The Pursuit of
Happiness
Pamela Gayle White
SPRING 2012 tricycle
Moving toward unconditional fulfillment and
freedom
You’re bright, curious, and driven. Maybe
competitive, certainly inspired by a good challenge, and possibly
interested in contributing something to make the world a better
place. Maybe you’ve even thought about what it will take for you to
reach 80 or 100 and be able to say: This is what I set out to do,
and I’ve done it. There have been ups and downs, but I’ve pretty
much stayed on track.
You may think: To go from here to
there—becoming a successful and satisfied person with a big chunk
of life behind me—I’ll need to get this, achieve that, go there. If
you’re a romantic, your success will depend on relationships; if
you’re family-oriented, it’ll be family; if you’re a materialist,
you’ll need to acquire certain things; if you’re an adventurer,
adventures; if you’re an intellectual, knowledge. The list goes on.
You may well have eminently worthy and admirable goals—especially
if contributing to the welfare of others is part of what makes you
tick.
But if our fulfillment and happiness depend on
obtaining or doing something, will we be unhappy or frustrated if
we don’t obtain it or do it? Is our happiness dependent on
something that is ultimately beyond our personal reach? Does it
depend on other people, other events? If those things, people,
events, states or relationships that we depend on for our
fulfillment change, what happens? They will change, they do change.
Sometimes for the better—but not always. Then what?
It is useful to take a closer look at what
actually makes us happy. What do we mean by happy? Where do peace
and fulfillment come from? What about dissatisfaction, pain and
anguish? How do we define these experiences? And who—or what—is
this potentially fulfilled person—this “me”?
Around 2,600 years ago the Buddha, aware that
we all share the desire to be happy and to avoid pain, asked
himself these exact same questions. And 2,600 years ago the Buddha
came up with answers that are still—according to Buddhists,
anyway—the most intelligent, pertinent response to human needs in
terms of philosophy and practice.
The Buddha was born to a royal family in what
is now southwestern Nepal. A holy fortune-teller told the Buddha’s
father, the king, that the boy would grow up to be either a great
ruler or a great renunciant and spiritual guide. Naturally his
father liked the first version better, and he did everything in his
power to make sure Prince Siddhartha Gautama was happy. We can
imagine the palace, the gardens and fountains, the peacocks,
banquets, dancing girls, silks and brocades, musicians and jasmine,
and all the rest of it. The king made sure his son never saw
anything unpleasant, troubling, or jarring. And we can presume that
the handsome, gifted prince believed he was leading a meaningful,
satisfying life. He was happily married, had a fine son, and his
wish was everyone’s command.
But then, the story goes, he went beyond the
perimeters of his idyllic life and for the first time witnessed the
shocking truths of aging, illness, and death. And suddenly a
yearning for peace and meaning that were not contingent on
commodities like health, youth, and wealth arose and was stronger
than everything else. So he left in pursuit of something like
unalterable happiness, and he tried to find it through the extreme
ascetic practices that were the going thing back then. After six
years of astonishing self-abnegation, he came to the realization
that the two extremes of earthly pleasures and self-mortification
weren’t going to take him where he meant to go. So he had some
lovely rice pudding, sat on a grass mat under a pipal tree in what
is now Bodh Gaya, and vowed he wouldn’t quit until he found the
absolute happiness he was looking for. “Let only skin, sinew, and
bone remain,” he said, “let the flesh and blood dry in my body, but
I will not give up this seat without attaining complete awakening.”
After a long and very eventful night, he became Buddha, the
Awakened One.
Seven weeks later, he gave his first teaching.
It laid out the whole story, from our misguided pursuit of
happiness to the possibility of awakening and peace, in four
points: the Four Noble Truths. His first truth, the Truth of
Suffering, states that suffering is a given in any form of
existence that is dependent on causes and conditions. It defines
suffering as all levels of discomfort, ranging from blatant pain to
the subtle discomfort of change and the far subtler existential
suffering that goes along with being alive.
The second truth is the Origin of Suffering,
and here the Buddha explains that the origin of suffering is not
some god who has it in for us, or some arbitrary finger of fate,
but our own ignorance and its karmic by-products. Revolutionary!
We’ll come back to this one.
The third truth is the Truth of Cessation, or
the truth of peace: the unequivocal peace that is realized when our
veils, confusion, and selfishness have ceased, have been removed,
and our natural goodness and wisdom have fully blossomed. Pure
happiness.
And finally the fourth truth, the Truth of the
Path, maps out the practice that leads us to the Truth of
Cessation. That route is essentially right view, right action
(learning how to be truly helpful), and right spiritual practice,
as traditionally expressed by the condensed guide to a wholesome
lifestyle called the Eightfold Noble Path.
The origin of suffering is ignorance. The word
in Sanskrit is avidya—not knowing, not being aware of our
fundamental nature or essence as being buddha, awake, and of the
nature of conditioned manifestation, including us, as being
interconnected and devoid of any sort of solid, independent self;
impermanent and subject to change, whether we like it or not; and
composite, meaning that pain will be part of our experience, since
everything that exists as an aggregate necessarily falls apart
sooner or later. Even the Buddha, who went on to give teachings on
different subjects in different places over a span of nearly 50
years, left his body behind at age 81.
Ignorance means that we don’t have all of the
elements we need to make informed choices about life. We’re all
looking for comfort, or meaning, but we make clumsy choices that
lead to painful results (eating too much chocolate is a personal
case in point). Because of ignorance, we are unaware of the
ultimate, fundamental interconnectedness of existence, and our
universe is perceived not as the ever-changing lace of illusion it
is but as a solid, somewhat static confrontation between self/me
and other/everything else.
We divide our world into me/you, friend/enemy,
desirable/undesirable, fulfilling/frustrating, and so on. It’s a
natural process, but a very arbitrary, utterly subjective one.
Somehow we’re able to ignore this last fact. We’re in dualistic
division mode, and we act on that; all sorts of emotions come into
play, and we act on them. We reinforce the tendencies—Buddhists
might say, we create or compound karma—that make the illusion
thicker, stickier, more solid. And the further we are from truth,
the more elusive happiness becomes.
A great 20th-century teacher from Tibet, the
3rd Jamgon Kongtrul, gave a talk at State University of New York at
Albany in 1985. “Most of the time our relationship to the world
around us accords not with its basic nature but with our incomplete
perceptions of it,” he said. “We do not experience our own basic
nature; instead we experience only what we see. The result is
tremendous conflict in our lives. No matter how hard we try to work
things out, there is always disorder and dissatisfaction, always
something missing. No matter how much we seem to have accomplished,
there is still more to achieve. This dissatisfaction continues and
its scale increases, because what we are fundamentally and how we
perceive are not the same.”
Jamgon Kongtrul refers to our basic nature:
according to many teachings attributed to the Buddha, our basic,
ultimate, objective nature is impossible to define in words, but it
includes that potential for awakening that he presented in the
third noble truth, Cessation. It has been described as luminous
awareness, emptiness, basic goodness, and buddhanature. Basic
nature has absolutely nothing to do with being a Buddhist; all
beings share this innate spark of perfection. What Buddhism tries
to do is give us the means to recognize, kindle, and experience
this potential, no matter who we are.
On a relative level, as beings subject to
confusion or ignorance in varying degrees, we are interdependent,
impermanent, and subject to the suffering we seek to avoid. The
underlying motor of our experience is karma. Essentially, karma
refers to the fact that actions and thoughts have results; nothing
exists without a cause. This is both bad news and good
news.
It’s bad news if we choose to remain in
“head-in-the-sand” mode, because our tendency will be to relate to
happiness and pleasure or frustration and dissatisfaction as having
external causes and external solutions. We deal with them by
focusing on a prize or a culprit and reacting according to our
confused patterns: we turn on the charm, or scheme, or run away, or
fight. But as Jamgon Kongtrul explained, “what is fundamentally
true is that the experience of pain or pleasure is not so much what
is happening externally as it is what is happening internally: the
experience of pain or pleasure is mainly a state of mind. Whether
we experience the world as enlightened or confused depends on our
state of mind.”
And that’s the good news.
It’s good news because there is always the
potential for being truly aware of what’s going on and using that
to deepen our understanding. There’s always the potential for
opening our eyes and being buddha: awake. Furthermore,
interdependence means that good actions bring positive, happy
results for us and for others; and impermanence means that painful
situations can change for the better and that we can perceive them
differently and use them more wisely.
The Tibetan word for Buddhist, nangpa, means
“insider,” as in “those whose focus is directed inside: on the
mind, its workings and development.” The Buddha taught that true
happiness, or fulfillment, is independent of outer causes and
conditions. So for Buddhists, the pursuit of happiness involves
training in looking inward. Once we know who we really are, from
the inside out, we’re less likely to believe in the viability of
our patterns and addictions. We realize that if we’ve been in
cahoots with dissatisfaction and confusion, it’s because we haven’t
discovered our own birthright.
An oft-given analogy is that of the starving
person who is unaware of the larder in the cellar. I always imagine
an emaciated fellow in rags, too defeated or unimaginative to think
to pick at the dirt floor of the filthy hovel he’s wasting away in.
Too discouraged to find the big iron ring just under the surface of
the dirt that would lift weightlessly away if pulled, revealing an
illuminated cellar filled with cool spring water, gorgeous fruit,
lots of good French cheese, fine crusty bread, and so
on.
If we’re inspired to dust off the big iron
ring and give it a pull, if we’re interested in working toward
replacing our confusion with clarity and peace of mind, in
discovering our birthright, Buddhism gives us tools. One of the
main tools, which guides us in observing and working with the mind,
is meditation.
Meditating isn’t about nuking the thoughts and
emotions that arise in our mindstream; it isn’t about floating
around in a bliss bubble; and it isn’t about shaving our head,
changing our name to Wangmo and living in a cave. So what is it
about? Remember that the Buddhist take on existence includes both
the absolute and relative levels. When we meditate, we relate to
both. We relate to absolute wisdom and relative confusion, and we
do it without judgment or politics. The basic meditation called
shamatha, or “calm abiding,” is a neutral process of acknowledging
and letting go. It’s the Switzerland of practices. We’re willing to
cut through our attachment to thought—but we are not trying to stop
the process of thinking, because thoughts are not the problem. Our
hopes and fears, attachment and rejection, the tension they create
and veils they reinforce are the problem.
Meditation takes many different forms; there
are endless variants, and each variant focuses on revealing one or
another of those treasures in the larder. Shamatha is the practice
that introduces us to the mind’s capacity to be trained and to
develop composure. And though composure is not the final goal,
stability is the basis for all other practices, some of which can
be quite dynamic and demanding. If the mind is constantly scurrying
around like a ferret on caffeine, how can we train it?
If we look at where the mind is going as it
dashes and darts here and there, we see that our thoughts are
concerned with the past—things we wish had happened differently,
situations we enjoyed and want to recreate, events that are dead
and gone—and the future, which doesn’t exist, and never unfolds the
way we write the stories anyway. When we meditate, we relate to
that unsettling, ineffable commodity: the present. We train in
letting go of thoughts and feelings as they arise, and settle back
into the present: that gap between two concepts—past and
future—that don’t actually exist. We’re simply being, here and now.
Because just being is so unfamiliar to us, we develop our practice
through any one of many methods for calming the mind, like
following the breath. We just sit down, settle our mind on the
breath, acknowledge what’s arising, drop it and go back to our
breathing. If we’re aware of tension, we soften and let it go. If
we’re aware of agitation or drowsiness, we make use of diligence
and apply a remedy.
Pay attention. Stay open. Note discomfort and go back to your
breathing. Use your curiosity. Be patient. You’re doing something
vital: you’re pulling the iron ring. You’re moving in the direction
of unconditional fulfillment and freedom. You’re pursuing happiness
the only way that truly makes sense: from the inside
out.