No Satisfaction
tricycle
Ayya Khema
explains why we won't find what we're looking for.
While we still have our “self ” intact, that’s the
one we love best. We won’t find anybody who will love us as much as
we do ourselves. Yet, because of our ego delusion, we believe that
there must be somebody like that somewhere. In reality we should
look at this search in a different way. We shouldn’t try to find
somebody who will help us to support our self-delusion but rather
someone who will help us to get rid of it. That can be the Buddha
and his teachings, because such is the essence of the
dhamma.
Introspection shows us the difficulties in making
the self solid and secure. In fact, this is such a burden that we
cannot be deeply happy. We can be pleasurably excited, but complete
happiness is not possible with a view that needs constant
reinforcement. We are not satisfied with telling ourselves how
wonderful and clever we are. We need another person to reinforce
and support this view.
The bigger our self-image is, the easier it gets
knocked down. We often believe that it is sensitivity when our
feelings are hurt, but it just means that we are self-centered and
want to protect our threatened ego.
To look for total satisfaction in oneself is a
futile endeavor. Neither satisfaction nor self really exist. Since
everything changes from moment to moment, where can self and where
can satisfaction be found? Yet these are two things that the whole
world is looking for and it sounds quite reasonable, doesn’t it?
But since these are impossible to find, everybody is unhappy. Not
necessarily because of tragedies, poverty, sickness, or death:
simply because of unfilled desire. Everybody is looking for
something that isn’t available. It’s worse than looking for a
needle in a haystack; at least the needle is there, even though it
is hard to find. But satisfaction and self are both delusions, so
how can they ever be found? Searching here and there keeps everyone
busy on this little globe of ours. If we were to stop looking for
satisfaction for the self, we would have an immediate lessening of
dukkha (unsatisfactoriness), since dukkha arises only from wanting
something. Also our self-concept would be minimized, as ego is no
longer constantly in the forefront of the mind.
To get to this enormous root system that entangles
us, we have to use mindfulness. The reason we find it so difficult
to be really mindful is the fact that true attention shows us that
there is no person, only mind and body. It is like coming up
against a wall and instead of digging through that wall, the mind
veers off and doesn’t want to know anything further. True
mindfulness has arisen when there is only the action but no doer.
With divided mindfulness we experience both, the one who is mindful
and the one who is being watched. If we use precision in our
attention, we see—even if only for a moment—that no person is
embedded in our mind/body process. We can never forget that
experience.