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Mindfulness
of Feelings
by
Matthew Flickstein
When we practice mindfulness of feelings, we
shift our focus from noticing the impermanent,
conditioned, and selfless nature of the body to
identifying these same three characteristics as
attributes of the mind and mental objects. As we begin
to investigate feelings, the interdependence of the
mind and body becomes evident.
In the same way that we isolated the body from
all other objects of consciousness when we began the
body contemplations, it is essential to remain mindful
of "the feelings in the feelings". We need to avoid
dwelling on any judgments, decisions, or internal
commentary that may arise based upon the feelings we
are observing. We must be careful not to identify with
the feelings and consider them "ours". We simply
maintain a mindful awareness of each feeling as it
presents itself to consciousness from moment to
moment.
We began exploring the aggregate of feelings in
the chapter concerned with purification of virtue (in
the book
Swallowing the River Ganges).
We described how a feeling automatically arises
whenever a sensory experience occurs. A feeling in
this context is not an emotion, but rather the direct
experience of a sense object as being pleasant,
unpleasant, or neither pleasant nor unpleasant.
The Buddha further describes feelings by
dividing them into three pairs. The first pair
contains pleasant worldly feelings and pleasant
spiritual feelings. A pleasant worldly feeling arises
when we have contact with a pleasant sense object, or
when we think about an aspect of worldly life that
brings us pleasure (thoughts of family, friends,
personal interests, and so on). A pleasant spiritual
feeling arises in connection with meditation practice,
such as when we experience the joy associated with
deep concentration, when we have a spiritual insight,
and so forth.
The second pair includes unpleasant worldly
feelings and unpleasant spiritual feelings. An
unpleasant worldly feeling arises when we have contact
with an unpleasant sense object or when we think about
an aspect of worldly life that brings us psychological
pain (thoughts of losing a family member, failing at
some task, losing a job, and so forth). An unpleasant
spiritual feeling arises in connection with meditation
practice. We may experience disappointment, for
example, when our spiritual progress is slower than we
thought it would be, or we may experience fear when we
realize just how impermanent everything really is.
The final pair of feelings consists of neutral
worldly feelings and neutral spiritual feelings. A
neutral worldly feeling is a feeling of indifference.
It arises when we have contact with a worldly sense
object that neither brings us pleasure nor pain, or
when we give consideration to an aspect of worldly
life that holds no interest for us. This feeling may
arise, for example, when we see the same billboard on
the way to work each day, or when we hear a weather
report for a place we have no plans on visiting. A
neutral spiritual feeling, however, is experienced as
equanimity and is the result of spiritual maturity. A
mind possessing the quality of equanimity experiences
every object of consciousness without attachment or
aversion. It develops naturally as we proceed with our
practice of meditation and continue to observe things
as they are.
Although feelings automatically arise whenever
there is sense contact, the type of feeling that we
experience can be influenced by our perception of the
sense object being experienced. For example, hearing
someone sing while we are listening to the radio may
result in a pleasant feeling, but hearing someone sing
when we are trying to meditate may result in an
unpleasant feeling. Recognizing that we cannot control
everyone or everything in our life may create an
unpleasant feeling, but realizing that there is no
self to be in control can result in a feeling of
equanimity.
If we are not aware of the feelings as they rise
and fall from moment to moment -- if we are not
guarding the sense doors -- we may either react to the
feelings we experience or to the objects upon which
the feelings are based. The tendency is to grasp at
pleasant feelings or objects, to resist unpleasant
feelings or objects, and to become bored with or
indifferent toward feelings and objects that are
neither pleasant nor unpleasant. This reactivity is
part of a conditioned chain of events that occurs
without the necessity of a self driving the process.
The following contemplations support the arising
of insight into the nature of feelings, the ways in
which we react to those feelings, and the impersonal
causes and conditions behind the feelings themselves.
The contemplation of feelings plays a key role in
helping to break the chain that keeps us in bondage to
our sensory experiences.
For the first exercise, choose any one of the
sense organs to work with for an entire day. Observe
the particular feelings that occur when sense
objects are encountered through that sense door.
When feelings occur, their presence may be
experienced as bodily sensations or merely intuited
without having specifically located them in the
body. However, it is essential to directly
experience the feelings and not just to theorize
that they must have occurred. Determine whether each
feeling that arises is pleasant, unpleasant, or
neutral. In the following days, repeat this process
for each of the other sense organs. Remember that
the mind is considered a sense organ that
experiences thoughts, feelings, volitions, and other
mental formations as its sense objects.
The first contemplation enables us to recognize
how feelings arise spontaneously when sense contact
occurs. It reveals how feelings are conditioned by
those contacts, and how we have no choice as to
whether feelings will arise. It also helps us
recognize just how incessantly consciousness is being
impinged upon by feelings.
To practice the second exercise, we continue
to meditate by focusing on the rise and fall of
every in-breath and every out-breath, noticing with
great precision their impermanent nature. Whenever
the mind shifts its attention to another object of
awareness, we recognize the impermanent nature of
that object, and then gently but firmly return to
the breath. If at any point, however, we realize
that we have lost our focus for an extended period
of time, we immediately reflect back to see what
initially distracted the mind's attention. We may
find that it was not the thoughts, images, or sense
objects themselves that we were reacting to, but to
the feelings that were associated with those
experiences.
The second contemplation illuminates the
conditioned nature of the mind and the way in which
the mind reacts to feelings without any conscious
consideration on our part. It enables us to discover
how the mind grasps after pleasant feelings or the
objects that provide those feelings, how it resists
unpleasant feelings or objects, and how it becomes
bored or indifferent with feelings or objects that are
neutral. As a result of this contemplation we realize
that the mind's reactivity to sensory experience is
conditioned, dependently arisen, and occurs without a
self in control of the process.
In the final exercise, we use feelings as an
opportunity to discover the true nature of our
moment-to-moment experience. This contemplation, if
diligently practiced, will lead to significant
insights.
After sitting in meditation for an extended
period of time, bodily pain begins to arise. The
first strategy is to watch the rise and fall of the
painful feeling and then to return to our breath.
However, if the feeling is very intense, we will
find it difficult to stay focused on the breath.
When this occurs, we begin using the painful feeling
as the primary object of our meditation.
The typical response to an unpleasant feeling is
to resist it or to engage in some activity that may
change the nature of the feeling we are experiencing.
In terms of sitting meditation, we may decide to
change positions or to slightly adjust our posture. By
doing so, however, we lose our concentration and are
not following one of the most important principles of
insight meditation: to remain choicelessly aware of
whatever arises to consciousness. The issue with pain,
more than the unpleasant feeling itself, is the fear
of being overwhelmed by the experience. As a result,
we tend to mentally and physically tighten around pain
when it occurs. This response serves to intensify the
unpleasant experience.
To practice this contemplation, we are to
relax, soften, and settle into the experience of the
painful feeling. We are to become so intimate with
the pain that we can penetrate our misperceptions
about the unpleasant feeling and see it for what it
really is. We will then be able to recognize the
impermanent nature of the pain and discover that
there is no pain in the knee, back, or other
location as such. The place in which we feel the
pain actually keeps shifting from moment to moment.
Further, if we are very attentive, we realize that
between pulsations of pain, there is the absence of
pain.
We will also find that the quality of pain
keeps changing. We may first experience the
sensation as burning, then as pressure, then as
throbbing, and so forth. If we are able to remain
fully present with the pain, it often reaches a
point where it breaks up and completely disappears,
showing once again its impermanence.
By remaining present with the experience, we
will also become aware of the unsatisfactory nature of
feelings. Of course, with painful feelings this is
quite obvious. However, if we were to remain
choicelessly present with the most pleasurable of
feelings, we would eventually see them change into
unpleasant feelings. This makes all feelings, even
pleasant ones, impermanent and ultimately
unsatisfactory.
As we continue to observe the painful feelings,
we discover their selfless nature. We realize that
what is actually occurring is the rise and fall of
unpleasant feelings, concurrent with the rise and fall
of the awareness, or consciousness, of those feelings.
There is no self as part of, behind, or in control of
the process. The feelings arise due to sense contact,
and in effect, the feeling itself is the feeler. When
this insight occurs, we discover the difference
between a feeling and the mind's aversive reaction to
that feeling. This insight transforms our relationship
to feelings, enabling us to maintain our equanimity
with whatever feelings arise.
This article
was excerpted from the book
Swallowing the River Ganges, ©2001, by Matthew
Flickstein. Reprinted with permission of the publisher, Wisdom
Publications,
www.wisdompubs.org
Info/Order this book.
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