Bhikkhu Bodhi on
Mindfulness in the Buddha’s Words
March 27, 2017 Justin
Whitaker Patheos
Mindfulness in the Western world is perhaps
best known in the terms of the words of Jon Kabat-Zinn
as:
“Paying attention in a particular way: on
purpose, in the present moment and non-judgmentally.”
Bodhipaksa of Wildmind presents a helpful
breakdown of each part of this sentence after offering his own
definition of “the gentle effort to be continuously present with
experience.”
Culadasa (John Yates, PhD), author of The Mind
Illuminated, describes mindfulness in terms of “optimizing the
interaction between attention and awareness.” He
emphasizes awareness here to bring out the global or peripheral
aspect of mindfulness; one is not only attending to a
specified object such as the breath or a task, but also has an
awareness of the world around them.
The meaning of sati can be also be understood
by looking at a description of it found in the Pali Canon. The
Buddha there describes the sati of a cowherd, who had to watch
closely over his cows to keep them from straying into fields with
ripe crops. Once those crops were harvested, the cowherd could
relax, just ‘being mindful’ (sati karaṇīyaṃ) of his cows. The crops
here represent thoughts of sensuality and the harvest represents
the abandonment via renunciation of those thoughts. Mindfulness, in
this case, is a kind of gentle presence of being based on prior
effort and control. So Bodhipaksa’s definition reflects very
closely this image from the early Buddhism while Kabat-Zinn’s might
be seen as a more “modernized” definition aimed specifically to the
contemporary Westerner. Bhikkhu Analayo suggests that the gentle
presence (similar to a wide-angle camera lens) is characteristic to
the Buddha’s particular use of the term sati.
Here, Bhikkhu Bodhi, the pre-eminent
contemporary translator of early Buddhist texts, describes
mindfulness (sati) specifically in relation to clear comprehension
(sampajañña) as understood in early Buddhist teachings. He defines
the role of sati as that which “keeps the object present
before one’s attention” or “attentiveness” – retaining or
preserving the object in mind. Sampajañña, he notes, has
the function of assessment and evaluation.
So, common factors of Buddhist “mindfulness”
seem to include attention/attentiveness and awareness, as well as
an activity of being present. It is not a passive state. It is a
quality based on cultivation, past effort, based in gentleness or –
perhaps more geared toward modern readers –
non-judgement.