                                          
                                          
                                          
                                          
                                  VII
                                          
                          SPIRITUAL FACULTIES
                                          
                                          
  The Buddha spoke about five spiritual faculties which turn into 
  spiritual powers if we cultivate and develop them. We all have these 
  faculties within and developing them means making them powerful 
  qualities which become factors of enlightenment. As long as they are 
  only faculties, they are potentials for enlightenment.
    
    The Buddha compared them to a team of horses with one lead horse and 
  two pairs that are pulling a wagon. The lead horse can go as fast or 
  as slow as it likes, the others have to fall into step with it. The 
  pairs have to be in balance with each other, otherwise if one goes 
  faster than the other, the wagon will topple.
    
    The leading faculty is mindfulness. It is up to us how much of it we 
  can find in any given moment. Mindfulness is a moment-to-moment mental 
  factor which can be compared to an observer. If we have an observer 
  with us all the time, it is more likely that we will stay on the path.
    
    The first pair that has to be balanced is faith and wisdom. There is 
  an analogy that the Buddha gave for these two qualities: he compared 
  faith to a blind giant who meets up with a small, very sharp-eyed 
  cripple, called wisdom. The blind giant, named faith, says to the 
  small, sharp-eyed cripple named wisdom: "I'm strong and can go very 
  fast, but I can't see where I'm going. You're small and weak, but have 
  sharp eyes. If you will ride on my shoulders, together we could go 
  very far." This tells us that faith without wisdom, while being a 
  strong faculty, is yet unable to find the right direction. We say 
  "faith can move mountains," but being blind, faith doesn't know which 
  mountain needs moving. However coupled with wisdom, there is enormous 
  potential. The reason for such strength, is that heart and mind are 
  brought into harmony. The mind can have wisdom and the heart can have 
  faith. When heart and mind are brought to a point of co-existence, of 
  no separation, the power which develops, is far greater than just 1 + 
  1 = 2. It is more like 2 to the power of 2.
    
    Faith as a quality in the heart has such great value because it is 
  connected with love. We can only have faith in something or someone we 
  love. Faith is also connected to devotion, which is a giving of 
  oneself and a lessening of pride. These are valuable and necessary 
  spiritual qualities. If we are devoted to a high ideal such as 
  Buddha-Dhamma-Sangha, then we have the understanding that there is 
  something greater than ourselves.
    
    The devotion we can have for that ideal is manifested in giving our 
  love and admiration, respect and gratitude, which are very important 
  and helpful qualities to develop.
    
    But the Buddha taught that blind faith is useless. Blind faith means 
  that one believes what one is told without personal investigation, 
  that one has faith in something that one's family adheres to, or 
  because it has been written down in special books, because it has been 
  transmitted from teacher to disciple, because it is something that one 
  likes anyway, that promises some mystical revelation, or because the 
  teacher is a respected person. All these are no reasons to follow a 
  spiritual path. Do not believe because somebody told you so! But if 
  there is some wisdom in the mind, and without it life would be quite 
  unbearable, we can quite easily investigate whether our faith and 
  devotion are justified.
    
    We can for instance, verify the first and second Noble Truths within 
  ourselves many times in a day. If we do that, we know what they mean, 
  only believing them is not very helpful, because it will not make any 
  difference in our hearts and minds. We can check out the impermanence 
  and unsatisfactoriness of all worldly phenomena without much 
  difficulty. Thereby we gradually gain more and more wisdom.
    
    The unwavering faith in the Buddha-Dhamma-Sangha is one of the 
  results that a stream-enterer (//sotapanna//) gains when s/he has the 
  first path moment, because until then the fetter of doubt still 
  exists. If we have established unwavering faith within ourselves in 
  the veracity and exactitude of the Buddha's teachings, we have taken 
  an important step. The heart quality within us will have opened up in 
  a way which will be most helpful, but understanding has to go along. 
  In Pali the one word //citta// denotes feeling and thinking, but in 
  English we have to distinguish between heart and mind because we 
  consider feeling a heart quality and thinking a mind quality, 
  otherwise, we can't express what we really mean.
    
    Our thinking capacity is rationality and logic, which is impaired by 
  our emotionalism, by the reactions to our feelings. The formula for 
  growth is: "purification of emotions brings clarification of thought." 
  If our emotions are pure, as they are for example in devotion, 
  gratitude, respect and faith, our thoughts have a much greater 
  capacity for clarity. The impure emotions connected with passions of 
  either wanting or not wanting, are those which hinder our thinking 
  capacity. We can't think "straight" when we are under the sway of 
  strong emotions.
    
    Our education system doesn't take any notice of that, nor do parents 
  teach this to their children, yet the Buddha taught it quite clearly. 
  Each human being has a right and left hemisphere in the brain which we 
  classify as male and female, the right being female, left being male. 
  The left or male side is in charge of the right side of the body and 
  vice versa. Just as the pairs of horses have to balance, both sides, 
  male and female have to attain a harmonious whole. the male side is 
  usually connected to our rationality, logic, linear thinking, 
  understanding. The female side is connected to feelings, nurturing, 
  caring, compassion, love, all the emotional qualities. Each of us has 
  both sides, the emotional and the mental capacity. Very few people 
  develop both equally. Therefore their cart often topples. Emotionalism 
  is just as much a danger as thinking without being in touch with one's 
  feelings. That too can go very much astray.
    
    In school we were taught to debate. We were given a subject to 
  debate with another child. When we finished, we changed sides and were 
  asked to hold the opposite view and debate, giving all factors of the 
  other side. Any child can do it, any grown-up can do it. It is just 
  straight-forward thinking. One can have the opposite opinion by the 
  flip of a coin. There is no inherent truth in any opinion, because 
  it's simply linear thinking. However, if these thoughts are connected 
  to our feelings we can no longer debate the opposite side. This is the 
  old story of having to bite into a mango to know its taste. We can be 
  told many things about a mango. It's sweet, delicious, soft, but we 
  cannot imagine its taste unless we get the feeling of the mango on our 
  tongue and have the personal experience. Then we can no longer debate 
  whether the mango is sweet or not, because we have experienced the 
  truth. This is the difference between just thinking or thinking 
  coupled with the experience of feeling.
    
    A person who goes too far on the side of rational thinking has to 
  learn to balance with feelings, the female side. Anyone who thinks to 
  the extent where the experience of feelings is hardly known, has to 
  practice much mindfulness of feelings. On the other hand, the female 
  side is often emotionalism. This means we are carried away by our 
  emotions and consequently our thinking is impaired. The quality of 
  logical thinking, of delving into a thought process and being able to 
  analyze, is not possible when the emotions are at the forefront. Of 
  course in women this has a connection to the mores of the patriarchal 
  society, but primarily it is due to the fact of not having developed 
  one's potential for both sides, which is inherent in all of us.
    
    The person who is primarily analytical is often under the impression 
  that this will actually bring about all the desired results. Such a 
  person, unless prodded and told often enough, will not try to get in 
  touch with feelings. The one who is always relating and reacting to 
  emotions is so habituated that s/he can no longer do anything else, 
  until shown through the meditative process that there is an 
  alternative.
    
    If one lives only in relation and in reaction to one's emotions, 
  life can become quite difficult. People who live like that often try 
  to deaden their emotions as a way out of their dilemma. That's of 
  course not the answer, rather to purify them. Naturally the person who 
  is a thinker also has to purify the emotions, but before such a person 
  can do that, s/he first needs to get in touch with them. The one who 
  lives with emotions and reacts to them all the time, also has to be in 
  touch with them, but not to deaden them, but to encourage wholesome 
  reactions. As the purification of the emotions takes place, thinking 
  will no longer be overshadowed by diffuse uncertainties. Unless we do 
  that, we only use half of our potential. This is what faith and wisdom 
  can mean to us, the emotions and the thinking. When we cultivate both, 
  we develop our faculties into powers. Harmonizing our emotional with 
  our thinking capacities is the essence of harmonizing faith with 
  wisdom.
    
    A powerful mind is a great asset, but only in conjunction with 
  purified emotions. Faith is one such purified emotion. Faith is much 
  easier for people whose primary defilement is greed, rather than hate. 
  Faith arouses pleasant feelings, which is greed's direction. In this 
  case, greed is an asset, although basically it is, of course, a 
  negative characteristic. But if we use it in a positive way, we are 
  engaged in a purification process, wanting that which is wholesome, 
  which leads us to the supermundane.
    
    First greed opens up into faith, resulting in pleasant feelings. 
  Then we can use greed to want successful meditation, stream-entry 
  (//sotapatti//), liberation. All are cravings, but they're going in 
  the right direction, of using greed to get rid of greed. That is our 
  best approach because greed is only truly eliminated by the 
  non-returner (//anagami//). If we use our craving in that manner, we 
  are at least searching for that which will give us the greatest 
  benefit, rather than pleasure through the senses.
    
    The Buddha's path is called the middle path, which means a path of 
  balance. We have to balance all extremes, so that they become a useful 
  basis for a harmonious person, whose practice will flourish. This is 
  one reason why the Buddha recommended the meditation on the 
  loathsomeness of the body. People often say they don't want to think 
  of their body as loathsome, it is a good working machine and very 
  useful. But we are actually enamored with our body; we are hanging on 
  to it, loving it, trying to preserve it, keeping it young and 
  beautifying it. We are attached to it and consider it "me". The 
  loathsomeness of the body meditation is not designed to disgust us, 
  but only to create a balance to our identification with our body. We 
  can compare this with walking on a tight-rope; if we balance too far 
  to the right, we fall down, too far on the left, we topple. Constant 
  balancing is necessary, which has to be done by everyone for 
  themselves.
    
    If we know ourselves to be reacting to our emotions, we need to 
  start analyzing and inquiring into ourselves. It is difficult for 
  someone who has always lived in reaction to their emotions to see 
  beyond them. The meditation practice helps greatly, because the 
  tranquillity that is bound to arise to some extent is conducive to 
  penetration into reality. We need some self-knowledge, otherwise we 
  can't make any changes. Introspection and attention to one's feelings 
  and thoughts should provide enough insight into ourselves to lay the 
  foundation for a meaningful change.
    
    The other pair is energy and concentration. It's not physical energy 
  that's needed, but rather mental energy, which has little to do with 
  the capacities of the body. We need unwavering determination for this 
  practice, which is transformed energy. The Buddha compared us with the 
  man who's wearing a turban that is on fire. Obviously, if a man is 
  wearing a turban that is on fire, he is most anxious to get rid of it. 
  That same kind of determination is needed to practice diligently. 
  Energy is also dependent upon one-pointed direction. We realize what 
  is most important and don't vacillate between social life, social 
  action, practice, entertainment and the many other options open to us. 
  Everybody has more energy for those things they like. We have to be 
  very careful that we don't use up our energy searching for pleasant 
  sense contacts because we like them. We have to be attentive to the 
  fact that pleasant sense contacts are so short-lived they will never 
  give us complete satisfaction, and that we're using up our energy 
  without getting any real fulfillment. So it turns into a waste of our 
  energy.
    
    If we see clearly through attention, mindfulness and introspection, 
  that if we put our energy into meditation and practice of Dhamma, our 
  //dukkha// is greatly reduced thereby, and that we actually have a 
  mode of living which includes everything else, then we will certainly 
  turn in that direction. The rest of daily living happens anyway. Most 
  people use up about 98% of their energy just to stay alive. Not that 
  they have to work so hard to make a living, but just to attend to 
  their daily duties and responsibilities, just to keep going. If our 
  energy is used for meditation, mindfulness and bare attention, the 
  mind faculties sharpen to the point where minor things and duties 
  necessary to stay alive, are done in an easy and harmonious flow. We 
  can start using our energy for that, which is most important.
    
    If energy is not coupled with concentration, it becomes restlessness 
  and we can notice that in meditation. Sometimes there is no 
  concentration, yet there is a lot of energy. Then mind and body become 
  restless; we would like to jump up and run away. If concentration is 
  too strong and there is no energy, then the third hindrance arises, 
  namely sloth and torpor. That is also easily noticeable in meditation. 
  People who are used to concentrating and can do it well, may 
  occasionally lack energy, and consequently concentration becomes 
  conducive to sleepiness. That is a time when the meditation should be 
  directed towards insight, rather than calm.
    
    Calm meditation which is pure concentration, may result in 
  sleepiness when there is not enough energy. But insight meditation, 
  with attention on impermanence, the constant arising and ceasing of 
  thoughts and feelings, may bring up the energy that is needed. As we 
  only have a limited amount of vigor, we have to use it in the best 
  possible way. Most people do not realize that energy is a great asset 
  and squander it on totally irrelevant activities. When we realize that 
  it is essential for the spiritual path, then we may become more 
  careful with it. As the body gets older, physical energy is reduced, 
  but that does not have to include mind energy. On the contrary. When 
  the body is young and full of vigor a lot of physical activity may 
  take place, and the mind may be neglected. In a older person when body 
  activity becomes less, the mind may receive most of the attention, and 
  mental energy could be increased.
    
    Energy and concentration have to balance, primarily in meditation. 
  When these faculties become powers, they result in the meditative 
  absorptions. When wisdom becomes a power, it means insight into the 
  three characteristics of impermanence (//anicca//), unsatisfactoriness 
  (//dukkha//) and corelessness (//anatta//). When faith turns into a 
  power, then it also manifests as the four immeasurable emotions 
  (//brahma vihara//): loving kindness (//metta//), compassion 
  (//karuna//), sympathetic joy (//mudita//), equanimity (//upekkha//). 
  Mindfulness is a power when all four foundations (i.e. mindfulness of 
  body, feeling, volition and thought content) are habitually attended 
  to. To become a master of all of these aspects is an ideal but to 
  practice them is a necessity. And since all of us have these faculties 
  within, there is every reason to cultivate them. One finds oneself a 
  more harmonious and balanced person, with less difficulties, capable 
  of helping others. To develop these five faculties should be a primary 
  object in one's life. The balancing of them needs to be seen as 
  connecting heart with mind.
    
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