How Your Mind
Works
Gaylon Ferguson| March
9, 2017| Lion’s Roar
What is this thing we call “self”? We assemble
it ourselves, according to Buddhist psychology. Gaylon Ferguson
breaks down the five-step process of ego development.
William James, one of the founders of modern
psychology, wrote in 1890 that our earliest experience of the world
is of “a great blooming, buzzing confusion.” While modern research
shows that newborns have more ability to make sense of their
experience than James believed, even as adults we remain confused
about how our minds work. Yes, we all know that we have minds and
psychological experiences, but who are we really? How does mind
work to shape our experience of our world, our felt experience of
being alive? How might we slow down for a moment to see clearly the
dazzlingly rapid unfolding of mind and world?
Buddhist psychology begins by examining our
everyday experience of clarity and confusion about our minds and
self. The earliest Buddhist maps of our sense of self show five key
steps in the process of ego development. The Sanskrit word for
these five, the skandhas, literally means “aggregates” or
“heaps.”
The skandhas are not so much collections of
elementary particles of existence as momentary gatherings of mental
and physical events. In fact, mind and body—the mental and the
physical—are the two main kinds of events. We experience ourselves
as embodied beings in a world of other physical forms like trees
and cars. We also move in a world of other living beings with their
own mental experiences of suffering and ease.
The five skandhas, the “heaps” of our basic
being, are (1) form, (2) feeling, (3) perception, (4) concept, and
(5) consciousness. Let’s walk together now through these five and
examine how step-by-step they build our sense of self.
Form
The first skandha is called “form,” meaning
both our physical body and the body of the world. How is this part
of our experience of mind?
Form is the ground of our being, the
fundamental sense that we are this body, somewhat separate from
this mind. This separation is the primary distinction in our
ordinary experience. My body has weight that appears on the
bathroom scale in the morning, while my thoughts are of uncertain
substance. They matter, particularly to me, but they are not
material. My body and my mind arise together, but in uneasy
tension. I cannot simply think my weight up or down.
The body and mind are like two quarreling but
conjoined siblings.
As in any dualistic relationship, body and
mind may go along harmoniously for a time together, enjoying each
other’s company and friendship. But body and mind can also fall
into deep division, quarrels, and entrenched separations. When all
is going well, my body cooperates with what my mind seems to want
from it: “Let’s have breakfast now, shall we?” But sometimes my
body rebels, developing a knee ache just when I wanted to go for a
run or falling asleep during an important meeting.
The body and mind are like two quarreling but
conjoined siblings. If we are physically tired or hungry, our
experience and judgment of others may be correspondingly flavored
by fatigue or low blood sugar. A recent study showed that Israeli
judges granted parole in sixty-five percent of cases heard
immediately after they had eaten and in nearly zero cases heard
just before a break period or at the end of the day. So the first
insight into the working of our minds is that understanding mental
experience requires close attention to the skandha of form as
well.
Feeling
The next phase in the emergence of self is
called “feeling.” This means our basic sense of liking, disliking,
or being indifferent to whatever we perceive.
How do we feel about the forms and beings we
are encountering? Do they feel attractive or threatening? Do we
feel like moving toward or away from them? These intuitive
feelings—not quite full-fledged emotions—are the basis for our
subsequent impulses toward or away from whatever we are
experiencing. “A warm sweater in winter? Hmm, good, I like this
very much.” “Too many layers in the heat of the midday sun? Hmm,
bad, I’d like to take some of these off.” Like, dislike, neutral,
attraction, repulsion, neutrality—around and around we go all day
and all night. Daydreams and nightmares are all flavored by
feeling.
Feeling is the general background to all our
experience, a changing texture of encounter and exchange with our
world. This is not denying that there are benevolent and malevolent
beings in the world, those who wish us well and those who would
cause us harm. As they say, “Even paranoids have real
enemies.”
Note that these feelings are our mental
experience. It’s partly the delight of our own minds we are tasting
when we enjoy a delicious apple. The skandha of feeling points to
this primarily mental aspect of all our experience. Our own minds
accompany our experience of anything and everything. This sounds
obvious at first, barely worth mentioning, but it’s one of the key
insights of the contemplative traditions. Our pleasant or
unpleasant experiences of whomever or whatever always have an inner
aspect. We call this inner aspect “mind.”
Perception
The next stage in the development of the self
is called “perception.” These are more specific discernments than
the simple, broad-brush evaluations of feeling—thumbs up, thumbs
down, or neutral. Here it’s “I like, very much, not only the warmth
provided by my new wool sweater but also its light-blue color and
smooth texture.” These perceptions of the desirable, handsome
qualities of the new sweater are all tinged by biases from the
past. We’ve prejudged it as having good qualities based on our
prior feelings.
Note that these perceptual judgments are all
from my point of view, from the perspective of a gradually
solidifying “me.” (A moth’s experience of the sweater would be very
different.) We perceive this as “a really good light-blue wool
sweater” because, for the moment at least, it seems to be “on my
side,” on the side of a central “me.” There is a dawning sense that
this sweater fulfills and completes me, so I grasp to hold on to
it. It’s as though by holding on tightly to the sweater (substitute
whatever fits for you), I am also holding on to a self.
The self-centeredness of this “perceiving”
comes home to roost in the psychological payoff: that this sweater
makes me good, “good to go,” slightly better than I was without
it—and a lot more solid in a fast-changing world.
Our experience of the world arrives
conveniently packaged into things we perceive are good for us and
things that aren’t.
It’s as though the skandha of perception were
an old-fashioned central switchboard operator fearfully screening
our telephone calls according to one simple criterion: for me or
against me? As a result, our experience of the world arrives
conveniently packaged into things we perceive are good for us and
things that aren’t. What’s wrong with that?
The problem is that the switchboard operator
acts in anxious haste, barely pausing to ask the name of the caller
or the nature of the call. The operator quickly—too quickly—decides
to let some calls through as “friends” and to deny access to others
as “enemies.” This would be tremendously helpful and efficient if
it were accurate.
Unfortunately, it’s all too frequently a comic
series of painful errors, just a prejudiced guess based on habitual
patterns: “Oh, I remember you from the pleasing sound of your voice
yesterday, Mr. Smith, you’re a very good friend, let me put you
through immediately.” Or “No, I don’t remember you, Mr. Jones,
never heard of you, but your ugly voice reminds me of a crank
caller yesterday, so please go away, good-bye!” As we see from this
analogy, perception adds names and labels of “recognition” based on
past experience. We also see corresponding impulses developing to
actively grasp or push away our experience.
Our hyper-busy perceptual switchboard operator
also fails to take into account the crucial fact of change. We have
all had the experience of discovering that the person we were
uncertain about yesterday turns out to be a close ally and friend
tomorrow—and vice versa. This enlivening discovery of the new is
what the “downloading” of past perceptions blocks.
Concept
The developmental process of ego hardens
further with the fourth skandha: “concept” or “mental
formation.”
With concept, we now have a name for the kind
of person Mr. Smith is—“good, pleasing”—and a series of names—“bad,
unpleasant”—for the kind of person Mr. Jones represents to us. This
is the realm of story lines and ideologies. This is the dualistic
aspect of mind that we call “false intellect”—using fixed
conceptual categories to identify ourselves and others.
In this realm of distorted insight, we begin
cleverly deceiving ourselves based on snap judgments, clouded
intuitions, yesterday’s news: “Oh, I see now: I’m this kind of
person and you’re that kind of person. So we couldn’t possibly be
friends. Good-bye!”
We leave the spacious, open humility of
not-knowing far behind and take shelter in a thicket of
concepts.
At this stage, we have developed sophisticated
interpretations of ourselves and our experience, far beyond the
basic “yea” and “nay” of feeling. This is the dimension of
psychological explanations: “I am this kind of person, because that
happened before.”
Again, this is not to deny the power of
previous causes and conditions in shaping the beings we have
become. But the temptation is to solidify the flowing water of
fresh insight into the frozen ice of fixed mental ideas. I repeat
to myself over and over again—and to whoever is willing to
listen—old stories of who I am, who I was, and who I am becoming
(as well as who you are and why you’re that way). We leave the
spacious, open humility of not-knowing far behind and take shelter
in a thicket of concepts. Ouch!
Consciousness
Finally, we discover the mental experience of
the fifth skandha, “consciousness.” The accumulated momentum of the
initial mind–body split, the positive or negative felt sense of
others, and the labels of ourselves and our world culminates in a
vivid display of emotions and thoughts.
This skandha is the familiar stream of
consciousness that we experience in everyday life, our mind-stream.
Buddhist psychology breaks it down into eight separate
consciousnesses. In addition to the familiar sense consciousnesses
of seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, and touching, Buddhist
psychology adds a sixth sense consciousness of “minding.” Just as
visual consciousness notices sights and auditory consciousness
attends to sounds, this sixth consciousness of mind attends to
thoughts and emotions. It also synthesizes and integrates the
experience of the other consciousnesses into a coherent whole, like
a skillful film editor coordinating image, sound, and discursive
commentary.
Underlying these six sense consciousnesses, we
may sometimes glimpse two more consciousnesses: a winding,
subconscious stream of conflicting emotions and anxiety (the
klesha, or “nuisance consciousness”) and even a hazy background
awareness (the alaya, or “storehouse consciousness”) that we
sometimes look back toward and call “I.” These underground currents
are great instigators, bubbling up occasionally with old
resentments and jealousies, fixated passions, and strongly
motivated denials.
The skandha of consciousness completes the
development of a deluded ego-sense. We now feel separate,
independent, and unitary—even though there is ample evidence to the
contrary.
Far from being single, unitary beings, we
arise as a dynamic collection of physical and mental
happenings.
We are not separate from our environments. If
we were, how could we breathe, eat, drink, sustain ourselves? Where
did the language we speak and write and read come from? None of us
is self-produced and independent, as our mothers and fathers remind
us. And far from being single, unitary beings, we arise as a
dynamic collection of physical and mental happenings, including
breathing, sleeping, dreaming, and waking. We have emotional and
physiological, skeletal and psychological aspects to our being, and
although these occasionally conflict with each other, they also
cooperate and harmonize.
What You Can Learn from the
Skandhas
Insight into your own psychological
processes—into how your mind works—is not an end in itself. The
tradition doesn’t offer this teaching as mere intellectual
knowledge or information. You are encouraged to use this map to
become more and more familiar, through direct experience, with the
processes you call “me” and “my mind.”
Developing a harmonious friendship with
yourself is a central part of the Buddhist path of awakening. These
teachings on the five skandhas invite you into a deeper, more
intimate experience of yourself. What do you find when you look
into your own experience of body and mind? This isn’t about
dogma—the point isn’t to confirm that the map is accurate or
“correct.” Part of the point is to notice that the map is not the
territory and never could be. (Imagine a map of Canada that was the
size of Canada: how useless would that be?) You are invited to set
forth as explorers of your own inner and outer terrains. Bon
voyage.
When you engage in this psychological
exploration, one of your best companions will be a sense of
friendliness toward yourself and others. Friendliness means taking
these five mental processes not as signs of an inherent weakness or
fundamental inadequacy but as aspects of your basic humanity.
Through cultivating friendliness, you can experience the skandhas
(as well as whatever else arises along the way) with a real sense
of gratefulness and appreciation. Let me be more specific
here.
If you can simply feel your feelings as they
arise, without rejecting them or telling yourself stale stories of
why you are “right” to feel this way, then feelings emerge as
highlights of being human, vivid signs of being alive.
The skandhas point, first, to healing the
body–mind split. If you pay caring attention to body and mind as an
actual experience, not just a distant “good idea,” then you’ve made
a good start. This is traditionally called “mindfulness of body.”
It’s a simple sense of welcoming and including your present
physical experience—not exaggerating your body or denigrating it,
neither praising nor condemning it. This is mind–body
friendliness.
The same goes for the other skandhas as well.
If you can simply feel your feelings as they arise, without
rejecting them or telling yourself stale stories of why you are
“right” to feel this way, then feelings emerge as highlights of
being human, vivid signs of being alive. You don’t need to act them
out or repress them. This is spacious freedom. Beyond grasping and
fixation, you allow your feelings to arise, be present, and go. You
appreciate that life bubbles up as colorful emotions, as heartfelt
experience. You appreciate being human.
Similarly, your thoughts and ideas can be seen
as the liberating play of wisdom. If you notice your thoughts as
thoughts, rather than confusing them with reality, then they become
friends and allies, companions along the path. Instead of confining
your consciousness of sense perceptions in narrow, tight boxes of
“for me” or “against me,” you can open into a larger appreciation
of seeing and hearing. You can taste the vastness of your
world.
On this journey, you see that both clarity and
confusion are woven into your everyday experience of mind. The
skandhas illuminate a fivefold process of mind grasping and
fixating, engaging in a losing battle of ego against the world. Yet
the same mental events can be the basis for a cease-fire, an
entrance into non-struggle and luminous peace.
Each moment in the unfolding of your
experience is an opportunity to welcome yourself, your feelings,
your mind, and others in your world. The key to working with mind,
to understanding its processes, is found in the innate warmth and
friendliness of the mind itself. You don’t need a newer, better,
super-improved body–mind. The real challenge is making friends with
the mind and body you already are.