In Buddhism, kindness comes before
rightness
WAYNE CODLING / TIMES COLONIST
AUGUST 6, 2016
Buddhist
thought is slowly seeping into the vernacular of of the so-called
western world. It is no longer considered exotic to know the word
'karma' or to advocate for mindfulness; we know about the Dalai
Lama and many of us harbour at least an aesthetic appreciation of
Zen. In fact, the highly urbanized and refined minimalism so
evident in the aesthetic staging of Zen is a powerful stimulant to
tens of thousands of our companion citizens who have taken up the
study of the Middle Way (ie Buddhist) practice. But we should never
forget that the vast majority of western people will not become
Japanese or Chinese or Vietnamese or Tibetan Buddhists. If there is
ever to be a form of Buddhist thought that has a positively
transformative effect in the western world, interested individuals
need to examine the very basics of Buddhism.
Buddhism
is full of fascinating takes on logic and morality and just what
constitutes good behaviour. But under all that talk about karma and
causation is the discrete notion of suffering. This is the core
concern of Buddhism from its very beginning and one of the shared
attributes of the myriad of Buddhisms.
Good
Behaviour is defined many ways; 8-fold path, 6 perfections and many
other schemas, but the basic recipe is the 5 Prohibitory Precepts.
Lay Buddhists can embrace these and be assured that a moral life
will ensue. The five are: not taking what
is not given, not doing harmful things, no careless or hurtful
speech, no abuse of sensuality and not to imbibe intoxicants to the
point of heedlessness. What's interesting about this
is: the initial template of good behaviour is that it involves
cessation. Cessation means getting to zero; zero greed, zero harm,
zero heedlessness in relation to speech, sexuality and
intoxicants.
From
the perspective of Buddhist practice, what we do in meditation is
erode the edifice of our own suffering and at the same time almost
eliminate ourselves as a cause of suffering. Basic Buddhism teaches
that suffering is caused by craving, clinging and that whole domain
of attachment. This ultimately means that every desire that prompts
action causes suffering related to the degree of attachment to that
desire. In meditation we deliberately seek to configure a presence
in which desire has been reduced to near zero.
If
Buddhist thought is ever to have real purchase in the west, a
subtle shift will have to happen. Buddhist morality is centred on
kindness being more important than rightness. Our western
civilization is very compassionate and very generous, but it is
also axiomatic that we accept great cruelty in the name of
rightness. In a Buddhist morality the importance of punishment is
diminished and our whole moral structure takes on a softer
configuration. Meticulous morality becomes more of a scrupulous
morality. This means less behaviour that is energized by fear and
more behaviour motivated by a sense of personal value and balance.
Meditation is the activity that allows that small shift to occur:
initially as a recognition of its veracity and then as an evolving
reference point for thought, word and deed.
Zen
meditation teaches the techniques of reducing toward zero such
internal activities as judgments, opinions and attachments of all
kinds. When we pay attention to our breath, the mind trends toward
stillness and calm. Having zero desire beyond breath and posture,
there is little suffering. In meditation we reduce suffering in
which we are complicit and by doing not-doing we are not the cause
of further harm to beings.