Kamma, self
and liberation
(The following is an extract from Meditation: A
Way of Awakening. It explains some of the rationale behind the
meditation practices presented in that book.)
And what is kamma that is neither dark nor
bright with neither dark nor bright result, leading to the ending
of kamma? Mindfulness as a factor of Awakening, investigation of
qualities… persistence/energy…rapture…tranquillity…concentration…
equanimity as a factor of Awakening. [A.
4.238]
An important aspect of Dhamma is about acknowledging
that in us which feels, gets hurts, complains, aspires and is
motivated for good or bad. We need to spend time enquiring into it,
steadying it and releasing it from hindrances and afflictions. We
can feel slighted or welcomed by people’s behaviour, useless or in
demand with regard to a work or family situation. These felt
meanings’ carry a meaning that forms who we seem to be – a winner,
a no-account, a trusted partner, a loner or whatever. People will
commit huge amounts of their resources, and even risk their lives
to get to be a winner with that ‘top of the world’ feeling. And at
the other end of the spectrum, there are suicides and the
self-destructive behaviour of those who feel they are
hopeless.
These felt meanings are volatile: they move our
hearts and affect how we act. Yet real as it all these feelings
seem, they do change; and if I follow them then who I seem to be
changes in accordance with them. When I am being ‘me, the harassed,
overworked’ my manner will have a different flavour than when I’m
‘me, welcoming you to my home.’ Actually, I have quite a few
selves, or subsidiary personalities, which take centre stage
dependent on the situation, pressures and natural conditions like
health. My world-view and motivation may change between one of
these personae (these selves that we have within us) and the next –
sometimes I can hardly believe it when someone reports back to me
what I said when I was in a difficult mood. In fact, I might
comment that ‘I wasn’t quite myself then.’
These ranging personae, of which any one can be
occupying the ‘me’ space at a given time, are based on felt
meanings that arise around one’s role, function, and relationship –
as well as on physical health and current attitude. The most
residual ones, the ones that really feel like me, are the ones
carried in the heart: ‘I am the one who has to do all the work (and
receives no recognition)’; ‘I am the one who can’t manage and needs
others to make decisions for me…’ and so on. They direct us through
event after event, and yet we might not even recognize them as such
because the mind will imagine that the feeling is being created not
from some internal bias, but from the situation that’s occurring
around us. Or, after a while, as one finds oneself in yet another
re-run of the damaging relationship or in charge of another project
that failed because we again underestimated what was needed, the
assumption can grow that this bias is our true self. The
potentially crippling reaction can set in that ‘I am weak-willed’
or ‘I’m a complete idiot.’
However, there is a wiser and more useful way of
understanding the personal predicament. It touches into the
Buddha’s teachings on kamma, and is supported by the meditations
that we’ve been working with. And it can bring around deep changes
for the better.
What is ‘kamma’?
Kamma (or ‘karma,’ meaning ‘action’) refers to the
cause and effect of our intentions, to action that occurs because
of intention, i.e. the mind is bent on that action. Such actions
leave results in terms of memories and habits. This result is
called ‘vipaka’ or ‘old kamma.’ So we live within a continuum of
action and result, (kamma-vipaka), in which whatever we do while
conscious of doing it leaves a result in the mind. These results
may be experienced as the reactions and responses of others, or as
effects on our physical well-being, but the deepest result is
mental. That is, our actions have a psychological and emotional
result that shapes our minds. After all, this is the way we learn:
we do something and from the results – from the feedback that other
people or our bodies or our own minds give us – we notice whether
that action gave us well-being or pain. Through contact, that
feedback gets lodged as a memory, a perception or felt meaning.
It’s a detail on our psychological road map of how to proceed
through life. That detail, a memory, or a piece of behaviour
becomes one strand in the weave of our identity. That’s how your
mind gets shaped, for good or for ill. And so one result of kamma,
good or bad, is the sense of self.
Now maybe the mapping gets messed up. It can be the
case that the feedback we received from others was skewed – you
know, you told the truth, but someone got annoyed. Still on your
map, you’re cautious about going down that track again. Worse
still, somebody gave you a hard time, not because of what you did,
but because they were having a bad day and you got in the way. This
happens a lot. We all get affected by other people’s kamma and this
is very confusing. You weren’t doing anything wrong in your own
eyes and someone takes a swing at you. Maybe your mother or your
father was upset at the time. Maybe the kids at school ridiculed
your ears or your voice or your clothes or your skin colour because
they thought it was fun, or their parents didn’t like blacks or
Jews or Albanians. So you end up hurt or bitter and frustrated
because of what other people do – and that affects the way you are
in the world. You have all kinds of dangerous territory on your
map. The result is you develop a persona accordingly: a ‘self’ with
a mental bent towards fear, or towards trying to be liked, or
towards bitterness and violence.
Another problem is that we don’t always learn that
well: we get a short-term boost and don’t notice the long-term
results of, for instance, drinking alcohol. Or we get the happy
buzz of buying new things and don’t take into account the long-term
effects on our bank account. Our instincts aren’t always based on
wise reflection, so confused assumptions about other people or a
lack of clarity as to cause and effect are more common sources of
bad kamma than a deliberately harmful intent.
The main point of the teaching on kamma isn’t who
you were in a previous life – you can’t practise with that. Nor is
a teaching of predestination, or about divining the future: no
Awakening in any of that. It’s telling us that what we do while
conscious of doing it is something we need to be clear about and
work with. If we are consciously motivated by compassion, or by
aversion, or by fear (even if someone else has planted that fear in
our minds) then those qualities get established in our minds. And
every time you act from a felt meaning and mental inclination, the
persona that goes with it takes a bigger position in your mind and
heart. As you act, so you become. That’s kamma, cause and effect.
And that’s what ‘not-self’ implies – what we seem to be, our self,
is a dynamic of causes and effects and not some unchanging
entity.
Two clear messages come through from this teaching:
one is to get clear about action and especially to look into the
motivations behind it. Whether we are motivated by anxiety,
affection, bitterness or just plain unknown random reaction, these
give rise to an anxious, affectionate, bitter or confused
personality trait. Continue along those lines and that’s who you
sense yourself as being. Therefore meditate, get to know what’s
going on under the lid, what makes you tick. Be mindful and allow
the immediate impulse to be witnessed, let pass, be questioned, or
enhanced. That’s the first message.
The second is to know what is good, what you want to
live with, what you want to base your life upon. Because any day
that life may end, and you don’t want to be dying with grudges and
anxieties in your heart. If you take the Buddha’s word on it, those
tendencies that are dominant in your mind when you die will dictate
the way another ‘you’ comes into being in the future. This seems
reasonable to me, as it’s what happens in this life. But if you
don’t accept that, still, you’d sooner live in this life without
anxiety and regret.
Perceptions are old
kamma
From the above it follows that if we’re keen on
getting clear as to why we act and what’s really going on with all
those split-second assumptions of feeling trusted or nervous, the
focus is on two strands of mental behaviour. One is felt meaning or
perception, the other is the mental activity that informs and
responds to that, both of which we’ve touched on before. So: the
broad term ‘perception’ (saññā) refers to both the initial
impression of a sense-object, and the felt meaning that is our
‘take’ on what that thing is. So we might both agree that a stretch
of sparkling flowing stuff is the sea – that’s the initial
reference; but the felt meaning is subjective. One person might see
it as dangerous, while another sees it as a lovely place to bathe:
the mapping is in accordance with each person’s previous
experience. Both maps have some truth in them, but holding on to
one generates conflict with the other.
It’s the activity called ‘contact’ (which has both a
sensory impression aspect and a heart-based meaning aspect to it)
that establishes perceptions. So where there’s a lot of
heart-involvement, the felt meanings get very subjectively mapped.
This is very much the case with perceptions of people. When we meet
other people, many value judgements and personal biases are bound
to occur – this is someone I can trust, need to win over, can help,
better be on guard against, etc. Any of these may be so – all
perceptions have some truth in them – but can we suspend and
reflect on the habitual interpretation, the one that first leaps to
mind, before acting on it? Can we check the map in the light of
mindful awareness? Maybe that impression is pointing to an aspect
of another person to bear in mind, or maybe it’s telling us
something about our own standpoint and bias.
The one who is most subject to our heart-biases is
living in our own body, speech and heart: good old me – whatever I
have decided I am, will never be, and deserve to be. And of course
there’s also the ‘me’ sense that arises dependent on how I’m seen
by others. As meditators, we watch and feel these felt meanings and
personae. We sense them as transient and in process. We sense them
as things that occupy consciousness, but not as belonging to or
defining some true and lasting self. If any one of them were really
me, then who is the self that’s watching them? That reflection
offers us the opportunity to respond to perception, to calm it,
accept it, or look into it rather than to keep following or
repressing it.
Thus, we’re not obliged to react to the world or the
self we seem to be right now. We don’t have to make more habitual
kamma out of what’s happening, or what others do. One of the
memorable sayings of the Buddha is: ‘We live happily, friendly
even amongst those who are hostile’ [Dhp. 197]. In other
words, when we’re among people who dislike us, we can sense that
their attitude is their kamma and leave it there. Their bias
doesn’t have to take over our own hearts and minds. And we might
feel after a few moments (or hours or years) that we could make
some good kamma around such impressions. We could clear our own
fear and anger. Then, once we’ve seen how reactive and edgy our own
minds can get, we could make peace with, be compassionate and
generous – even to people who’ve hurt us. Why not? We’re not being
asked to approve of others, just to finish with the grudges and
start afresh. This is a big step, but it is what is most truly
grand and worthy about humans. We can step out of history and we
can step forward in a different way. And in ourselves there’s the
joy: ‘Oh, that mean feeling, that twenty-year-old surge of blame or
guilt or vengefulness – it’s gone.’ We’ve ended a piece of old
kamma and the mind feels spacious, settled and agile. So the
encouragement is to Awaken to kamma, to end old kamma rather than
try to sort out whose fault it is. This is the ongoing process of
liberation.
Activities
In the course of that enquiry, we can get a useful
handle on the second strand of mental behaviour, sankhāra
– ‘activities’ or ‘formations.’ They’re activities because they’re
the agents of kamma. Intention is the leader of these, but it’s not
on its own. Activities are everything that causes or is liable to
cause, action. What this means is that all those qualities that
seem to be ‘I’ as an agent (as in ‘I do, I speak, I feel’) are not,
and aren’t issuing from, a solid being but are repeated activities;
programs if you like. But when these programs get established, they
have solidity: hence ‘formations.’ Furthermore all those moods and
states that seem to be ‘me’ or ‘my self’ as an object (as in ‘my
real self is a tragic romantic’, or ‘a misunderstood genius’) are
formed programs of sorrow, frustration or self-importance.
Heart-contact (classically called ‘designation contact’) will etch
these on our personal map and thereby establish the perceptual
references that we judge current experience by. So a mishap gets
read as ‘Life is tragic’; or ‘No one understands me.’ True enough
in a way, but no-one understands anyone all of the time; and life
is also comic, resilient, and the optimal occasion for Awakening.
So the perception is a truth of our own mapping, and the mistake is
turning it into an activity.
Other activities, of attention and contact, play a
part in this, because attention frames an experience, and contact
establishes the perception of it as an accurate impression. So,
with regards to attention – if you’re not attending to something
the contact doesn’t happen; you don’t get a perception, and you
don’t get a corresponding intention. (As when you’re watching a
movie: you don’t notice that your leg’s going numb, so you don’t
get the impulse to move.) Also if contact doesn’t place something
accurately in terms of your store of perceptions – if you see
someone who reminds you of a friend from childhood, when they’re
not – you get an inappropriate response. To take another example:
say you’re out walking in the country with a friend, and she
suddenly stops dead in her tracks, points ahead and comes out with
a Latin name. What you see is a pretty bird sitting in a bush. So
you think the name refers to the bird, when in fact it’s the name
of the bush. You both ‘saw’ the same thing, but because your
respective attentions framed different details of the scene, you
had different sense-contact experiences. As it turns out she is a
botanist, and gets very excited at the sight of this rare plant, it
means a lot to her. But you’ve seen birds like that many times and
think ‘So what.’ So the designation contacts differ, dependent on
personal history. To take it a step further: her utterance came
from an eager (though misguided) intention to share her joy. You
think, ‘Why not call it a yellowhammer, like everybody else does?
Who’s she trying to impress!’ So here the intentions get skewed and
misinterpreted; she wonders why you’ve gone dismissive – which
triggers things in her, and you think she’s being highfalutin or
showing off, and that triggers things in you.
This is an example of a kammic process. What we have
to ac-knowledge is that the navigator (attention) can’t read that
well (or is looking elsewhere), the mapmaker (contact) isn’t
accurate, and the driver (intention) has their own ideas and latent
tendencies. This is not good news for the road through
life.
Yet it is a cause for Awakening. For starters, it’s
good to remember that all this is not-self; and to take to heart
the practice whereby you can witness and shift intention, attention
and contact. First of all, take intention. What you may notice
about those responses and impulses is that they arise dependent on
perceptions. Some are re-runs of basic programs and personal
history. Somearise through accessing states of tension or numb-ness
in the bodyrather than through particular thoughts or present-day
scenarios. (These embodied states can carry a large amount of
‘kammic mapping,’ therefore one should work around such areas with
sensitivity.) Some are directly disagreeable, such as anger,
depression or grief. Emotion can be stimulating and lift us up, but
it also uses up huge resources of energy. The search for happy
feelings can get us into some addictive pastimes and impair our
capacity for responsibility and fellow-feeling. And yet, our life
is structured around these activities; and carrying out intentions
is what a meaningful life is all about. Indeed so. So we can and do
intend towards the clear, the compassionate, the generous. Through
wise intention there’s the possibility of shifting our activities
into a better program.
Meditative training is about doing just this; it’s
about using activities skilfully. So we cultivate intentions of
clarity and kindness. And we cultivate deep attention. These allow
us to con-template contact, perception and any intentions that
consequently arise in terms of good, bad, suffering, or well-being.
In this way the twofold meditative activity of calm and insight
(samatha-vipassanā) comes into play.
Then what becomes clear that these activities
operate through three channels – body, heart and thought. With some
practice we can notice how one affects the others and we get some
perspective on their very convincing and compulsive programs.
Especially the clutching one that keeps creating a sense of self.
That’s the one to work on for the release from
suffering.
The kamma of meditation
As we’ve see, kamma is carried out by activities,
and so is the release from kamma. For this, in the meditative
process, we discern and work with activities in all the channels.
First there’s the bodily activity, which gives rise to the sense of
‘where I am.’ It’s the activity, governed by breathing, of having a
vital and grounded body, a sense of being located in a physical
context. That means there will be many ‘fight, flight, feed on
this’ reflexes ready to fire. Secondly, there’s the mental/heart
activity that presents us with moods, feelings, perceptions and
intuitions. This tells us ‘how I am.’ And finally, there’s the
‘what I’m going to do (or should do) about all this’: a bubbling
energy of thoughts and attitudes. This is our ‘head sense’, our
ability to conceive and articulate, the verbal activity. When these
sankhāra are running, they form our habitual and
habituating responses with corresponding thinking, mood and body
tone. So: we recognize a task that needs to be done – and our
thinking system starts whirring; we see someone we are fond of –
and a surge rises up in our hearts; there is a sense of threat or
danger – and our bodily sense tenses up. Whether the intention
behind them is good or bad, confused or wise, they manifest in a
dynamic way and we can witness them in terms of body, heart and
thought.
Of the three activities, the heart activity is the
most crucial, because this is where conscious action, fresh kamma,
originates. Every action originates with a felt meaning, a mental
perception that contact places in the heart and which may trigger
verbal or physical action. Designation contact places us on our
kammic map. Actually it’s more like landing on a trampoline of
cause and effect: something touches the heart and we bounce into a
reaction. However we can get off the thing. If we get the heart to
discern, to restrain, and to step back from its habits, we can
first of all adjust our bounce, and have some choice in terms of
what kamma we create. And that initial non-involvement gives us
another choice: to investigate a perception and impulse and stop
bouncing up and down. Sense-contact doesn’t have to dump us on our
kammic trampoline. ‘From the ceasing of contact is the ceasing
of kamma’ as the Buddha puts it [A.6.63].
So the cycle of kamma-vipaka can be
changed, or stopped altogether through releasing the heart from the
grip of activities. Towards this end, using the body is great
because although you may have run out of the capacity to feel much
patience and compassion for a boss who’s been surly and demanding
for ten years, or with a three-year-old who’s throwing his
breakfast at the wall and screaming while you’re trying to get his
sister dressed…you can still breathe in and out. And know ‘this is
where I am, right now.’ It doesn’t seem to resolve the situation,
but it takes you out of the bounce of felt meanings and emotions
and ‘fix it, do something’ programs to a place where you can gather
your resources. From there, you can witness and not take the whole
scene so personally. This kind of thing has happened and will
happen to others; this too will pass and you’re not obliged to
solve the situation or make it work. Know the feeling as a feeling,
be with that urge to scream and lash out – as an activity rather
than as me and mine. Let it arise and pass. You don’t have to be a
character in someone else’s movie – or even in your own. You don’t
even have to take on the ‘I should be capable, assured, in charge
and able to master this’ program and persona. You can put aside the
maps and act, or wait, with mindfulness and clear comprehension.
You’ve started freeing up a bit of old kamma.
Awakening and ‘not-self’
So freeing oneself from old kamma begins with not
letting the old pattern trap you into becoming its stooge. You just
feel the activity for what it is. In meditation you can contemplate
the activities that move the heart through feeling them in the body
– just think of your pet love or hate and feel the flush that
happens. And as you feel it, let it move and pass. You’ll probably
feel yourself becoming charged up, tight or hot or bristling, you
may even recognize the mood of the persona who arises with that
activity. Do you need to be/want to be bounced into that
person…again? Well, sometimes we do. Much of the time we either
want to become the loved and enriched person that floods our nerve
endings, or we feel we have no choice but to be weighed-down loser
that the world seems to make us. However we can choose to
contemplate these possibilities. Stepping back into mindful
awareness, you can feel how that person is going nowhere but round
and round. That’s what we call ‘samsāra’ – happy or
unhappy, it’s the business of going round and round. Then know that
for what it is. When you get the point that there’s only a virtual
self in that round, an appearance that doesn’t arrive at anywhere
final, maybe the momentum pauses. There may be an emotional shift,
or a sense of relief. Subsequently you can act with clarity with a
clearer view.
In this kind of enquiry, if you’re really just
exploring how it is, rather than trying to find something, the only
mental kamma that you add is that of mindfulness and investigation.
This is the kamma that leads to the end of kamma, in that it
doesn’t establish a new perception of, ‘He is one of those’ or, ‘I
am an obsessive person.’ Mindfulness and investigation helps us to
experience the storehouse of perceptions, impressions and felt
meanings as programs that run through the body-mind system. Other
factors of Awakening follow on the deeper you penetrate the
activities. Applied persistent energy keeps you engaged with the
process, and keeps your inner hero alive. Its vigour builds up the
power of the mind so that we can stand back from habitual activity.
This results in the three factors that provide vitality and
firmness – rapture, calm and concentration. When the mind is firm
and calm, then there is the factor of equanimity directed towards
activities; even the good and useful ones you can know are just
that, not something to make into a person. That means you can have
a good idea without having to shout it from the rooftops. And you
can have a helpful insight, or a state of concentration, without
getting conceited and obnoxious about it all.
Even these skilful Dhamma activities are not solid
three-dimensional realities, they aren’t me or mine. Every place
where there’s a grip around an activity, it feels like ‘me’ and the
basis for stress is established. So there’s a deep learning that
has to be done that affects our way of being. In a nutshell, the
point is to relax the activity that clings to activities…even to
the good ones. Because of course, we’re not trying to ultimately
get rid of activities, and just sit there like a turnip. Just as we
need to have perceptions to get some sketch of what things mean, we
also have to come up with an activity as a response. The key point
is to get free of the clinging, because it’s that which blindly
binds perceptions to activities in a habit-forming way. That’s
kamma.
It should be easy once you know the problem, but
kamma has an addictive quality.
Kamma is addictive because we’re used to
sankhāra showing and telling us who we are. Even if our
self-view is wretched, the hunger to be something is such an
ingrained reflex that we operate around it. Just like a junkie
ordering his/her life around getting the next fix: it’s never going
to be enough, it costs us and we should really snap out of it, but
it takes some doing. Beyond what we like to be, there is a reflex
to be something solid and permanent that kicks in by itself. This
is the reflex of ‘becoming.’ It provides the support for and is the
result of grasping. It wants to be something, some self – and
whether that is a millionaire who has far more money than they
need, or an athlete who runs their body to rags, or a depressive
who has a much darker view of themselves than is balanced and true,
that instinct pushes us along into self. The rarest experience for
a human being isn’t bliss, but feeling that they (and life) are
‘good enough.’ Becoming is insatiable: it always wants more, a new
success, a bigger deal, another future. The Buddha said this can go
on for lifetimes: he called the process ‘further becoming’ – which
is about as interesting as chewing the same piece of meat for a
thousand years. It’s only ignorance that keeps us at it!
The subtle aspect of this from the spiritual
seeker’s point of view is that it’s not possible that ‘I can get
enlightened.’ From the position of a solid ‘me’ trying to gain
something, we can’t experience full liberation – because that view
of self is an activity. It too is a reflex and an addiction.
However, we can come out of the addiction by being filled with the
deep potential of the factors of Awakening. These provide the inner
stability and richness that means the mind doesn’t have to keep
leaning on the activities, and identifying with feelings, energies
and attitudes for support. It doesn’t have to be solid thing; when
balance is established, the mind can be a process, and one that
leads off the bouncy trampoline of kamma.
So generating these factors is the kamma that leads
to the end of kamma. Therefore, mindfulness and investigation are
crucial. Applied energy and patience are also necessary because
some activities have very convincing and compulsive patterns.
There’s ‘righteous me, stuck in an unfair world.’ Then again
there’s the inner tyrant who gives us scathing indictments and
endless naggings over our laziness, stupidity, weakness and
all-round hopelessness. These are important pieces of mental kamma
to get free of – and you do so through contemplating the activities
with the firmness, bright-heartedness and enthusiasm that comes
from non-involvement. Yes, vigour is needed: just sitting there
going through the same mental pattern time and time again isn’t
going to bring release. It can even etch the program deeper. So
when you’re getting stuck, stay out of that place, regroup around
your skills with breathing or get the assistance of another
person’s mindful awareness. That’s what teachers and spiritual
friends are for.
As we acknowledge how stuck all of us can get,
equanimity arises. This is a very spacious kind of love that
neither approves nor disapproves, but offers all the empathic space
that we need to allow us to sense our kammic programs without
attachment. Then our apparent winning and losing selves can march
through without judgement and be seen for what they are. This view
offers a life-changing opportunity: when you experience your
passions, nagging anxieties and defence strategies as just old
kamma, you can step out of them. You don’t have to keep offering
board and lodging to hungry ghosts that leave the place in a mess.
Instead, in the process of releasing old kamma, you live in a
fuller, more spacious and assured way – just because you’re not
carrying so much stuff around.
Ajahn Sucitto