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Attaining Enlightenment Through Meditation

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    <Attaining Enlightenment
    Through Meditation>
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    (Questioner) Hi Sunim, thanks
    for giving me a chance to ask a question.
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    So, I have a question on meditation
    and studying Buddhist scripture.
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    I learned that the Buddha achieved
    a peaceful mind and profound enlightenment
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    through meditation.
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    I am trying to practice meditation
    for the same purpose,
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    but as a beginner who hasn't gone
    through the path, I have some doubts
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    about how I can achieve such a deep state
    of enlightenment through not thinking.
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    Could you explain how meditation can lead
    to such peace of mind and enlightenment?
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    (Sunim) All our suffering actually happens
    because we think too much.
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    So, we need to truly liberate ourselves
    from our preconceptions of ethics,
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    morality, religious faith, and other
    paradigms. These guard our thoughts.
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    For example:
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    Say a man and a woman who like
    each other have become lovers.
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    So, in a regular relationship between
    two ordinary people, they like each other.
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    However, if they are Buddhist clergy
    or Catholic clergy, they have been taught
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    not to engage in sexual relationships.
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    So, those people
    who are trained in that way,
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    while they enjoy being with the other
    person in a romantic relationship,
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    also feel guilt.
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    So, all that guilt, that negative feeling,
    is not a result of having this romantic
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    relationship with another person you like.
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    It comes from your own preconceptions
    that you shouldn't be doing this.
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    So, a lot of the suffering and issues
    we experience today actually happen
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    because of the contradiction or collision
    between what is happening in reality,
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    what we experience in reality, and our
    preconceptions of how things should be.
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    That suffering disappears
    when you erase the contradiction
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    by choosing to abandon a preconception
    and accept reality
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    or adhering to that preconception
    and foregoing your desires.
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    However, we can never solve this problem
    as long as we simultaneously adhere
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    to a preconception and desire
    what we want in reality;
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    that contradiction will persist.
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    So, another example:
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    If traditional ethics dictate
    that men and women of a certain age
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    cannot be romantic partners,
    then such relationships create suffering.
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    Similarly, if we are taught that divorce
    is unacceptable after marriage,
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    yet circumstances call for separation,
    this contradiction creates suffering.
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    But in the natural course of things,
    people come together
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    and separate all the time.
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    It's all coming together.
    It's not the cause of your suffering.
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    Separation or divorce is
    not the cause of your suffering.
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    It's your preconceptions of "what ought to
    be" that actually cause your suffering,
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    whether it's a first meeting
    or a separation.
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    If you can just erase "what ought to be,"
    then you actually eliminate
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    a lot of suffering
    from your own internal conflicts.
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    For example, when we teach our daughters
    that premarital sex is a sin,
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    it causes them internal suffering
    when they engage in it.
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    But we do not teach our sons
    this to the same extent,
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    so they may not feel the same guilt.
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    This is all due to the preconceptions
    we instill in our children.
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    For example, if you stop thinking
    right now, there is no cost to suffer.
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    That is why the foundation of
    our meditation is stopping your thinking.
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    What posture you take, how you breathe,
    none of that really matters.
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    Many of you say you are meditating,
    but you end up thinking quietly.
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    That is thinking, not meditating.
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    Thinking good thoughts does not mean
    you meditate well.
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    Meditation is
    a state of absence of thoughts.
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    If your thinking stops,
    most of your suffering will go away.
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    But once you try to stop thinking,
    you will find it doesn't stop easily.
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    Naturally, your thinking is amplified
    more than two, three, or tenfold.
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    So when you are meditating,
    your body may be still,
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    but you are always thinking.
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    So how do you stop thinking?
    Because if you intend to stop thinking,
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    that intention itself gets amplified.
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    That is why the old teachers told us this:
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    There's dust flying in the room.
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    We don't see it well.
    It is almost invisible.
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    But if there is a ray of sunlight
    that comes through the room,
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    We suddenly realize that a lot of dust is
    floating in the room.
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    We are trying to get rid of the dust
    from the room with a duster or a cloth.
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    Then, we are realizing that
    trying to do so only creates more dust.
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    Then, what do we do?
    We just have to let it be.
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    As time passes,
    most of the dust will gradually settle.
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    So basically, they're saying
    we constantly live
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    in a flux of thoughts and distractions,
    but we don't realize it
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    because we lack the
    single ray of light to illuminate them.
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    So, the fact that you actually sit down
    and start realizing
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    how dusty the room in your mind is,
    isn't a failure in the meditation.
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    it's actually a process
    of meditating on that recognition.
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    It's the same as seeing a single ray
    of light illuminating all that dust.
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    That first realization
    that "I live amidst all this dust,
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    in these distracting thoughts".
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    Then you start engaging in a kind
    of performance-oriented meditation,
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    in which you want to do meditation
    better and faster.
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    Thereby creating more distractions,
    letting dust fly even more.
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    You have to just let it be.
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    But it doesn't really settle that quickly
    because it just flies around.
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    That's why the strategy is
    to focus your thoughts on one thing.
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    The easiest thing to focus your thoughts
    on is your breath.
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    Basically, it is a strategy
    of focusing
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    on the inhalation and exhalation
    of your breath.
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    In Pali, it is called Ānāpāna.
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    Another strategy that came up
    during the Zen Buddhist tradition is
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    a Koan, to focus on one single thought.
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    Or one single question,
    like "Who am I?".
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    Just focus on that single question.
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    Other thoughts will constantly be there.
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    You just let them be.
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    But the only thing you actually focus on
    is that single question.
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    For example, say you read a book
    in the middle of the forest.
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    You know, there are birds tweeting.
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    You hear a stream.
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    And you hear cars down the road.
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    So you can't really focus.
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    If the cars were not running,
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    if the birds stopped tweeting,
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    if the stream stopped running;
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    then you could actually focus
    in a quiet forest, right?
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    But you can't stop those things.
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    Just because you stop those externalities
    doesn't guarantee that you can focus.
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    But if you really focus on the book
    and get really into the substance
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    of the book, birds may tweet,
    but you don't pay attention to them.
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    The cars may be running on the road
    next to it,
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    but you don't really pay attention,
    nor do you pay attention
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    to the stream running beside you
    because you are really focused;
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    you are in that zone of focus.
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    So, meditation is
    all about the absence of thoughts,
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    but from a strategic perspective,
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    it's all about focusing
    on that one single thought.
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    Let's say you focus
    on the breath in and breath out.
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    So, when the breath comes in
    to know that the breath is coming in.
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    You are not thinking
    about the breath coming in.
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    This is a kind of sensory experience:
    the flow of the air as it actually travels
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    over your skin, through your nostrils,
    as it enters your lungs.
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    And you also feel that kind of tactile
    sense of the breath and leaf in your nose.
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    This is experiencing, not thinking.
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    You are just experiencing that breath.
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    You might think of your mother
    at that time.
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    But once you are actually distracted
    by the thought of your mother,
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    you start thinking,
    "Oh, what about the time we went
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    on a picnic with my mom?
    What about the time
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    we had an argument with her?"
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    So, you actually create narratives
    around those thoughts.
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    This becomes a distraction.
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    So, you can't really stop the thought
    of your mother rising.
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    But despite whatever thoughts come to you,
    you keep focusing on the breath.
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    Basically, do not pay attention
    or give energy to that thought.
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    And then the thoughts kind of dissipate.
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    Then other thoughts will come.
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    You'll think about coffee.
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    But nevertheless, you focus on the breath.
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    Then the thought of coffee dissipates.
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    So you will have countless thoughts
    rise and fall, rise and fall,
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    as long as you don't pay attention
    to them.
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    But once you start actually doing it,
    when you think of coffee,
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    you kind of follow it and create a story
    out of it;
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    "What kind of coffee do I want?
    With whom do I want this coffee?".
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    At that time, you have already lost
    that focus on your breath.
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    Because our attention can only focus
    on one thing at a time.
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    If I focus on here, I lose focus there.
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    And if I pay attention there,
    I lose attention here.
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    Thoughts are just that;
    as long as you don't pay attention
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    to them, they will just rise and fall,
    rise and fall.
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    So, when we say we are distracted,
    those random thoughts are
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    not distractions in themselves.
    It really becomes a source of distraction
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    when you start creating stories
    around those thoughts.
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    So, if you keep practicing,
    you can sustain that focus
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    on a single breath for one minute
    before being distracted,
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    then five minutes, and then ten minutes.
    It will actually increase.
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    So, the attention span
    on that single breath will continue
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    to increase,
    and you will experience less distraction.
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    Then you start actually gaining autonomy.
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    You are no longer beholden
    to your past memories or future hopes.
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    The reason you get angry, you get sad,
    you feel this emotion and that is
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    because all these past memories come
    haunting you.
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    You become fearful, anxious, and nervous
    because you are thinking about the future.
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    So, if you are not captured by thoughts
    of the future,
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    then all your anxiety and nervousness
    will go away.
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    So that is why we teach to be awakened
    in the here and now,
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    without being captured
    by your past memories or the future
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    that has not come yet.
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    So even if a thought about Buddha comes
    unbidden to you while meditating,
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    that is just another distraction.
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    So, just singular focus on that breath;
    everything else is a distraction.
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    If it's a Zen Koan,
    anything that falls outside the scope
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    of exploring that question is
    a distraction.
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    And so, in that state, even what you read
    in the scriptures, sutras,
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    or even Buddha's own teachings
    are just distractions.
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    That's why there's a teaching:
    if you see a Buddha,
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    if you think about the Buddha,
    kill the Buddha.
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    If you encounter your teacher,
    kill the teacher.
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    So, we don't really mean to
    literally kill them,
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    but obviously, we are saying is
    to not pay them any mind.
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    They're just distractions.
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    Sorry for the lengthy response.
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    (Sunim/Questioner Laughter)
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    (Questioner) Thanks.
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    (Audience Applause)
Title:
Attaining Enlightenment Through Meditation
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
23:02

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