The
Buddha was very pragmatic. He didn’t philosophize about “the
nature of reality”; he gave us simple, basic guidelines about
how we can manage the challenges and difficulties of life.
The Buddha started with the basic human condition: we often suffer.
Suffering can take many forms: anxiety, tension, stress, grief, fear,
or dissatisfaction, to name a few. He emphasized that suffering is workable,
that we can engage with our suffering in such a way as to be freed from
it. He described five faculties that we need to develop to do so: confidence,
effort, mindfulness, concentration, and discernment.
These five qualities are present in varying degrees in almost every
activity. They are useful in developing any skill, be it playing a musical
instrument, training in a sport, or cultivating a meditative mind. The
Buddha recognized these universal human capacities and taught us how
to use them to develop the craft of meditation.
Confidence comes first because without it we would
probably never step onto the Buddhist path. With confidence, we apply
ourselves and experience the results. The more confidence we have, the
more fully we engage in the process of meditation.
When we begin spiritual practice, our confidence may be inspired by
someone we’ve met or something we’ve read. In time, we learn
from our own experience that the practice is helpful: our confidence
becomes verified. For example, perhaps you’ve learned from experience
that mindful breathing can calm your nervousness or temper impatient
impulses. Perhaps you’ve learned that remaining mindful of your
body gives you more stability and calm. Or maybe you’ve seen that
mindfulness of clinging helps free you from clinging. With each of these
experiences, your confidence in both your ability to be mindful
and the value of mindfulness grows.
The next faculty is effort. The more confident we are,
the more likely we will apply ourselves in spiritual practice. There
is no spiritual practice without effort. A regular meditation practice
requires effort. It takes effort simply to get to the meditation cushion.
Once we’re there, we have to make some effort to turn our attention
to the breath or to let go of thinking.
The effort in meditation should be neither strained nor complacent.
Even so, sometimes heroic effort is required; just to stay present for
our experience may take great courage. At other times, effort is easy
and delightful. You may feel like you’re on a raft carrying you
down a gentle stream. Of course, you have to steer around the eddies
and avoid the hanging branches, but even this can have an effortless
quality.
The next faculty is mindfulness. Inspired by confidence,
we make wholehearted effort and become more awake and attentive to the
present moment, better able to track our experience moment by moment.
Mindfulness is the simple capacity to track what is happening in the
present. We learn to recognize what is happening without resistance,
conflict, holding, or clinging.
At times in meditation practice, we experience a strong counter-force
to being present. We need to be wise about that counter-force, to not
take it personally or see it as a failure, and to have confidence that
with time mindfulness will develop. Judging the mind’s tendency
to wander or becoming discouraged is not helpful. Be patient and just
keep showing up. Sooner or later the mind calms down. It stops running
off in all directions, and is simply here.
Strong mindfulness has a cognitive element to it, an alert clarity.
When mindfulness is well-developed, you know you are awake. This clarity
has a quality of energy, a delightful, clear effortless effort. We no
longer struggle to be present; the mind is settled in the present moment.
The mind becomes an instrument of awareness.
As the attention becomes more stable and the forces of distraction weaken,
we can develop the fourth faculty, concentration. With
concentration, the mind is less fragmented. It becomes increasingly
composed, focused, and unified. We are like a musician absorbed in playing
a score. Concentration helps mindfulness to penetrate beneath the surface
chatter of the mind to see what’s going on at a deeper level.
A mind that’s confident, engaged, mindful, and focused can develop
discernment, the fifth faculty. Discernment helps us
determine which movements of the mind and heart, which thoughts and
feelings, are useful. What can we let go of? What should we develop
further?
Discernment may seem challenging, or perhaps more active than you think
meditation should be. But with mindful discernment, you will see that
the busy mind doesn’t know what it needs. With discernment, we
begin to take responsibility, not just for our behavior, but also for
our mind and what it does. We notice what is or is not conducive to
greater peace. If the way a person practices creates stress, then mindfulness
and discernment will show that. As the mind settles down, we begin to
learn how to let go of unskillful thoughts, feelings, and motivations.
The process of practice is self-correcting: it guides the mind to greater
peace and freedom.
To learn a skill you have to apply yourself and practice regularly.
You learn most quickly when you practice every day. So too in meditation.
And in meditation, as with any craft, we learn from our “mistakes.”
The five faculties—confidence, persistent effort, mindfulness,
concentration, and discernment—are skills that we all already
have to some degree. Recognizing and cultivating them as part of our
meditation practice can help us develop our meditation and also manage
our life experience to benefit ourselves and others.