Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • In /The Dhammapada/, Buddha says, “the monk who delights in awareness, seeing the danger

  • in unawareness, not liable to fall back, is close to [Nirvana].”

  • So Buddha is saying that awareness leads to freedom from suffering, and unawareness leads

  • to suffering.

  • So there's something we have to figure out right away: what is awareness?

  • To put it simply, awareness is to see what is.

  • And you might be thinking, /aren't I always seeing what is?/ And the most likely answer

  • is no.

  • See, where there's thought, there's no awareness, and where there's awareness,

  • there's no thought.

  • So if you spend a lot of time thinking, it means you spend a lot of time not being aware.

  • And you might be wondering, /is thinking bad?

  • Am I thinking too much?

  • How can I think less?

  • How can I be more aware?/ And all of these questions will be fruitless.

  • It's much more useful to see the function of thought.

  • Thought is useful for working on problems you already know the answer too.

  • For example: /where are my keys?

  • Let me think about where I last saw them.

  • Oh, yeah, there they are!/ But thought can never answer this one question: what's a

  • fact that I should know that I don't know already?

  • Because if you can articulate it, then you already know it, but thought can't articulate

  • what it doesn't already know, so thought is always limited by your past experiences.

  • And what you wantwhat everyone wantsis answers, and /thinking will never give you

  • answers that you don't already know/.

  • Thinking can't tell you anything new.

  • If you sit still and really listen to your mind, you'll quickly find out how repetitive

  • it is.

  • It talks about the same things over and over again.

  • It revisits the same ground.

  • It produces nothing new.

  • It provides the same solutions over and over again.

  • That's because thought comes from memory, and memory is always of the past.

  • And if your memories had the answers you're looking for, you'd already have solved your

  • problems.

  • You'd already be where you wanna be in life.

  • So if you're still seeking answers, you won't find them through thinking.

  • And when you truly realize this, you'll start to wonder: what's outside of thinking?

  • When thinking stops, awareness starts.

  • When awareness starts, you see /what is/, no longer blinded by your thoughts, emotions,

  • memories, and preconceptions.

  • In other words, you're no longer blinded by your past.

  • And you may be wondering, /blinded by my past?

  • What does that mean?/ Think about a time when someone you know got a haircut, or did their

  • nails, or lost some weight, or gained some muscle.

  • Did you notice right away?

  • Or did you have to be prompted to notice?

  • If you didn't notice, you were not seeing the world as it was.

  • /You were seeing the world as you were/, and you were blinded by your past.

  • You didn't see the person as they were, but rather, you saw a memory of them.

  • But when thinking stops and awareness starts, /you see the world as it is, not as you are/.

  • And when you see what is, you can discover the new and the interesting.

  • And when you discover the new and interesting, you learn, and when you learn, you really

  • find the answers you were in search of.

  • But if you haven't already solved a problem, thought will never give you the answer.

  • And when you know that you don't know, thought stops, and awareness begins.

  • And it's only when you become aware that you become free of the past, and it's only

  • when you become free of the past that you become available to the present, and it's

  • only when you become available to the present that you become capable of knowing what you

  • don't know, and maybe, someone who's capable of knowing what they don't know is close

  • to Nirvanamaybe, maybe not.

  • As always, this is just my opinion and understanding of the Buddha's words, not advice.

  • If you liked the video, please consider liking the video.

  • And if you're looking for a video to watch after this one, I recommend watching my video

  • Buddha - Your Thoughts Determine Your Future”, I'll put a link to it in the description

  • below and in the top right of the screen

  • right now.

In /The Dhammapada/, Buddha says, “the monk who delights in awareness, seeing the danger

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it