilaration of free fall. So this is very much like the first experience of things
arising and passing quickly, you know, as we continue in our meditation practice and it deepens at a certain point,
the mind really goes from emphasizing the content of what's arising.
You know, this, this, this, this, this, to the process, meaning the process of change.
And so instead of the emphasis being on the watt,
it really becomes an emphasis on how it's happening.
Things arising, passing, arising, and passing. And that perception gets very refined.
So we see this process of change very quickly.
So that's the sense of exhilaration.
Then going back to the image of the free fall,
then maybe the person realizes they don't
have a parachute.
They're in this free fall and there's no parachute.
And then they get really frightened.
There's now maybe a little fear or even terror arises and they're falling, falling, you
know, afraid of that.
And so the equivalent of that in the meditative process
would be, after the exhilaration of seeing things arise and pass, you know, so quickly
and then the mind begins to focus on just the disappearing, the rapid disappearance of
everything. So then there's the felt sense of this just no security in a place.
There's nothing to hold on to.
And so that can be a challenging time in meditation,
of going through that feeling of it.
But then, again, going back to the example of the free fall.
So first, there's the exhilaration, then there's the fear, but then at a certain point the person realizes there's no ground.
And so then they relax into an equanimity that simply is enjoying the whole experience, you know, a fall of change or flow. So this is quite similar to what happens in meditation because after that kind of disturbing
period of time when we are highlighting the fact of the insecurity or there's nothing
to hold on to with a continual disappearance.
At a certain point, we realize there's no ground which is another way of saying or analogous to the understanding
of selflessness.
This is just a natural process going on, and we fall into a place of tremendous equanimity.
And the equanimity is so profound, and it's a very exquisite kind of happiness that comes.
We really come to a place of peace. And at that point in practice, it said,
even for those people who are still on the path, but that place of equanimity is said to resemble
the mind of a fully enlightened being walk and maybe for a short period
of time, just staying at that disappearing age of things, seeing things continually fall
away, I think is very unlikely that you'll be experiencing the unsettling aspect of
seeing this process of change. My sense is that you'll really begin to understand
the liberating aspect of it.
This has been great.
I really appreciate this,
and I really love the three homework assignments
because these are things all of us can do.
So thank you, Joseph, really appreciate it.
Yeah, you're very welcome.
As you know, I love talking about this stuff.
See you next time, Dan.
Yes, I'll see you next time.
I like that because that implies there will be a next time.
I didn't do anything too bad this time.
No, this is delightful.
Thank you to Joseph.
As a reference, the topics covered here today
were covered in deeper detail within two Dharma talks
that Joseph gave on a retreat recently and online retreat, so you can actually hear those talks
if you want to go deeper here.
We put the links in the show notes.
Thanks to all of you for listening, really appreciate it.
Go give us a rating or a review that stuff really helps.
And thanks most of all to the people who work so hard on this show.
10% Happier is produced by Gabrielle Zuckerman,
Justin Davy, Lauren Smith, and Tara Anderson.
DJ Kashmir is our senior producer, Rissa Schneiderman, is our senior editor,
and Kimmy Regler is our executive producer,
scoring and mixing by Peter Bonnaventure
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