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Stopping & Seeing
adapted from a talk by Gil Fronsdal,
April 1st, 2003
The
Chinese often used simple and ordinary Chinese words to translate Indic
Buddhist terms. I find it particularly interesting that they translated
the words for “concentration” and “insight” as
“stopping” and “seeing.” As important as the words
“concentration” and “insight” are in Buddhist
practice, they can also be problematic. They suggest capacities that we
develop over time, and so are not necessarily available or even relevant
to the present moment. In trying to achieve concentration and insight
as some future goal, we may even miss seeing the present clearly. Stopping
and seeing, on the other hand, suggest something immediately possible
in any situation, even the most mundane. They are activities with which
we are all familiar. For example, that’s what we do when we come
to a stop sign.
Stopping
and seeing function together in a number of ways. In some circumstances
we focus on stopping and in others we focus on seeing. We stop so that
we can see clearly. We look so that we can better understand what we should
stop doing. Stopping supports seeing and seeing supports stopping. If
we can stop what we need to stop, great. But if we can’t stop, then
we can look into what doesn’t stop.
All
Buddhist practice entails some form of stopping. Restraint, suspension,
relaxation, letting go, and surrender are all forms of stopping in the
service of becoming free of our clinging. Freedom from clinging makes
room in our psyche for spiritual growth. Initially this might mean simply
stopping in our activities long enough to recognize what is actually happening.
Be it a moment’s “breather,” a session of meditation,
a retreat or even a vacation, we often need some pause in our daily routine
to get a better perspective, to unwind, and to understand what further
we can put to rest.
All Buddhist practice also includes seeing, though in some circumstances
this translates to listening, sensing, and perhaps receiving. Clear seeing
is the vehicle for insight, love, and the deepening of the spiritual life.
Wise action requires the ability to see and understand.
The experience of stopping and being aware in the present moment can be
exquisite: to be where we are, with nowhere else we need to go; to feel
peaceful and fulfilled without any need to achieve a particular identity
or recognition from others; to stop our attempts to get what we want and
to feel instead complete, at ease, happy.
Formal meditation practice is an extended form of a sacred pause in which
we voluntarily stop our usual daily activities. Seated in meditation,
we can practice stopping or letting go of our usual train of thought.
Our psyche can become calm. If we can’t let go of our preoccupations,
then perhaps we can be content with looking into the nature of the preoccupied
mind. Greater calm becomes a basis for seeing more clearly into the subtle
and habitual ways in which the mind clings. As meditation deepens, we
see ever deeper forms of attachment. We can then stop. Our attachments
relax, and we can more easily let go of them.
I encourage you to develop a variety of ways of stopping and seeing throughout
the day. Stopping for a red light, stop your internal preoccupations and
notice what is happening with you. Pause before eating as a way of checking
in with yourself. Wait a moment or two before speaking. Do a short meditation
at the end of a workday. Sit quietly with yourself before going to sleep.
With time and practice, more and more often, stopping and seeing occur
together. When we see clearly, seeing is the same as stopping and we can
find rest in the midst of activity.
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