Using Sati, Samadhi, and Panna—The Core Path—to Cease Suffering



Using Sati, Samadhi, and Panna—The Core Path—to Cease Suffering
What is the Core Path?
 
Sati (Mindfulness), Samadhi (Concentration), and Panna (Wisdom) are universal tools for every human being to cease suffering. Together, they form the "Core Path" that functions to distinguish conventions from reality, ensuring the mind does not become lost in attachments that lead to suffering.
 
1.Sati: The Immediate Awareness
Function: Constant awareness of mental contact as it arises.
Application: When sensory contact occurs through the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body, or mind, use Sati to immediately recognize the resulting feeling (Vedana). This stops Nandi (delight) and prevents mental formations from escalating into attachment.
 
2.Samadhi: The Stability of Mind
Function: Maintaining the mind’s stability in its "Normal" state (Pakati).
Application: In work or daily life, train the mind to perform its functions with stability, undisturbed by worldly conventions. This provides the mind with strength and prevents exhaustion caused by unnecessary mental proliferations.
 
3.Panna: Insight into Non-Self
Function: Deconstructing conventions to reveal the truth that all phenomena are Anatta (Non-Self).
Application: Use Yonisomanasikara (Wise Reflection) to see that there are only natural phenomena performing their respective duties. Do not harbor the self-importance that "I" own the body or the mind. With this clear insight, the mind relinquishes attachment and attains true peace.
 
Conclusion: Walking the Path in Every Moment
Using the Core Path to cease suffering is not limited to sitting meditation; it is the practice of "relinquishing Nandi in feelings" during every activity. This returns the mind to its normal state (Pakati) and continues the learning of truth until this physical form expires.

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What is Citta (Mind)? How is it Related to Cetasika, Phassa, and Vedana?

Definition of Citta (The Mind)

Citta is the "act of knowing," the "consciousness," or the "awareness" of various phenomena and emotions. This is the fundamental definition of the mind.

The Reality of Citta

Citta is just one of many natural phenomena (Dhammas). It arises and ceases solely based on causes and conditions. It has no permanent self (Anatta) because it is merely the function of knowing.

Causes of Arising: Citta arises when three factors meet: the Internal Sense Base (eyes, ears, etc.), the External Sense Base (sights, sounds, etc.), and Phassa (Contact).

Sensory Consciousness (Vinnana): When these three meet, sensory awareness occurs (e.g., eye-consciousness, ear-consciousness).

Impermanence (Anicca): Within the Five Aggregates, Citta belongs to the Vinnana-khandha. It arises and falls away so rapidly that no "permanent mind" can be found. It is under constant pressure to change (Dukkha) and belongs to no one. It cannot be commanded or owned (Anatta).


The Role of Citta

Citta is the leader; it is the "chief." Its duty is simply to perceive the mental factors that process through it. It perceives the movements of:

Rupa (Body)

Vedana (Feeling)

Sanna (Perception)

Sankhara (Mental Formations)

Vinnana (Consciousness itself)

The mind does not own these aggregates and has no right to interfere or cling to them. Its only proper duty is awareness. When practicing the Path (Sati, Samadhi, Panna), the mind perceives sensory objects with a state of "Knowing, Seeing, and Letting Go"—just as the Buddha taught Bahiya: "In the seen, let there be only the seen."


Cetasika: The Mental Factors

Cetasika refers to the dhammas that accompany the mind, shaping it into wholesome (Kusala) or unwholesome (Akusala) states.
They arise and cease simultaneously with the mind, at the same base, and with the same object.

The Actor vs. The Knower: Most people think the "Mind" is the one thinking or getting angry. In reality, the Cetasikas are the "actors." For example, when thinking, Vitakka (Initial Application) is working. When angry, Dosa-cetasika (Anger factor) is performing its duty. The Mind (Citta) is merely the act of knowing that anger.

3 Groups of Cetasika:

1.Wholesome (Kusala): Includes Sati (Mindfulness), Samadhi (Concentration), and Panna (Wisdom). This is the Core Path.

2.Unwholesome (Akusala): Includes Greed, Hatred, and Delusion (Avijja). These arise when the Path is not being practiced, leading to Tanha (Craving) and Suffering.

3.Neutral (Annyasamanas): Factors like Phassa (Contact) and Vedana (Feeling) that can join both wholesome and unwholesome states.


Phassa (Contact) & Vedana (Feeling)

Phassa: The Gateway

Phassa is the meeting of the Internal Base + External Base + Consciousness. Without Phassa, neither the mind, mental factors, nor feelings can arise.

Avijja-Phassa (Ignorant Contact): Occurs when there is no mindfulness. It leads to "delight" (Nandi) and suffering.

Vijja-Phassa (Wise Contact): Occurs when the Path is practiced. Wisdom (Panna) is present, preventing the fuel for craving.

Vedana: The Experience

Vedana is the "tasting" of an object—Pleasant, Painful, or Neutral.

Vedana with Wisdom: Knowing the feeling without delighting in pleasure or resisting pain. This stops Tanha.

Vedana with Ignorance: Getting lost in the feeling, leading to craving and "I-ness."


Deconstructing "Atta" (Self) and "Attaniya" (Belonging to Self)

1. Atta (The Illusion of 'I')

Atta is the false assumption that there is a "controller" or "center" behind the body and mind.

The Reality: The body is just a combination of four elements: Earth (flesh/bones), Water (fluids), Wind (breath), and Fire (warmth). When we die, these return to nature. There is no "person" inside.

2. Attaniya (The Illusion of 'Mine')

Once the "I" (Atta) is created, the mind draws a boundary of "Mine."

Physical Attaniya: My body, my beauty, my possessions.

Mental Attaniya: My thoughts, my knowledge, "my" peace from meditation.

The Trap of the Digital Age

In the digital world, Atta is expanded through social media profiles (Digital Self). We chase "Likes" to feed a self that doesn't exist. We buy things not for use, but to define "Who I Am" (Consumerist Attaniya).


Conclusion: Ending the Endless Craving

Suffering does not end by having everything; it ends by seeing that no one owns anything, not even "ourselves."

Practice: "Do good without the 'doer'." Perform duties based on causes and conditions, but do not claim the results as "mine."

The Goal: Live in the world of conventions without being lost in them. When "The Burdensome Self" disappears, only the peaceful, natural process of Dhamma remains.


“Whatever Dhamma performs its duty wrongly, it distorts nature... When one sees the truth, clinging expires.”



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