2022 Guided Meditation


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Recordings of Guided Meditation sessions from Dhammaloka Buddhist Centre, Perth, Western Australia  MEDITATION  Extract from Ajahn Brahmavamso's writing  Those who ask this question are usually those who have not yet experienced jhàna themselves.  It is difficult to do what is necessary to realise jhàna; so most people ask this question wanting to be told that Jhana is not essential.  They want to be told that their inability is not an obstacle.  They want a quick and easy way to Nibbàna.  Such people will be pleased and even inspired by a teacher who tells them what they wanted to hear anyway ‑ that these Jhana states are unnecessary ‑ and they will follow this teaching because it is convenient.  Unfortunately, Truth is seldom convenient, and rarely agrees with what we want to hear. On the other hand, a meditator who has familiarity with jhàna will recognise them as blissful states of letting go, and it is right there, in the experience of letting go, letting go that the relevance of jhàna is known.  The first jhàna is the natural result of letting go of the concern for sensory pleasure (kàma sukha), by which is meant all concern, even for mere comfort, in the realm of the five external senses (sight, sound, smell, taste and touch).  In the first jhàna, through sustained and complete removal of all interest in these five senses the meditator loses all sense of the body, and these five external senses disappear.  They abide wholly in the sixth sense that is pure mind, and are still, in blissful inner silence.  The Buddha called this “The Bliss of Renunciation”, or the bliss of letting go.  The second jhàna is the natural result of abandoning a very subtle movement of attention towards and holding onto this blissful mind object.  When this final ‘wobbling’ of attention is let go of, one experiences the even more pleasurable bliss of full inner stillness (Samàdhi), where the mind is absolutely one‑pointed and motionless.  The third jhàna is the natural result of letting go of the subtle excitement of rapture, and the fourth jhàna is the natural result of letting go of happiness itself, so as to enjoy the most profound and immovable mental equanimity. In Buddhism, experience, not speculation, and even less blind belief, is the criterion for understanding.  A meditator simply does not realise what stillness, rapture, happiness or equanimity fully mean until they have become familiar with the Jhanas.  But the experience of the Jhanas, these stages of letting go, give one direct understanding through experience of these mental phenomena, in particular happiness (sukha) and suffering (dukkha). It is similar to the tadpole who has spent her whole life in the water but who can have no understanding of water because she has known nothing else. Then, when she grows up into a frog, lets go of the water, and attains to dry land, she knows both the nature of water and the way to go beyond it.  In this simile, the water stands for dukkha, the dry land for jhàna (not Nibbàna ‑ the frog still carries a little water on her skin upon dry land!), and the way to go beyond stands for letting go. In this way, the practice of jhàna reveals the path to fully ending dukkha.  The meditator who achieves jhàna will eventually ask “Why are these jhàna so profoundly blissful?  They will discover for themselves the obvious answer ‑”Because they are stages of letting go of that which they now see as fine forms of suffering!”  When one is familiar with Jhana, and realises the origin of the bliss therein, one will come to see for oneself that all worldly pleasures, that is, of the five external senses (which include sexuality), are merely dukkha.  The attachment to the body and its sensory adventures will begin to fade away. One will understand clearly why all enlightened ones are celibate.  Then, as one progresses onwards to the higher Jhanas and contemplates why each further one is ever more pleasing, one comes to understand that it is because one is letting go of refined mental attachments, such as the attachment to rapture, happiness and equanimity.  It becomes clear that even these most lofty of mind states are just refined forms of suffering, because when one lets them go, then more suffering goes too.  The higher one goes, the more dukkha is let go of and through this process dukkha becomes known.  One cannot know fully the truth of suffering, and thus the Buddha’s Four Noble Truths, except by letting go of suffering through the experience of jhàna.  LINK TO FULL TEXT It is very odd, therefore, that some suggest that the practise of jhàna leads to attachment.  How can, what is the practice of letting go, lead to attachment?  Indeed, the Buddha repeatedly said that these jhàna s