Patience

by Ajahn Sumedho | 1988 | 1,122 words

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Peacefulness and tranquillity can be incredibly boring, and a lot of restlessness and doubt can come up as a result. Restlessness is a common problem because the sensory realm is a restless realm, bodies are restless, minds are restless. Conditions are changing all the time, so if you are caught up in reacting to change youre just restless.

Restlessness needs to be thoroughly understood for what it is; the practice is not one of just using the will to bind yourself to the meditation mat. Its not a test of you becoming a strong person who has to conquer restlessness - that attitude just reinforces another egotistical view reinforced. But it is a matter of really investigating restlessness, noticing it and knowing it for what it is. For this we have to develop patience; its something we have to learn and really work with.

When I first went to Wat Pah Pong I couldnt understand Lao. And in those days Ajahn Chah was at his peak and giving three hour desanas every evening. He could go on and on and on, and everybody loved him - he was a very good speaker, very humorous and everybody enjoyed his talks. But if you couldnt understand Lao...!

Id be sitting there thinking, Whens he going to stop, Im wasting my time. Id be really angry, thinking, Ive had enough, Im leaving. But I couldnt get enough nerve to leave, so I would just sit there thinking - Ill go to another monastery. Ive had enough of this, Im not going to put up with this. And then he would look at me - he had the most radiant smile - and hed say Are you all right? And suddenly all the anger that had been accumulating for that three hours would completely drop away.

Thats interesting isnt it? After sitting there fuming for three hours it can just go. So I vowed that my practice would be patience, and that during this time I would develop patience. Id come to all the talks and sit through all of them as long as I could physically stand it. I determined not to miss them, or try to get out of them, and just practise patience.

And by doing that I began to find that the opportunity to be patient was something that has helped me very much. Patience is a very firm foundation for my insight and understanding of the Dhamma; without that I would have just wandered about, drifting about, as you see so many people doing. Many Westerners came to Wat Pah Pong and drifted away from it because they werent patient. They didnt want to sit through three hour desanas and be patient. They wanted to go to the places where you could get instant enlightenment and get it done quickly in the way that you want.

Through the selfish desires and ambitions which can drive us, even on the spiritual path, we cant really appreciate the way things are. When I reflected and actually contemplated my life at Wat Pah Pong, I realised that it was a very good situation: there was a good teacher, there was enough to eat, the monks were good monks, the lay people were very generous and kind and there was encouragement towards the practice of Dhamma. This is as good as you can get; it was a wonderful opportunity, and yet so many Westerners couldnt see that because they tended to think - I dont like this, I dont want that, and it should be otherwise and what I think and what I feel, I dont want to be bothered with this and that.

I remember going up to Tam Sang Phets monastery, which was a very quiet secluded place in those years, and I lived in a cave. A villager built me a platform, because in the bottom of this cave was this big python. One evening I was sitting on this platform by candlelight, it was really eerie and the light cast shadows on all the rocks; it was weird. I was sitting there and I started to get really frightened and then, suddenly, I was startled. I looked up and there was a huge owl right above, looking at me. It looked immense - I dont know if it was that big, but it looked really enormous in the candlelight - and it was looking straight at me. I thought Well what is there to be really frightened of here?, and I tried to imagine skeletons and ghosts, or Mother Kali with fangs and blood dripping out of her mouth, or enormous monsters with green skin, and I began to laugh because it got so amusing. I realised I wasnt really frightened at all.

In those days I was just a very junior monk, and one night Ajahn Chah took us to a village f鳥te. I think Satimanto Bhikkhu was there at the time. We were all very serious practitioners, and we didnt want any kind of frivolity or foolishness; and of course going to a village f鳥te was the last thing we wanted to do, because in these villages they love loudspeakers. So anyway Ajahn Chah took Satimanto and me to this f鳥te, and we had to sit up all night with the raucous sounds of the loudspeakers going - and monks giving talks all night long! I kept thinking Oh, I want to get back to my cave - green skinned monsters and ghosts are much better than this. I noticed that Satimanto, who was incredibly serious, was looking really angry and critical and very unhappy, and we just sat there looking miserable. I thought Why does Ajahn Chah bring us to these things?

Then I began to see for myself. I remember sitting there thinking Here I am getting all upset over this. Is it that bad? Whats really bad is what Im making out of it, whats really miserable is my mind. Loudspeakers and noise, and distraction and sleepiness, one can put up with it, but its that awful thing in my mind that hates it, resents it and wants to leave - thats the real misery!

That evening I could see what misery I could create in my mind over things that one can bear. I remember that as a very clear insight of what I thought was miserable, and what really is miserable. At first I was blaming the people, the loudspeakers, the disruption, the noise and the discomfort - I thought that was the problem. Then I realised that it wasnt, it was my mind that was miserable.

If we reflect on and contemplate Dhamma, we learn from the very situations which we like the least - if we have the will to do so.

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