Training the elephant of the mind

shamatha

In classical meditation training, the mind is symbolized by two animals: an elephant and a monkey. The elephant represents the qualities of inertia, stubbornness, repetitious mental and emotional patterns, and overall our ignorance about our own mind and its sublime, true nature. The monkey represents the activity of the mind, constantly distracted and unsettled. The monkey also illustrates how the mind will mimic higher qualities of Awareness and fool the practitioner into cherishing experiences as special when they are merely the play of the personal mind.

The training for meditation has three goals:

  • to revert the mind from the external for its frames of reference to the internal,
  • to declutter the mental-emotional complex so that the qualities of contentment, peace,  tranquility or serenity can be experienced,
  • and to begin to tame the elephant and monkey demonstrations of a person in his or her life.

The preliminary practices of sitting quietly (just that!), of experiencing the body breathing, or of gazing at the sky help us recognize how uncivilized, unruly, and mindless we are with ourselves, with others, and our world. None of these practices are meditation but all (and many more) are necessary to prepare the mind-emotion complex and the hard-to-train sense of self for meditation.

Training in meditation has goals different from those of its preparation.

  • Truth is the first aim. All preliminary practices reveal how deceptive our daily experiences can be. For example, people, places and things appear stable or permanent but nothing is. Everyone knows someone who has died, or who was in love and now is not, or who was young and now is not. Social policies change, people’s interests change, climate changes. So, truth, that which is non-deceptive – is truly true – is the target, the aim, of meditation. Real meditation has no interest in relaxation since that is simply to feed the elephant. Nor does true meditation encourage titillating internal experiences since that feeds the monkey. Truth, as in true true, as in truth of Being is the primary purpose, aim, goal, and function of meditation. This target is represented in Tibetan imagery by the arrow.
  • The revelation and then realization of what is really real is the second purpose of meditation. This is born of the primary overall function and purpose of Truth. For example, is my craving revealing that I am really hungry or revealing that I am bored?  If I am bored, why? As a human being, limitless possibilities of how to improve my state of mind, clarify my emotional and behavior patterns, bring joy and harmony to my relationships and the world, and overall be creative in all of these is within my capacity. Why am I bored and reaching for a snack that doesn’t serve the boredom, doesn’t serve my body or emotions, and is a waste? What is real? Meditation is designed to deconstruct the illusory and open the wisdom eye and heart of someone so that Real and True arises as obvious within oneself. No dogma, no doctrine, no fanaticism, just obvious. One Tibetan symbol for this is the skull cup: reality is mind-made.
  • Unanimity, oneness is the third functional purpose of meditation. The above two realizations provide a third: we are all in THIS together. Together, if we care for each other, everyone benefits. When we don’t, everyone suffers. That’s real, that’s true, that’s obvious. One symbol for this is a set of mala beads.

The preliminary training for meditation is necessary and to be applauded in all the ways that it is currently extant in the world. Meditation used to only be practiced by adepts. But what is called meditation is not in most cases.

What will be offered in the free, online group meditation sessions (beginning Tues, Jan. 16) does not claim to be true meditation. What will will practice will, however, combine the purposes of taming and training together with the ultimate functions and aims of meditation.

You are welcome to join. Use this link (and file it for ease of use.)