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FBI VOL00009
EFTA01129103
465 pages
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which arose whenever you saw or heard some- thing that was 'pleasing'. Each group disagreed with the others because it was obvious that an image pleasant to one person may not be pleasant to another. A sound pleasant to one person might not be pleasant to another. Something that creates a pleasant mood today might cause an unpleasant mood tomorrow. Thus there is nothing to make anything discussed a 'blessing' without doubt. The debate went on and on without any sign of coming to an end. It is just like people in the present day can still not agree as to what is truly a 'lucky charm'. Eventually the problem was only resolved by taking audience with the Buddha. A representa- tive asked the Buddha the nature of blessings and his reply is what is now know as the Mangala Sutta — thirty-eight blessings divided into ten group- ings. B.2 Definitions: The Word 'Blessings' Some may still wonder about the meaning of the word 'blessing' [mangala]. Some people think a blessing must be an object or an action — but by our technical understanding of the word, we trans- late it as 'a cause of prosperity, progress and happi- ness'. If you want to know the definition, you could say that the progress towards happiness that a 'mangala' will bring is four-fold: 1. progress through acquired wealth (worldly treas- ure, heavenly treasure and the treasure of Nir- vana). 2. progress through wisdom, which is the means by which obstacles in life and evil are abated. 3. progress through virtue through the channels of body, speech and mind, at the basic, intermedi- ate and advanced levels 4. progress through the three benefits: benefit in this lifetime, the next lifetime and in the hereafter. A blessing is a sign that positive development is about to take place (to a person, society or the world). Unlike such principles as that of deserved fate, the logic of blessings is forward looking, sig- nifying that something good is about to happen. B.3 Principles of Ethical Learning A working computer has two important parts: hard- ware and software. The hardware of the computer is the wiring and the circuitry. The software is the programming that we install on the computer. The hardware of a computer is neutral, but what makes the difference between a beneficial and a degrad- ing computer is the type of software installed. If you install working programs, the computer can be useful. However if you install violent games, vi- roses or pornography then the computer becomes a source of degradation. The worth of the compu- ter thus depends on the software. A drinking glass is also neutral. What makes the difference between a beneficial and a degrading glass is the sort of drink you put in it. If you put a nourishing drink in the glass such as milk then the glass will be an uplifting one welcomed by every- PRINEWLEBEHINOTHEMIRMBONT BLESSNGS OF UFE Kowa MKS eft barn luldnotres406:0 Gamow -Hansen • 3carsai• lame.. fleef • iinti Iniftleg Softies ins a: Tee Karp w.0000, m tit "td womb wow**, >,, waterer* pawn imampropane »> beeellei cOMpeler ranike >a> Dinell00 pas dirk OW:, 31111KM clarroCrr; pratran • • • IcgreInG °omits • • 113ta C. GacciLearring En. Unclosir Omponmakr. Fkri 8000411 AIM Amon one. However, if you put alcohol or poison in the glass, then the glass is immediately eyed with sus- picion. The worth of a drinking glass thus depends on its content. In the same way, a human being has two impor- tant parts: body and mind. By body we mean all Orientation 21 EFTA01129123
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the blood, bones, muscles and organs associated with the physical body — even the brain, which is a physical organ. By mind, we mean the knowledge and attitudes that constitute our consciousness. The mind is like "the ghost in the machine". The physi- cal components of the human being are also neu- tral. The difference between a human who is up- lifting and one who is degrading depends not on the body, but on the mental component. Unfortu- nately, the software of the human mind is not pre- installed from the factory! When we are born we are born along with an ignorance about all aspects of life. From the time we are children, we spend our life learning in order to fill the gap in our knowl- edge — to provide ourselves with the knowledge we need for life. The path of our subsequent des- tiny depends on the sort of knowledge we fill our- selves with. We can fill ourselves with either: • accurate knowledge: positive knowledge which is creative and uplifting for ourselves and oth- ers, or; • inaccurate knowledge: negative knowledge (com- parable to lies to the soul) which is harmful to ourselves and others. Our knowledge increases as a result of influences in our surroundings. The first and most fundamental influence on our learning is the sort of people that make up our environment. The second most impor- tant influence is the environment in general. Together, these two influences have the potential to instil us with Right View about the world (effectively our core val- ues and assumptions about the world and our atti- tude to it). The first group (see p.25) which concerns the acqui- sition of discretion concerns our understanding of what is wrong and what is right. Even if someone is knowledgable,if their discretion is faulty, their future is unlikely to be bright. On the contrary those with good discretion but who lack education, at least they will not become a burden on society. It is the basis of Right View [samma dipthi]. Simply avoiding associ- ating with fools will bring us wealth, because we have no risk of spoiling our reputation, our wisdom is also not at risk and may be improved — virtue of all sorts will start to flow in our direction. This is the result even of following thefts! blessing — what more will be the benefit of practising all of the blessings in their entirety. The benefits will be not only to ourself, but to society and to the world as well. The second group (see p.65) concerns consolidating upon the goodness of the discretion you already have through the environment which we inhabit, from the habits we have built up for ourselves in the past and by setting a proper aim in life. This style of teaching is characteristic of the Buddha who taught virtue in a way that becomes successively more complex. The third group (p.139) concerns how we can make a contribution to society by our skilfulness, so that we ourself do not become a burden on society and can at the same time be a refuge to ourself in terms of earning our living. The fourth group (p.139) progresses from being able to help ourselves to being able to help other people as well. The first people who we must help are those to whom we are indebted: our parents. If we have new people to whom we owe our efforts towards virtue, such as our children and our spouse. Furthermore, we have to be able to divide our time so that neither our responsibilities in the work and in the home are neglected. The fifth group (p.183) builds on the strength of vir- tue we have built up for ourselves in the home, ex- panding the scope of our virtue wider into societywith generosity, public works. If you have already got your life under control, you will be able to do something for the benefit of society with some sort of efficiency. Those who try to help social works when they have not yet got their own personal affairs under control, may create disasters rather than helping others.Those who want to give advice to others but who are un- able to speak politely, may make enemies instead of improving the quality of society. Higher groups of blessings deal with the more subtle aspects of training the qualities of the mind in purity. B.4 38 Blessings as an ethical system We find that the Manual of Peace lives up to the de- mands of an ethical system as follows: 1 Progressive & Sequential: The thirty-eight bless- ings are arranged according to the degree of di f- 22 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps towards Enlightened Living EFTA01129124
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ficulty in practice: the easier ones come before the harder ones. The sequence of blessings be- gins with external practices, i.e., dealing with gross social behaviours but gradually leading up to the more internal and subtle ones. Following these sets of virtues gives one an impression of climbing up a flight of stairs leading to salva- tion. If you don't associate with the society of the fools, then you enhance the process of asso- ciating with the wise. When you are dealing with the first Blessing, you are creating conditions to fulfill the second one. One can say that at the same time you respect those who are worthy of respect. It starts with number one. While you are working to develop number one, it is already doing the groundwork for number two and number three — it's progressive. One blessing conditions the next progressively. By doing the first Blessing, you are committing yourself to many subsequent Blessings thereby. By associ- ating with the wise, it is opening you up to many good things; you learn from the wise, you progress — all good things come from associat- ing with other people. So, by practicing one Blessing, it will eventually lead to practicing all of the Blessings. And by doing one, you prepare for the other; they are inter-related. This logic is very beautiful, it leads you ownwards step-by- step. It allows you to improve, socially and spir- itually, hand in hand with each other. It is like a self-catalysing process in chemistry or a positive feedback process in physics. This makes salva- tion via the thirty-eight blessings a kind of up- ward spiral, where you move upwards to Nir- vana, the highest goal in Buddhist spiritual cul- tivation, starting from the simplest blessings, and gradually perfecting yourself. 2 Self-Catalysing: When one kind of living bless- ing comes into existence or is practiced, it will support other kinds of virtues to manifest them- selves, and the manifestation of any one bless- ing will lead to development of the next higher blessing in the sequence. 3 Exhaustive: Other mechanisms of spiritual val- ues can easily be accommodated within it 4 Holistic: Blessings assume the presence of a deeper unseen network of causes and effects which interact together in cycles of positive feed- back for the ethical development of society. Bless- ings can be used as a non-subjective socio-ethi- cal checklist, that cuts through self-centred ness that might otherwise lead to superficial social changes (an individual's prosperity, for exam- ple, being misunderstood as a sign of social de- velopment) because social development that is unethical is by this philosophy, a contradiction in terms. It also provides a holistic mirror to view one's own personality and development. 5 Multi-level: It covers the full spectrum of human relations from the interpersonal, through the fa- milial, occupational and communal levels to the social. It offers a holistic perspective of a world governed by interrelating conditions. 6 Non-discritninatoty: This philosophy makes no distinction between men and women, lay prac- tice and monastic practice. The set of virtues is not restricted to a particular sort of person or so- ciety, but it can be treated as the common good that is shared in a particular community or even by the whole of mankind. 7 Multi-Factorial: The Thirty-Eight blessings are a means-ends model of ethics. The ethics of the Blessings escapes the rigid linear dimension of 'means' and 'ends' in favour of a multi-factorial causality model. The weakness of consideration in terms of 'means' and ends' is seen when try- ing to establish definitions in a complex multi- factorial situation. With the lighting of a match, for example, can we say that the match is the means to the production of fire? Are not oxygen, friction and a striking surface also means to the production of fire? If the friction is not sufficient to cause ignition, can it still be considered a means? Is a match struck in a vacuum still a means? Is not Oxygen also an end for the proc- ess of photosynthesis too? ... but simultaneously the means for ignition? How would linear eth- ics tackle the problem of 'auto-catalytic' phenom- ena (better known as vicious circles). If defini- tions of means and end are so difficult to pin- down in such a simple scientific situation, it is hardly surprising that ethics based on 'means' Orientation 23 EFTA01129125
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and 'ends' are virtually impossible to apply in multi-factorial social scenarios. Unfortunately, the problems found in society are almost always the vicious circles that make application of eth- ics so difficult. To the question of whether bless- ings are 'means' or 'ends', it must be answered that they are both. Putting any one of the thirty- eight blessings into action will contribute to- wards social development. At the same time, the existence (or coming into existence) of any of the thirty-eight blessings is itself an indicator of so- cial progress. Blessings also help to avoid the dilemma of justifying unwholesome means by wholesome ends. 8 Facilitating Practical Outlook The practice of blessings are effective through reversal of posi- tive feedback loops of decay through the setting in motion of positive feedback loops of develop- ment: firstly, to check the downward spiral and, secondly, to turn the spiral upwards. Action for social problem solving can start by the effort to replace any one of the thirty-eight counterparts of the blessings by a blessing. Problem solving can start with the local application of any bless- ing. The blessings encourage personal commit- ment instead of passing the buck. Once the first blessing comes into being, then it will cause an upturn in society, which will ease the accumula- tion of the next blessing in the sequence. The end-point, said to be the biggest blessing of them all, is to bring all thirty-eight blessings into be- ing in society. 9 Transcending Values: The Manual of Peace does not focus merely on the values of action based on moral principles or intention for the actions, but rather on the modes of our relationships in soci- ety, environment, family relations, education, communication and spirituality. Yet, the scope of application of blessings can even expand to cover the whole of the human race, with all lives shar- ing their part in the single commonwealth of morality—the Global Community. 10 Highlighting Opposites: Blessings also reveal the flipside of blessings — the 'Bad Omen' or 'social curse', which are the sign that something bad is about to happen (omens of forthcoming decay). Where there is no development, there must be decay, and to this end the opposites of the thirty- eight blessings are representedby a set of thirty- eight identifiers, like tips-of-the-iceberg, which signal thepresence of a nest of much deeper- rooted but invisible social problems. The nature of such problems is, again, that of negative feed- back loops or 'vicious cycles' which lead toward decay. Unsolved, such curse will spread, into ever broadening circles of repercussions with their own vicious cycles. A comparable example in science might be the thermodynamic model of loss of entropy through the dissipation of heat. These are characteristics of the Manual of Peace. In the chapters that follow, each of the thirty-eight Blessings of Life will be explained in turn. 24 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps towards Enlightened Living EFTA01129126
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e --% The First Group of Blessings "Turning your back on unwholesomeness" Goodness doesn't come unpackaged. It comes as part and parcel of the person who does good deeds and and who exemplifies those good deeds. Goodness is transmitted between people by the exam- ple a good person sets for others and by a good person's teaching and criticism of the behaviour of a person whose level of goodness is lesser. Goodness is like the food which we eat. It strongly influ- ences of our view and understanding of life and the world.To begin with we have no idea what goodness is. Some people tell us that such and such a thing is good. Others tell us that something com- pletely different is good. Who should we believe? And when we ask them why they consider such and such a thing to be good, no- one seems to know the answer. Thus if we want to learn how to do good deeds, we have to start making decisions about our lives even from the time we are still unable to tell the difference between good and evil. Although we cannot tell the difference between good and evil, there are certain indicators that allow us to tell the difference between people who habitually do good and people who habitu- ally do evil. The first step on this path is the identification of the people who habitually do evil and we make our first step towards goodness by avoiding such people. Our next step towards good- ness is to associate with people who are habitually good. The third step is to honour those who are habitually good so that we can start to observe the faults in ourselves, by comparison with the higher virtue of those who are worthy of respect. Thus, the first group of blessings is thus almost entirely concerned with being selective about our friends. EFTA01129127
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Blessing One: Not Associating with Fools A. INTRODIRMON A.1 First Step on Journey the Most Important For the Manual of Peace, although all of the bless- ings are important, all of the latter thirty-seven hinge on the first. Thus you could say that of all the blessings the first is the most important. It is like the first tread of the steps leading into a house. If you cannot climb this first step, you will spend the rest of your life at the foot of the staircase with no way of getting into the house. You can also think of this blessing "Not Associating with Fools" as be- ing like the first step on a long journey, without which the voyage can never begin. 13. DISta, I ()\: 111 . DIPOR I INCE & FORMA DON B.1 The importance of calibrating discretion No-one wants to make a mess of their lives. Every- one wants to feel that they are profiting from the years that pass them by — to give them a sense of success and achievement in their lives. HoweveK, the way each person defines "success", "profit" or achievement in their life will dictate what they chan- nel their efforts into. A businessman defines profit in life in monetary terms so he devotes his time and effort into earning as much as he can. A criminal might define achievement in life by "cracking the most impenetrable safe in the world" or "cutting the most corners possible" to maximise the amount of stolen goods he can a mass - so he spends all his waking hours planning his next robbery. A criminal doesn't particularly want to live his life dishonestly, but he thinks that being a criminal is good enough. Although everyone seeks success (in their various ways), in the long run they may be left with regrets in their mind. If you ask why a difference of definition of success in life can make such a difference to one's destiny, it is because this "common sense" about the world dictates the de- cisions we make about the world — and these de- cisions drive all that we say and do. In the Manual of Peace we call such common sense "discretion" — it is the basic understanding by which we judge each experience and situation in the world to know whether it is likely to be beneficial for us or harm- ful. B.2 Discretion doesn't come unpackayed Discretion is a personal quality we acquire, test and calibrate as a result of the experiences we meet in life. It is not a quality we can get by reading about it, buying it, downloading it or memorizing it. It can only come as the result of our transactions with real people. It is a quality often unspoken, but eas- ily learned by example. Thus discretion doesn't come loose, but is part and parcel of the exemplary people who possess it. B.3 Two Formative Influences on our discretion There are two major influences on the formation of discretion in a person. The first major influence is Blessing One: Not Associating with Fools 27 EFTA01129129
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the example of those people we are closest to, such as our family and friends. The second major influ- ence on our formation of discretion is ourselves. Sometimes we call it the ability to be a good teacher to ourselves [yonisonzanasikara]. Even if you have been listening to advice for good or bad friends, you always have to consider advice and justify it to yourself before getting down to following the ad- vice. If you have accurate discretion when you con- sider things, even given faulty data, you will have the common sense to see through the discrepan- cies and come out with the right decision required by the situation — unlike the man with unreliable discretion, who even when given reliable data, will come to the wrong conclusion. Usually we have to learn discretion from the ex- ample of other people by transactions with them first, before we can calibrate our "auto-didactic" discretion and come to accurate conclusions inde- pendently — because in the beginning we have no idea what constitutes a sensible decision and what constitutes neglect. Thus when we are learning dis- cretion, at first we are very vulnerable to the exam- ple set by others. The example they set us may cali- brate the way we think for the rest of our life. Thus a correct example has the power to correctly cali- brate our thinking for the rest of our lives — but conversely, a faulty example may damage the way we think for the rest of our life. C. PROCESS OF ACQUIRING DISCR1;11ON C.1 Benefitting from others without catching their bad habits Every time we have a transaction with a person it is like a negotiation or tug-of-war between us to see whose discretion will brush off who. In a situation where people are unable to recognize good or bad examples of discretion, then the ex- change of "discretion" will be like osmosis — flowing from a point of high concentration to a point of low concentration. If Person A has a lot of good discretion and Person B less, then Person A's good discretion will tend to brush off on Per- son B. If Person C has a lot of bad discretion and Person D less, then Person C's bad discretion will tend to brush off on Person D. In practice though, as adults with a degree of life experience, we don't passively let others' habits brush off on us. If we are able to recognize good habits and good dis- cretion then we will open ourselves up especially to absorb them. However, if we recognize bad habits and bad discretion, then we will try to pro- tect ourselves from picking those habits up. Thus, normally we are selective— and try (to the best of our ability and discretion) to pick up good hab- its while avoiding the bad ones. In this way, we can have transactions with others without losing our own virtues under their influence. You can compare it to visiting someone in hospital who has a fever. You can visit them, talk to them and console them — you can do all these things with- out catching their fever, but you would try to avoid having them sneeze over you. There are some sorts of patients and some sorts of illness, however, that are so dangerous that we cannot afford to have any transaction with that person. Such diseases like the plague are so contagious, that it is not safe for healthy people to transact (specifically come into physical con- tact) with them. Such patients, by the nature of their disease need to be nursed in an isolation ward with no visitors. If they were animals, they would be put in quarantine. When considering the transmission of discretion, there are some cases of those so contagiously infected with faulty discretion that despite our immunity or our efforts to be selective, we will nonetheless be infected by their faulty discretion. Even if we started with healthy discretion, it would be un- dermined by the strength of negative discretion of those people — what more the danger if we are still inexperienced and impressionable (per- haps still children or lacking world experience) and don't even know what it means to be selec- tive? These quarantine victims of faulty discre- tion, whether intentionally so or not, are the first and most fundemental obstacle we will meet as we try to acquire blessings — in the Manual of Peace we call such people by the technical name of "fools". 28 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps towards Enlightened Living EFTA01129130
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D.1 Definition of a Fool A fool is someone wicked, or weak, or feeble. They are made feeble by the fact they habitually think, say and do things that are unwholesome. The root of the lack in common sense by which they can justify such unwholesome behaviour is the fact that they don't have their mind centred or under their con- trol. To call such a dangerous person a "fool" might seem like an understatement — because some fools might look like a proverbial giant punching sand- bags, a frightening prospect for a rhinocerii, let alone a fragile human being. Thus, how come we use the term "feeble" for a fool? A fool is made weak like a person made weak by a serious disease — we do not fear him on the basis of his strength or knowledge or ability to think — but because his disease is dangerous. 13.2 Four Human Strengths Human beings have four different sources of power: 1. Physical Strength: different people are endowed with different degrees of physical strength. Any- one with plenty of muscles and no disabilities is endowed with the first storehouse of power. 2. Strength of Knowledge: derived from one's back- ground of education and the experience of pass- ing years. Having the ability to apply educated reasoning in useful subjects is the second store- house of power. 3. Strength of Thought: Some people go through the same number of classes together. They have an equal amount of knowledge, but their ability to think through things using their knowledge may not be equal. Some people know so much, but it is of no use to them when they come to think things through. Someone may know how to mend an engine but sits idle all day long. Why don't they offer their services as a mechanic? Or earn their living in the engine business? Sitting around all day long, waiting for someone to come along and find work for them...? We can blame this on their having knowledge but not using the knowledge as part of their thinking. Thus, if any- one uses both their strength of knowledge and their strength of thought, they are at great ad- vantage because they are endowed with the third storehouse of power. 4. Strength of virtue: When one has both the strength of thought and mindfulness of what one is doing, when one is using one's knowledge and thought to perform good service to oneself and others, one is endowed with the fourth store- house of power: strength of virtue. The human being has the potential to be endowed with all four storehouses of power: physical strength, strength of knowledge, strength of thought and strength of virtue. Even if someone is endowed with (some of) these storehouses of powet, if their judgment is faulty, they will not be able to put their power to full use. If, for example, a foolish guy is physically strop , and may be qualified as a professor with a with plenty of knowledge, but without the ability to think properly, he will be want to apply his mas- tery of chemistry for dishonest purposes (e.g. dis- tilling heroine). Thus even if you are endowed with only some of the four powers, you can still be clas- sified with the fools — and those powers are not used to their full potential. At the most a fool can use only three of the storehouses of power. They can use only three of the four. Like a four-cylinder car in which only three of the spark plugs fire — it is of no use to anybody. If you have a four-cylin- der car, all four need to work in order to get ben- efit from any one of the four. Thus, if you know your 'cylinders' are damaged, you don't need to wait until none of them are left firing before you go for mending! In conclusion, when we define the meaning of a fool as someone weak or feeble, we can see more clearly now that it means that they are weak or feeble in doing good deeds. Now that we know about the risk they present to our discretion and know a little about the reason for a fool's weak- ness, the next challenge that faces us is how to pro- tect ourselves from them. As we shall see, we first need to be able to recognize fools - if we can rec- ognize them, we can more easily protect ourselves from their influence. Blessing One: Not Associating with Fools 29 EFTA01129131
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E. RECOGNIZING FOOLS 3. .E.1 You cannot tell a fool by external appearances When identifying whether someone is a fool or not, we cannot base our judgement on external appear- ances — we must base our judgement on internal features. The things we should avoid basing our judgement on include gender, age, lineage, nation- ality, connections, knowledge, job or wealth. Al- though fools are characterized by their habitually evil actions of their body, speech and mind, because all of these three come from within they might not be obvious to us, especially if we are still at a stage in our spiritual maturation when our discretion is 4. still inaccurate. Appearances, gender, age, lineage, nationality, connections, knowledge, job and wealth are only indirectly connected with the quality of the mind. When we want to identify a fool, we need to look for behaviours that betray their underlying quality of mind. The sort of behaviours that are most clearly identifiable are those that come out in the context of our interaction and friendship with them. £2 How to Tell a Fool We are not mind readers who can observe how oth- ers think. All we can observe are the things which others express openly — that is others' words and actions. Even fools have chinks in their armour which will be revealed as we interact with them — in fact there are five in all: 1. They like to persuade others to do evil things: Not only does a fool persuade others to do evil. He will also exemplify those evil deeds for oth- ers to follow. He might skip work on the slight- est trivial pretext and persuade his colleagues to do the same. 2. They like to interfere with things that are none of their business: A cleaner has the duty simply to keep the office clean, but if instead of doing her duty, she leaves her work undone and spends her time rummaging in the wastepaper baskets for trade secrets, already you should be suspi- cious that she is a fool. A student has the duty to study, but if instead of studying their subject they waste their time on protests against the govern- ment — then again they might be a fool mas- querading as intelligentia. 5. They like anything that is improper: Fools have a dislike for anything that is right and proper. They like playing with fire. They like taking drugs. They like gambling. They like fighting fish. They like the opportunity to put a spanner in the works. You can be sure that anything they like has someone on the receiving end of their suffering. Even if they take the chance to ordain as a monk, they will end up being the one to cause a schism in the order. Their predicament is the same as the one illustrated in the ancient tale of the angel and the worm. (See §G.1 below) They get angry even when spoken to decently: Suppose a mother warns her daughter to dress modestly before leaving the house in case the neighbours gossip. The daughter might reply an- grily that this is how modem people dress. Her mother gave her a perfectly reasonable piece of advice but her own daughter answers back with the verbal equivalent of a slap in the face. Sup- pose a father advises his son that he should be revising instead of going on outings so close to his examinations. "How can you say that?" might shouts the boy. "Didn't you go for out- ings when you were younger?" Often the other person knows that they are in the wrong, but when they are found out and their fault is dis- covered, they lose their temper — the mark of a fool. A fool is like a person covered in open wounds. If he bumps into something even only lightly, it hurts. For a fool, his mind is covered in wounds, and when confronted with the truth, it hurts. Sometimes even just a glance is enough to provoke him to aggression. They refine to comply with rules and regula- tions: Fools heeds neither the laws of the coun- try nor the local customs. If you meet someone who refuses to comply with the regulations, you can be 99% sure that you are dealing with a fool. If it wasn't for the law, there would be a lot more opportunity for fools to express themselves through the performing of evil deeds. The law forces fools to have to express themselves less freely or in secret. The law will thus obscure from the public eye the real nature of a fool's mind. It is for this reason that we have to notice the marks 30 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps towards Enlightened Living EFTA01129132
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of a fool from the first four sorts of behaviour mentioned above. If you come across any of these five features, then it should already be ringing warning bells in your head. .E.3 The sixteen ways a fool might treat you Some people who may appear on the surface to be friendly, might be fools masqueradingas friends. The Lord Buddha called such people false friends [mittapatirapakal and categorized them into four types each with four characteristics — giving a to- tal of sixteen forms of behavioural characteristics to look for. With friends like these, who needs en- emies? 1. The Mercenary laiiitadatthuharal 2. The Man of Empty Promises luaciparama] 3. The Flatterer [anupplyabhatzi] 4. The One who Leads you down the Road to Ruin rapayasahoyaj 1. a mercenary is one who: 1. tries to appropriate your possessions; 2. sacrifices little in the hope of gaining much; 3. helps others only when threatened by the same danger; 4. only makes friends to serve his own inter- est; 2. a man of empty promises who: 1. tells you how sad he is not to have been able to share with you something that has already run out; 2. promises to share with you things they don't yet have; 3. tries to win your favour with empty prom- ises; 4. has excuses every time called upon to help; 3. a flatterer who: 1. toadies to your evil-doing, 2. toadies to your doing of good; 3. sings praises to your face; 4. gossips about you behind your back. 4. leads you down the road to ruin by: 1. being your loyal drinking companion; 2. being at your side when you roam the streets at unseemly hours; 3. frequenting games and shows with you; 4. joining you at the gambling table. Such behaviours illustrate sixteen ways in which a fool will unwittingly reveal his lack of responsibil- ity. Besides leading us to ruin, such people lead so- ciety unfalteringly in the direction of deterioration in a way which is hard to remedy. If you come across any of these sixteen features, then it should already be ringing warning bells in your head. R AVOIDING THE INFLUENCE OF FOOLS E1 Putting fools in quarantine In the words of the old Thai proverb: "Always keep a safe distance — give a hound an armslength, give a monkey six feet but for a fool a hundred thousand miles may not be enough." Just as mentioned earlier, when a person has such a dangerously contagious disease as faulty discre- tion, we have no alternative but to isolate them. However, as we shall see it is not physical distance which we use to isolate a fool — it is more on the level of interaction. We have to be careful getting to familiar with them — that is effectively how we keep "psychological distance". E2 Association Defined When we talk of associating with others, what are the limits of our definition? In fact there are seven different ways in which it is possible to associate with others: 1. Meeting up with fools. This can be called associ- ating with fools but it is only association in its most rudimentary form. Of course such associa- tion might not lead to anything. After all it is just our visiting them and their visiting us. We may not even particularly enjoy each others company. 2. Getting closer. This is once you start getting more familiar with the fools you meet up with, start lending things to one another, talking on sub- jects of common interest, and following common pastimes. 3. Feeling a liking for one another. This is once you Blessing One: Not Associating with Fools 31 EFTA01129133
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start to get more familiar, you start to believe that you have common tastes. You start to believe that you yourself like anything that they like. 4. Respecting them. After a while, you start to find that you respect that fool for his particular skills: (e.g. his skill in gambling) and you start to think what good luck it is to have this fool as your ac- quaintance and an example to follow. 5. Moral Support. After having admired the fool for a long time from a distance, you start to be- lieve anything they think. 6. Joining in. After sharing the same opinions for a long time, you start to join in with their activi- ties and follow the same way of life. 7. Influencing and instilling behaviour to one an- other. In the final stages of association, it is im- possible to tell the difference between the fool and his associates. It has also come to the stage when it is impossible to reverse the effects of the fool on his associate. Thus for any reader who realizes that they are un- der the influence of a fool they should realize too the danger of even casual contact with the person- ality of someone who is a fool. There will be an unavoidable escalation of intimacy even without realizing it. £3 Practising non-association in everyday life If you want to avoid associating with fools in your everyday life, apart from avoiding social contact with fools as already mentioned, it will be neces- sary to give special attention to the following is- sues: 2. 3. 4. 1. Prohibit yourself from every sort of evil and from all of the roads to ruin: Don't go thinking that 5. the odd game of poker amongst close friends, or just to keep your hand in, can surely be of no harm to anybody. Prohibit yourself right from the start. This way you will save yourself from tears in the long run. Even if you are someone with weak tendencies in the direction of being a fool, such as liking to get up late and ignoring the alarm clock you have set for yourself, you should get tough with yourself right from the start. Prohibit yourself from doing even the most minor unwholesome deeds. Make the break from any evils you may have committed in the past It doesn't matter what sort of bad habits you might have had in the past — don't give yourself even the smallest chance to relapse. Don't even speak of those things any more. Make Your performance of good deeds continu- ous. There is no need to think over your past fail- ures or entangle ourselves in the guilt of your past bad deeds. Starting from today, you must practise generosity, keep the Precepts, meditate and do the daily chanting — continuously. In this way the scars left by our old way of life will gradually heal leaving only good behavior in its place. In the case you have to associate with a fool be especially careful. Sometimes we are put in the situation where we have to associate with fools, even though we don't want to. Sometimes, for example, we find out that even our own boss is involved in corruption. If we refuse to have any part in his dealings, we might get sacked. What should we do in such a situation? If we do eve- rything he orders, in the end we will pick up his bad habits. Our ancestors had a simile for warn- ing us in such a situation. They said you should be as careful 'as if you were warming yourself before the fire. If you stay too close to the fire for too long, you will get burned. If you keep too much distance, then you will be left shivering in the cold'. Thus, just as with the fire, you need to keep the appropriate distance from the fool — not too near and not too far. You can associate with a fool only in the case that you are sure you have the capability and steadfastness to help them. Jumping into the water to save a drowning person is only sensi- ble if you are able to swim — otherwise you get two drowning people! Whether you can really help a fool or not depends whether your own virtue is sufficiently steadfast to allow you to help them unscathed. If you are not yet suffi- ciently steadfast then keep your distance— even 32 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps towards Enlightened Living EFTA01129134
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if they are your own relatives! If you come across a friend who takes no heed of your warnings, however many times you might tell him, you have to resign yourself to helping him out in- stead when the suffering from their own mis- takes starts to sink in— when the circumstances make him a little more ready to listen. However, if he is not such a bad guy, and you are able to make some impression on him, then try to help him — try to keep him from going under. It's not that you should be hard hearted, but you have to know our own limits and if helping a fool is beyond your capability, you have to with- draw our help and keep our distance in order to survive. F.4 Interaction without Transaction Some texts summarize the functions of association as two fold. Others summarize association as a path- way as follows: joining, receiving, and giving. • Joining means eating, sleeping and investing to- gether. • Receiving means taking someone on as one's spouse, one's child, one's employee or as one's extended family. The point where we start to associate with them is the point when we take them on. • Giving means that after joining them and taking them on, we give something to them. Such giv- ing includes giving them consideration, praise, encouragement, lodging, food or payment. All of these are included in the definition of associa- tion. If you are associating with fools on any of these three levels you should be warned to withdraw yourself before sustaining any further damage. F.5 The Varieties of Fools Some people think that they already have enough discretion to choose their friends and thus overlook the importance ofthe first blessing. In fact, even though we may be experienced and adult there is a fool with whom we have to associate cautiously throughout our life — that is our "inner fool". In conclusion, there are two different types of fool in the world — the fool in the outside world and the inner fool. The inner fool is the little"devil" that seems all too ready to justify your doing the things for which you should know better. They are the er- roneous discretion that creep into our heads, and it is our task to put an end to the arising of such fools in the mind. Further to the temptation to be complacent about our ability to recognize fools, it should be added that parents have a special responsibility to their exemplar-sensitive children to be cautious about the sort of friends they associate with — and even to choose a school and teacher for their children to help them to avoid associating with fools. This sub- ject is dealt with in more detail in Blessing Thirteen — nevertheless a little extra attention on this front right from the beginning of our study of the bless- ings can help to ensure a bright future for them — preventing tears when it's too late to reverse the problems (like drug-addiction). G.ILLUSIKA I WE EXAMPLES G.1 The Angel and the Worm (traditional) Once upon a time there were two young men who were friends. How they came to be friends no-one knew, because one was found of doing meritorious deeds, while the other did only evil deeds all his life — like cockfighting, fish fighting, taking drugs and alcohol. When he was working as a merchant, he would sell only fake goods and stolen goods. When he was a teacher, he wouldn't teach normal subjects to his pupils — he would teach all the shortcuts and loop- holes in the law. Even with such different tastes, the two friends managed to maintain both their identity and their friendship until they both passed away. When the good guy died, he was reborn as an angel in heaven. The bad guy was reborn as a worm in a lavatory. One day the angel was wondering what had be- come of his friend. The angel checked every level of heaven but could not find his friend. He checked the human realm, but again his friend was no where to be found.The angel made a further check and was surprised to see that his friend had been born as a worm in a lavatory. The angel wondered what Blessing One: Not Associating with Fools 33 EFTA01129135
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he could do to help his friend, and tolerated the revolting smell of the lavatory out of compassion in order to stand at the edge of the toilet bowl and make himself known to his friend. Standing at the rim of the toilet bowl, he changed himself into his old human form. "Old friend do you remember me?"asked the angel. "Of course," said the worm."We used to be friends a long time ago." "O! Worm! Now I am an angel. Today I have come to do you the biggest favour of your life. I have come to invite you to join the heavenly host. However, there is one condition. If you want to be an angel you have to keep all the precepts without breaking any of them from this day onwards. You must think only meritorious thoughts and do meritorious deeds and before long we'll be able to abide in the same heavenly host" "What's so great about being an angel?" asked the worm. "You can get whatever you wish instantly sim- ply by thinking of it. As soon as you think of an- gelic sustenance, ambrosia manifests itself. If you think of clothing then instantly you are clothed in angelic apparel. If you think of a heavenly man- sion, then a heavenly mansion arises instantane- ously. All you have to do is have the intention and hundreds of good things will come your wsL "In that case I don't want to be an angel.. bet- ter off as a worm thank you." "What do you mean?" asked the angel. "If you are an angel you have to make the wish before you get what you want. As a worm I don't even have to make the effort to think. Excrement in the toilet just keeps on flowing into my mouth. Just leave me alone because ■ better off as a worm." In such a case it is obvious that he is so used to his foolish ways that in the end he is beyond help. G.2 Metaphor. Leaves wrapping a stinking fish Another parable used by the Lord Buddha is that of the leaves wrapping a putrid fish taking on the same putrescant smell of the fish itself. 6.3 Metaphor: Burning hovel next to a palace Our ancestors had a parable. They said that to as- sociate with a fool, no matter how good we might originally be, is like building a palace next door to a hovel. Whenever the hovel catches fire, no matter how safe the palace is from fire, as soon as the hovel goes up in flames the palace bums down as well, just like the virtuous person destroyed by associa- tion with fools. G.4 Maheiltassapa's Kuti Burned Down by Foolish Student (Kutidussaka Atoka J.iii.71) In the time of the Lord Buddha, there was an elder monk of unblemished virtue named Kassapa. He was respected by all of the enlightened monks and other members of the monastic community. Even the Lord Buddha's closest disciple Ananda, had great respect for Ven. Kassapa. It was the norm for the elder monks of the com- munity to accept newly-ordained monks as their disciples, in order that those new monks could re- ceive training. Some of the elders accepted more than others in keeping with their ability as teach- ers. Ven. Kassapa accepted three or four disciples but it turned out that among their number was a stubborn monk, Ulualcasaddaka who would lis- ten tono-one's advice. On winter evenings it was the duty of the disciples to boil water for the elder monks for them to take a bath in comfort. The stub- born disciple would never boil water for Ven. Kassapa in accordance with his duty. He would al- ways leave the chore of boiling the water to his fel- lows while going himself to invite Ven. Kassapa to wash as if he had boiled the water himself. Everything else the stubborn disciple did was in the same vain. Instead of going on alms round, if he fancied something special to eat the stubborn monk would claim to temple supporters that Ven. Kassapa wanted such-and-such to eat and when they brought such-and-such a food to offer, he would eat it himself. Ven. Kassapa knew what was going on and warned the stubborn monk,"to be so lacking in re- spect is not in keeping with having ordained as a monk. You must train yourself better than this in 34 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps towards Enlightened Living EFTA01129136
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future."Kassapa warned the stubborn monk con- tinuously, but the only effect of the criticism was to make him feel as if his master was singling him out unfairly for criticism.The more advice he received from his master, the more victimized he felt. Instead of feeling grateful for all the special attention his master had given him, he planned on getting his revenge. He planned the following day instead of going out on almsround with the rest of the disci- ples for the master's breakfast, stay behind, let the master go for almsround mself and burn down the master's kuti while he was gone. In this case it is clear to see the behaviour of a fool who repays a master's advice given with the best of in- tentions, by burning down his master's house. Ven. Kassapa came back from his almsround to find only ashes where his kuti had stood. The disciple had run away. The Lord Buddha heard the story and disclosed to Ven. Kassapa that the stubborn disciple had been a fool causing damage not only in this lifetime, but in previous lifetimes as well: In that previous lifetime, Kassapa had been born as an oriole while the stubborn monk had been born as a monkey. The two inhabited the same tree. The oriole wanted to waste no time in building a nest to protect itself from sun, rain and dust — but at the same time the oriole warned the monkey, he ought to build himself a nest against wind and rain, sun and dust, because he had perfect gripping hands like a man, and could build a nest even more easily than the bird with her beak. The oriole told the monkey to build its own nest again and again. but the monkey never took any notice. When it came to the monsoon, the oriole ducked into the shelter of its nest whenever it rained, while the monkey sat out in the rain sobbing. The oriole felt sorry for the monkey and thought the time had come to tell the monkey to build a nest. Perhaps now that* had a good soaking see the value of the advice. Thus the oriole po s head out of its nest and told the monkey ,"you ought to build yourself a nest against wind and rain, sun and dust, because you have perfect gripping hands like a man, you can build a nest even more easily than I can with my beak. As soon as the rain stops build yourself a nest !" The monkey replied,"If I wanted to build a nest I could build one easily—but even though my body is like that of a man, my intelligence is the lesser." "You're a strange case," said the oriole. "Some days you go around destroying the nests of oth- ers but when it comes to the monsoon, you're the only one without a roof over your head. This is the destiny of one ungrateful for the generosity of others. You had better start improving your- self!" The monkey was stirred to anger by the criti- cism. Soaked to the skin by rain and only insulted further by a bird from inside the comfort of a dry nest, the monkey climbed up the tree to the ori- ole's nest and pulled the nest to pieces. As a monkey he had pulled the oriole's nest to pieces. As a human, he put his own master's kuti to the flame, even though his master had spoken only kind words.These are the identifying features of a fool and are the reason why we have to be- ware of this type of person. Blessing One: Not Associating with Fools 35 EFTA01129137
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Blessing Two: Associating with the Wise A. INTRODUCTION The second Blessing of the Thirty-Eight, concerns how in our self-cultivation we can successfully close the door on unwholesomeness in our lives, to pre- vent ourselves from slipping any further back on the slippery slope of spiritual entropy. At this point, when our discretion and sense of conscience is still not very accurate, we are not yet sufficiently versed in spiritual ways to become a Wise One ourselves. However, what we can start by doing is to learn how to recognize others who are, and to associate with them so that some of their discretion may brush off on us. A.1 Difference between knowledge and wisdom A wise one is distinguished by his or her wisdom. Before starting this blessing it is important to define this wisdom dearly because being 'wise' is not the same as being 'educated'. 'Wisdom' as intended in this blessing is the discretion as to what is real 'profit' in our lives as outlined by omission in our description of fools in Blessing One. In fact, being educated is also a blessing, but its details can be found in Blessing Seven. The word "wise one" of this Blessing comes from the Pali word "parglita" better known in our language as "pundit". Some people believe that you can become a "pundit" sim- ply by getting yourself a graduation certificate from a reputable university. In fact if you get yourself a good degree and set yourself up in business and make a success of it, you will earn praise and re- spect from many other people. However, there are no small number of the more unscrupulous amongst these who find themselves behind prison bars inspite of all their academic knowledge. Thus in spite of all their good intentions it is reasonable to assume that such graduates are not truly wise but are only wise in the ways of the world. The sort of wisdom we are interested in, in this section, is the sort of wisdom that will, at the very least, keep you out of jail and ensure wholesome profit for the owner both this lifetime and in the here after. This sort of wisdom is called spiritual wisdom. The best example of the wise man in the present day must have both wisdom of the ways of the world and spiritual wisdom to a true example of a wise man. B. 'I HE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A FOOL & A WISE ONE We are all people alike, equipped with a body and a mind, so what can be blamed for the different amounts of success people meet with as they go through their lives? Why is it advantageous to as- sociate with one sort of person and not another? If you look at people just on the surface, the reason is not obvious. You have to look deeper. B.1 People distinguished by quality of mind In these days of human rights, we do all we can to make people equal, but it is not always so easy. Blessing Two: Associating with the Wise 37 EFTA01129139
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When it comes to differences of wealth or access to education, it makes sense to give people the maxi- mum of opportunities to help themselves. But where the system of rights breaks down is when people no longer want to help themselves any more — or when people don't even want to live their lives by the rules of decency that bind society together. Of course there are some people who claim that even criminals should be given full human rights and who spend their time feeling sorry for sen- tenced murderers. However, for the most part we accept that when a person's behaviour deviates into violence or vengefulness or cruelty so far as that of a wrong-doer, no matter whether the police catch him or not, that they are no longer dealing with a person like you or me any more. There is a "screw loose" somewhere in the thinking of such people. Even though they might have two arms, two legs and a head just like you or me, but there is a differ- ence of mind so great that it makes that person dan- gerous. Whats more the deviation of thinking of such people is (as discussed in Blessing One) so con- tagious that it brushes off on the people who asso- date with them. B.2 Effect of differences in the quality of mind It is differences of mind' that distinguish such peo- ple from the rest of the world whose lives are gov- erned by disaetion.To pinpoint why a fool suffers from faulty discretion, is hard to explain to a person who has never tried meditation. The difference be- tween the mind of a fool and the mind of a wise one is a difference of quality. The mind of a fool is one where the thoughts are confused — a mind which is unyielding and blind. Such a mind is dull and can- not think constructively about any subject. Such a mind is blind to reality. If you were to compare such a mind to glass, you could compare it to opaque or frosted glass. Whatever you look at through glass of this type will appear distorted, dark and formless. By contrast, the mind of a wise man is like crystal clear glass. Everything viewed through the glass is crystal clear. Like a dear mirror, you can even see yourself as you really are. 1. The terms 'mind' or 'mental' are used in the Asian sense meaning the abstract phenomena of'spirit' or'awareness' rather than the western concept of 'brain' or 'nervous system'. 38 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps towards Enlightened Living You might doubt that the mind, as an abstract phe- nomenon, could have such a powerful influence on our destiny — but the mind is in fact of utmost im- portance because every dealing we have with the world must pass through the channel of our mind. Consider looking at the world in the minor. What ever is situated in front of the minor will show its reflection instantly. Furthermore, a mirror only the size of the palm of your hand is large enough to show the reflection of an entire mountain! All it needs is for the mirror to be really dear, that's all, in order to be able to show instantly the reflection of any object, indiscrirninable from the real object itself. In the same way, all it takes is for the mind to be really clear and it too can instantly hold, examine and understand anything and everything as it really is. All of this is by contrast with the man who has a clouded mind (who we have compared to a dull or frosted mirror) which can do nothing to facilitate clear understand- ing, who cannot comprehend dearly because his own mind is clouded. Because the mind of a fool is dis- torted, he sees the world in a distorted way. When everything he sees is distorted, how does he interact with the world? The answer to this question is, "in the way he thinks is appropriate" —namely, accord- ing to thought, speech and action which are distorted from the norm. On the contrary, because a wise man has a mind that is crystal dear like a diamond he sees the world dearly — as it really is. Thus, he can deal with the world in a way that is appropriate on a more cosmic level than the fool who is locked up in his own selfish view of the world. Meditation is the main means by which we can upgrade the quality of our mind. Once we realize the peril of having a mind which is dull, clouded and of generally low quality, we can start to appreci- ate why meditation is so important in the preven- tion and cure of problems in our lives. B.3 The Ups and Downs of the Mind from Day-to-Day Very few people are out and out murderers and plunderers. At the same time very few people are completely pure in mind. The ones who are already "arahants" have no need to waste time reading a book like this. EFTA01129140
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An example of ups and downs in the quality of mind of someone like you or me, who lies between the extremes, is the man who gets up in the morn- ing with the best of intentions and enthusiastically prepares almsfood to offer to the monks. At the time he is preparing the food his mind is as clear as that of a wise man. However, even before the monks have arrived on almsround, he has lost his temper, shouting at his children and his state of mind has been reduced to that of a fool. When the monks ar- rive, his mind is back to a state of clarity as he gives the alms and pours water from the vessel to trans- fer the merit — he has recovered for himself the clear mind of a wise man. But as he is leaving for work he spoils his state of mind again, shouting at his kids for being late for school. As soon as he leaves the house, he gets his temper back. In the best of moods he makes the intention to do the very best he can at work that day — to make every penny of the wage he receives from his employer worth- while. The black clouds in his mind go over the horizon and he's back in the frame of mind fitting for a wise man. But alas, another car cuts in in front of him, someone overtakes him on the inside and thoughts of revenge stir up a storm of road rage in his mind spoiling his quality of his mind and the rest of his day. Don't worry this man is not some- thing special. When talking about such imperfec- tion of mind it is not the same as mental illness — merely inefficiency in our quality of mind. Most of us have the same ups and downs in the course of making our way through life in the real world. B.4 Varieties ofpeople If we were to divide people according to the qual- ity of their minds, being very simplistic we can di- vide people into a minimum of three different types: 1. Those whose mind is usually clouded — the fools; 2. Those whose mind is usually clear — the wise; 3. Those half way in between whose mind is not entirely dear, but at the same time their mind is not completely obscured by clouds. This third category represents the majority of good intentioned people in the world. We're not yet free of mental defilements and for this reason we earn the special name of kalyarjabala. "Kalyaga" means beautiful or good. "Bala" means the fool. Together the two words mean the good-intentioned fool. Sometimes a fool, sometimes a wise man—but not a 100% accomplished example of either of the two. Another term often used in Buddhism for this sort of person is aputhujance. The root meaning of "puthu" is 'thick'. The root of "jana" means per- son. Such a thick person doesn't mean that he lacks intelligence, but conveys instead that he has a thick rind or peel — and the thing that makes it thick is the defilements in the mind. In the case of those whose layer of defilements is not so thick that they can still listen to reason, they can be referred to as kalyagaputhujanct, because they still have some hope of scrubbing through those defilements to reach the innate wisdom that lies within. The first step for a kalyagaputhujanct in working his way towards his own inner wisdom is to be able to rec- ognize the wise men amongst his acquaintances so that he can pick up on the good character possessed by a wise man as his standard in elevating the qual- ity of his own mind. L. Mali\ MO I 11L 11 ISE ONE We can define the Wise One in any one of four ways. In effect, the definitions overlap — they differ only in emphasis: C.1 Defined in terms of discretion A Wise One is one who has the discretion to dis- criminate what behaviour is wholesome and what behaviour is unwholesome, specifically: • knowing what constitutes good and what con- stitutes evil; • knowing what constitutes right and what con- stitutes wrong; • knowing what constitutes merit [purifia] and what constitutes demerit [papa] C.2 Defined in terms of behaviour A Wise One is someone who habitually thinks, speaks and acts in a good way. All of the features of Blessing Two: Associating with the IVise 39 EFTA01129141
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a wise man discussed so far have all been his exter- nal characteristics — but on closer inspection it turns out that the wise man has several spiritual features that distinguish him from the ordinary fool: 1. The wise one is wont to think habitually in a good way: His habitual way of thinking comprises at minimum: non-greed, non-hatred and right view. Going beyond this, his thoughts are downright wholesome and include loving kindness (in place of non-hatred), generosity (in place of non-greed) and right view (in place of wrong view). 2. The wise one is wont to speak habitually in a good way: The wise man is apt to be well spo- ken in diametric opposition to the fool who has only a babble of insults to decorate his intelli- gence. There are four ways in which the wise speak good words: 1. He avoids telling lies. The wise one will al- ways speak the truth. He is always a man of his word. 2. He avoids divisive speech. The wise man by contrast will always be the one to mend the differences between others by his words. He will be the one to forge harmony within a group. 3. He avoids the use of swear words and harsh words. No matter how angry the wise man is, he will not even consider insulting others. The wise man gives careful thought to the every word that escape his lips. 4. He avoids idle chatter. If the wise man knows what he has to say is without use, he will keep it to himself — he will maintain 'noble si- lence'. 3. The Wise One is wont to do only good deeds: The wise one likes to perform physical good deeds with an emphasis on being compassion- ate [meta /karuna], getting down to earning an honest living 'summit ajiva) and marital fidel- ity. The fool by contrast is continually killing, stealing and committing adultery. C.3 Defined in terms of virtues A Wise One is wont to demonstrate the following four virtues: 1. Gratitude IkataiiiiEJ: He recognizes the debt of gratitude he may have to others 2. Self-Purifying lattasuddhit He purifies himself of all evil 3. Purity Iparisuddhij: He purifies others of all evil 4. Endearing Isafigaha]: makes himself useful to society CA Defined in terms of the profit sought from life In Blessing One we have already seen that the dis- cretion concerning the nature of profit in life for a fool is different from that of a Wise One. In Bud- dhism we have two definitions of profit in life: profit in the short-term and profit in the hereafter. CA.1 Material profit defined (A.iv.281) The Lord Buddha taught four ways in which the wise one accrues benefits in the present lifetime (in Pali the ditthadhammikatthapayojana). In Thai culture they are colloquially referred to as the 'four chambers of the millionaire's heart' or more sim- ply, the way to set yourself up in life. As we have said, sitting idle will do nothing to ensure your com- fort in life. Comfort doesn't come unearned.Thus comfort in one's old age must come from hard work in one's youth, when one is still physically strong enough to be productive in one's work. The wise will, while they are young, store up the means to live comfortably in their old age when they are no longer able to earn. There are four virtues for ac- cruing benefit in the present life. These are: 1. Diligent Acquisition [uftanasampada] i.e. not being too lazy to go out and earn a living. Wise is the man who applies himself to the task in hand (not sitting around all day and waiting for money to appear magically) 2. Stewardship Iarakkhasampadal means both saving and protecting what you have earned 3. Associating with Good Friends Ralyatta- mutual means the same as associating with the wise — that is the title of this Blessing — and to avoid associating with the evil — especially the sort that are always trying to persuade you to go and gamble or go down to the pub. 40 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps towards Enlightened Living EFTA01129142