cover

images

Introduction

The content of this book is simply a communication of a current theory of actuality that was realized within a period of meditation on the 13th June 1980. This was followed by an actualization process throughout the various schools of Buddhism over the course of twenty five years and then within a secular western context which is still on-going. This journey was an attempt to make intellectual sense of the experience so it could be communicated to a new secular western audience without recourse to religious dogma, institutionalised belief, or other cultural influences.

The communication of the Dharma has never been about the communicator. It has always been about the communication. It has always been communicated so that it can be tested, challenged, refuted or realized within direct experience, without the need of any belief aspect imposed by the confused and conditioned, self-biased mind.

If, by engaging with this book, it helps you to move away from the mind state of worrying towards the mind state of contentment or peace of mind, you can be assured it is the Dharma. If it does not, then it is suggested that you discard whatever you find unhelpful.

B. Cumming

 

To find out more about the book or to contact the author, please visit:

www.vividpublishing.com.au/noworries

 

 

Copyright © 2016 B. Cumming

ISBN 978-1-925590-04-3 (eBook)

Published by Vivid Publishing
P.O. Box 948, Fremantle Western Australia 6959
www.vividpublishing.com.au

eBook conversion and distribution by Fontaine Publishing Group, Australia
www.fontaine.com.au

Subjects include: Buddhism, Meditation, Dharma, philosophy, spirituality

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, printing, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.

Acknowledgments

It would possibly fill this entire book if everybody who has contributed in some way towards its development were individually acknowledged. There have been so many teachers within each of the main traditions of Buddhism, both formal and informal. There have been so many mentors along the way, many of whom are still in contact. There have been so many Dharma friends who have been there, supporting and encouraging this journey, that it would take a lifetime to be able to express the depth of gratitude that is owed to each and every one of them. They know who they are and so do I and that is all that really matters.

I am indebted to the kindness and dedication of Bodhidasa (Troy Shier) Taradeva (Barbara Warren) Dhivajri (Emma Watt) of the Darmadatu Sangha and my friend and fellow journeyman Chris Johnys. They have somehow painstakingly managed to untangle my uneducated scribbling into something that sounds possibly half intelligent and have apparently put all the dots and squiggly bits in all the right places. Thanks also to Buddhist artist Garava of the Triratna Buddhist Order for permission to use his water colour ‘melancholy skeleton’ for the front cover of this book and to Shaktidana (Michelle Mainwaring) of the Dharmadatu Sangha for creating the back cover.

This book is dedicated to the memory of my late parents, who provided me with the opportunity of human life and encouraged me, from a very early age, to be a critical, free-thinking, creative individual and to my wife Mudita (Julia) who has been there supporting me every step of the way since the age of 13.

Contents

1. The Secular Western Context

2. The Origins of Buddhism

3. The Birth of the Buddha

4. Going Forth

5. Worrying

6. Awakening

7. Conditioned Causal Continuity

8. The Decision to Teach

9. The Four Principal Assignments

10. The Eight-Step Journey

11. Living in Awareness

12. Instant Karma

13. Re-Becoming

14. The Middle Way

15. Going for Refuge

16. The Three-Fold Method 1. Ethics

17. The Three-Fold Method 2. Meditation

18. The Meditative Process of Concentration

19. The Three-Fold Method 3. Insight

20. The Dharma Practitioner

21. Practicalities

About the Author

One: The Secular Western Context

“No Worries.” It’s possibly the most iconic phrase used in Australia and, more than likely, every other western culture has its own version of it such as ‘no problems.’ If you are not Australian, for the purpose of this book, where you see the words ‘worry’ or ‘worries,’ just replace them with the words that are used in your own country and the concept will work in the same way.

For Australians, and those that have a preconceived idea of what Australia is, (based on what they have seen and heard from others) a country that conjures up an image, perhaps, of a carefree nation that is so laid back, the problems of everyday life pass them by. Considering it is one of those countries that appears to have more creatures living there that have the ability to kill you, or cause you serious injury, or illness compared with anywhere else in the world, at times it is difficult to understand how this image became a part of the popular portrayed view of Australia.

Australia seems to present an image, inwardly and outwardly, of being a nation at ease with itself. This iconic phrase ‘no worries’ communicates the idea, perhaps, that Australians spend most of their lives surfing at the beach, throwing a shrimp on the barbie (BBQ) or knocking back a stubbie (small bottle of beer also known as “piss”) on the veranda with a few mates. Yet, it seems clear that everything is not always as it seems in this amazing and diverse country that is Australia, nor, I suggest, any other western society.

According to published statistics from the Australian Health Department, Australia has one of the highest levels, per head of capita, of mental illness in the form of depression, stress and anxiety disorders, in the developed western world. These statistics indicate that it is increasing at an alarming rate, as is the rate of suicides. It would seem that in actuality, Australians do quite a lot of worrying and it is suggested here that it is very much the same within most other western cultures.

The aim of this book is to explore how the teachings of the Buddha, when understood on the basis of their practical application, are possibly more relevant today than they were over 2,600 years ago. But only if they are approached on the basis of one’s own cultural conditioning and with a willingness to adopt and engage fully in a particular lifestyle change, to alleviate or eradicate the worrying aspects of life, without recourse to religious dogma, or institutionalised belief.

It is acknowledged from the outset that there will always be some benefit experienced by engaging with Buddhism and its practices that have developed in cultures that are not our own. There may even be some benefit experienced even if any of those developments appear to have become entrenched in religious dogma, political elitism, or are not aligned with current scientific knowledge that was not known previously. This book is not in any way an attempt to undermine, or be disrespectful, towards any form of classical Buddhism. Neither is it an attempt to undermine the faith, or disrespect the beliefs of millions of Buddhists world-wide who practice the Buddha’s teachings to make the world a kinder place for all of us to live in. It simply sets out an alternative approach that has been found to be helpful within a western culture.

Before we go any further it is vital to have an understanding of the context in which this book will be exploring Buddhism. Context is an essential component of the process and is there to create focus. We are living today in a particular time in history and in a particular culture that is vastly different from ancient India and the many diverse cultures where the teachings of the Buddha later developed. For the Buddha’s communication to be effective for us it is helpful to address the issue of context from the outset.

We live in a rapidly evolving secular western society which brings with it unique difficulties which arise from the way we have been conditioned to live. It is the human conditioning process that lies at the centre of everything the Buddha communicated. In his original communication he used the language of his day. He used the existent belief systems, current ideas and concepts and even the superstitions of the local populace as a means of showing them how unhelpful they were.

It is suggested here that it could be unhelpful for us to cling to things that have no relevance for us today. For the Buddha’s teachings to be of use to us, it is helpful to use our own language. It is helpful to draw on information and knowledge that is available today and information and knowledge that may become available in the future. It is unhelpful to be afraid of letting go of practices, traditions, rites and rituals that no longer have any practical use within a modern secular western world.

The motivational intent behind this book is simply a way of setting out an approach to Buddhism that aims to be practice led and based on living within an ever evolving secular western society. The basis of this is an understanding that it is only when you are prepared to take a long hard look at your own cultural conditioning, with an integrity that is not influenced by someone else’s ideas, that you will come to see the journey as it was meant to be seen by you and where it can be of most help to you. Whilst doing this there is a clear requirement to remain loyal, as best as one can, to the essence of the original communication. This is the challenge that has been taken up by those organisations and individuals who are engaged in this latest reformation that has come to be known as secular western Buddhism.

The primary consideration of this approach is to explore what works now, rather than what should be believed in because of an ancient tradition. The journey of the modern day, secular western, Dharma practitioner, is to seek to answer three principle questions.

1. What works to free this thing we call the mind from worrying?

2. What works to accomplish the development of compassion?

3. What works to awaken us to the way things are in actuality?

As a newcomer, or even if you have engaged with classical Buddhism before, at first you may find it difficult to let go of the language, the spectacle and the romanticism of what you may have previously understood Buddhism to be. That is to be expected, considering the way it has been portrayed historically in the public domain. Sadly, as we will come to see, nothing is ever as it seems.

The secular western approach to the Dharma is not about dilution or dummying down the Buddha’s message. It is about the restoration and revival of his practical method of living. It will serve to enliven and refresh a valuable communication which at times has got stuck in the ancient past. A modern secular western society relies heavily on the scientific method of discovery rather than beliefs in mysticism and magic. The ancient texts and the development of Buddhist thought over the last 2,600 years provide us with a secure legacy for which we are assuredly grateful. But, it is helpful to be aware that we are not beholden to it just because it is called Buddhism if we are to make progress within the journey.

The practical and systematic approach that is set out within the context of this book is centred on three self-supporting and equally important methods of development and they will be explored in detail in later chapters of this book. The first method is that of meditation. It is promoted here as the means to develop clear thinking and a sense of emotional well-being. The formal sitting meditation practices that are suggested within the context of this book, bring a very light form of discipline into your daily life and practice and can be traced back, through Buddhist literature to the Buddha himself.

Progress is measured by the significant helpful changes in your psychological mind states and overall sense of emotional well-being over a period of time. There is a core concentration practice that uses awareness of the breath as its focal point and there is a more explorative and experience-based practice that uses a range of people who you regularly come into contact with as its focal point, in order to develop a kinder approach to life for you, others and the world around you.

The second method is about developing an ethical lifestyle that is not dependent on externally imposed rules and regulations. You will be encouraged to consider adopting a set of ethical guidelines and to use them as a means to work towards becoming proficient in observing your habitual patterns of thinking, speaking and behaving and then taking responsibility for them without recourse to blaming others or external events. There are five basic ethical training principles that are promoted here within this context and they will be explored in depth in a later chapter.

I undertake the ethical training principle, to avoid wherever possible, doing harm and to practice loving kindness.

I undertake the ethical training principle, to avoid wherever possible, taking anything that is not freely given and to practice generosity.

I undertake the ethical training principle, to avoid wherever possible, engaging in sexual exploitation, or manipulation and to practice stillness, simplicity and contentment.

I undertake the ethical training principle, to avoid wherever possible, unkind speech and to practice truthful and kindly communication.

I undertake the ethical training principle, to avoid wherever possible, anything that will tend to decrease the clarity of the mind and to practice keeping the mind clear and radiant.

The third method is the effect of practicing the other two self-supporting methods. This is the development of insight. This is not an intellectual, knowledge based pursuit. It’s not about being clever, intelligent or knowing stuff. It is about developing levels of concentration, within the meditative process that will eventually give rise to irreversible transformation. It is about seeing through our conditioned beliefs about whom we are and how we came to be that way. It is about moving away from the worrying mind to one that is at peace with itself, others and the world around it.

When reading this book it may be helpful to understand the founding principle of this secular western approach to Buddhism. At times, when, and if, you experience anything of an unhelpful reaction to what you read, it is suggested that you come back to this page and re-engage with this founding principle as it sets out clearly your personal responsibility. It is based on an early Buddhist text and is one that is considered to be of vital importance in this approach. It moves the individual away from blind faith or belief, towards their own direct experience and is promoted as a safety precaution against coercion or manipulation, which, it is sad to say, goes on quite a lot within some Buddhist organisations.

Buddha’s Charter of Free-Thinking and Critical Inquiry

It is unhelpful to simply believe what you hear just because you have heard it for a long time.

It is unhelpful to follow tradition blindly, merely because it has been practiced in that way for years.

It is unhelpful to listen to rumours.

It is unhelpful to confirm anything just because it is stated in a scripture or text.

It is unhelpful to make assumptions.

It is unhelpful to draw conclusions by what you see and hear.

It is unhelpful to be fooled by outward appearances.

It is unhelpful to cling to, or become attached to, any view or idea just because you are comfortable with it.

It is unhelpful to accept as fact, anything arrived at by logic.

It is unhelpful to be convinced of anything out of respect or reverence to your chosen Dharma communicator.

It is helpful to go beyond opinion and belief.

It is helpful to reject anything that, when accepted, tried and tested with integrity, leads to worrying in the form of want, not want and confusion.

It is helpful to accept anything that, when accepted, tried and tested with integrity, leads to the practice of loving-kindness, contentment and clarity.

This advice is a guide to what may be of benefit when developing criteria for what is and what is not conducive to making authentic progress on the Dharma journey.

If we understand the charter correctly, we will have noticed already that the Dharma is not a belief based system. It is a thing to be tested and challenged in relation to our own lives. It is a thing to be tested and challenged within our own direct experience, so that we can move towards the alleviation and eventual eradication of our worries. It is a thing in action. It is a thing to do. It is a thing to practice. It is a thing to live.

So, as we can see, there is no room for belief on this journey. What is a belief? Within the context of this book, a belief is something that has arisen within us from our conditioned experience. Perhaps it has something to do with the way we were raised, our education, the media, or even in some circumstances a direct or apparent mystical experience, or maybe a combination of a number of those things. No matter how this belief arose, it is with us now. It has become, for us, a kind of personal truth. We don’t know why, we just know it’s the truth. We can’t prove it’s true to a third party because their conditioning factors were different to ours, so it becomes our individual truth. The problem with this is that we then build a wall around this belief because it is ours. We have become closed to it not being accurate and when anyone challenges our belief we react strongly in an unhelpful way. Make no mistake the Dharma journey is wholly confrontational, not in any kind of hostile way, but it challenges long-held beliefs and confronts us with the actuality of them.

It is suggested here that it is unhelpful to use the words ‘truth’ or ‘true.’ Those words appear to have been significantly responsible for the worst excesses of human behaviour throughout history and contributed to the deaths, mutilations and untold misery of so many beings. It seems apparent that the moment any one person or group believes they know a truth, then some other person or group who believe they know the truth will need to fight the other to prove one is right and the other is wrong and to the death if necessary.

Within this context it is suggested that it is not even helpful to promote the idea that the Buddha taught the truth. It is suggested here that it is helpful to consider that he communicated a ‘current theory of actuality’ that invites people to test, challenge and either realize it for themselves or refute it. What is amazing is that in 2,600 years, the brightest minds of each age have gotten nowhere near refuting it. Another consideration as to why it is not helpful to use those terms is that for something to be true, it must become fixed and static forever and that is the total opposite of what the Buddha communicated. What is suggested here is that we turn away from truth and look for ‘facts.’ Facts can be ‘established,’ whereas truths are believed. In doing so, it is suggested that it is helpful to adopt an attitude of what is referred to as a ‘transitory view.’ A view may well have arisen within the same set of conditioning factors as the belief, but it is only relevant to this moment in time and is subject to change if circumstances change. This approach plays a significant role in stopping us from getting bogged down in the dogma of fixed beliefs. If we remain closed to the inevitability of change we remain in the world of beliefs, but if we stay open, at least to the possibility that our individual truth may not be what we believe it to be, we open up the opportunity for realization.

So, what are these worries and how do they arise and cause us on-going difficulties? To explore this from a secular western perspective we will need to start at square one with an understanding of how Buddhism began.

Two: The Origins of Buddhism

Buddhism is not what you think. Buddhism is how you think, why you think it and what happens as a consequence of the thought process. It is about developing ways to integrate the pre-conscious, biological, nature aspect of being and the subconscious, psychological, nurture aspect of being into conscious awareness, so that this thing we call the mind can be at peace. The pre-conscious aspect includes all inherited or evolutionary genetic and other biological influences which would include the four primary drives of:

1. To survive

2. To replicate the species

3. To seek pleasure

4. To avoid pain

The subconscious aspect is the sum total of all the stored sensory data input since conception and birth that is called the conditioning process.

In its most simplistic understanding Buddhism is about developing ways to enable the thought process to move from causing harm to you, others and the world around you, towards the development of contentment, peace of mind and compassion for all living beings. It is about developing a way of life that can be lived fully without the drama of worries that arise in our everyday worldly lives that spoil it for us.

It is about taking 100% responsibility for everything you think, say and do and paying attention to the quality of your mind state and emotional experience in each moment and learning from that experience. It follows a basic principle of ‘cause and effect’ that is aligned with doing the least amount of harm possible in any situation to yourself, others and the world around you. The good news is that in secular western Buddhism you do not have to do the guilt thing, beat yourself up or give yourself a hard time when you make mistakes, (as you surely will) because none of us will ever be mistake free.

Buddhism didn’t actually begin until long after the death of the person on whose communication it is based. The name Buddhism itself was developed sometime around the early twentieth century within western society. It is derived from the words ‘Bodhi’ or ‘Buddha’ which means something like: ‘one who is awake to the way things are in actuality.’

It could be said that the story of the Buddha and Buddhism is all about worrying. To get to grips with its actuality we really do need to let go of all the intellectual and mythological stuff that appears to have been added in. It may have been added in to possibly give it a greater credibility, but more likely it was as a means of keeping it within an institutional religious set up. It never required anything added in. It has always been credible enough in its down-to-earth, practicalities. The very basis of the Buddha’s story could easily be set out as:

1. He worried about stuff

2. He noticed that he worried about stuff

3. He left his home life to seek out why he worried about stuff

4. He found out why he worried about stuff

5. He found a way to stop worrying about stuff

6. He suggested a way that you too could stop worrying about stuff

The life story of the Buddha could be said to be, in many respects, an important teaching in itself. It shows clearly that this is a human process and not one created by an external, divine, higher intelligence, entity or energy. This is a very human story about human potential. When you think of the Buddha or see an image of the Buddha you are being invited to witness your own potential as a human being. When you see that serene pose and gentle smile it sings out to you, “yeah this guy knows what it’s all about.” And what usually comes next is. “I want some of that.”

What you may not know however is how to get it. The likelihood is that for most of your life you have been looking in all directions for an external experience that would match that expression of the Buddha. What you will eventually come to realize, when you engage with the Buddha’s teachings with integrity, is that your dream can never be fulfilled by external sources no matter how hard you try.

The historical figure, Siddhartha Gautama, we are told, spent over forty years travelling around Northern India attempting, as best he could, to communicate an experience that was realized in the concentrated states of sitting meditation. This experience is referred to here as ‘clarity.’ This experience of clarity involved no element of faith or belief. Those things would automatically fall away within that awakening experience. What was realized within the experience and later communicated by the Buddha has come to be known as the ‘Dharma,’ which in its most simplistic description would mean, ‘the way things are in actuality.’

As the Dharma spread to other countries and different cultures, it began to absorb local customs, traditions, beliefs, superstitions, rites and rituals. This was inevitable. There really is no other effective way to communicate the Dharma, without reference to what exists culturally and historically. It seems clear that the Buddha did that throughout his teaching life. He used Indian culture and the pre-existent religious belief systems to communicate what he had discovered within that experience of clarity.

Today, there are so many different Buddhist traditions, schools, sectarian groups and organisations. Many who choose to explore it for the first time in Australia, or other western countries, appear to struggle to understand what it is to be a Buddhist or what Buddhism is. The whole Buddhist arena is now so large and diverse, it has become very difficult for people to know what is and isn’t Buddhism outside of the cultural context of where it is being taught and practiced. For the average westerner this can be very confusing. They think they are being drawn towards Buddhism, but what they find is that they are inevitably being drawn towards a particular form of classical and often religious Buddhism that is associated with a culture that is alien to them. They then have to try and distinguish what is the Dharma from what is actually Indian, Tibetan, Japanese, Chinese or other Asian religious culture and this can take forever and can, for some, be a crippling and time consuming distraction.

The form of Buddhism taught and practiced within each of these different expressions of the Dharma are equally valid and perfect for those whose conditioning is dependent on that culture. But it provides, it is suggested here, limitations for anyone else, other than as an intellectual or religious pursuit. The methods, as taught by the Buddha, could be described as the developmental model for the authentic human being. One who is free from their own cultural conditioning, group think and behaviour. It is a journey of transformation, of change and is not for the faint hearted. It is an on-going living process. The institutions of culturally specific classical Buddhism may well go to great lengths to blind you to this fact. That is just the nature of institutions and there is nothing malicious going on within that. You are invited here to take the blindfold off from the outset and to keep it off.

It can be quite difficult to pinpoint when Buddhism actually began. During the lifetime of the Buddha there were no Buddhists or Buddhism. There was just him and his motley crew of fellow wandering beggars, living off the hand-outs of local villagers or being sponsored by wealthy and influential patrons. This was quite the norm in ancient India then and to some extent, it could be said, very little has changed in this respect throughout the classical Buddhist world.

Despite early reservations about being able to communicate the Dharma effectively, the numbers of his followers grew very quickly, despite his apparent non-evangelical approach to teaching. It would appear that the vast numbers that are often referred to in Buddhist texts, are something of an over exaggeration of the actuality of the situation according to archaeological surveys and some scholastic investigations. So, it is always helpful to bear in mind that ‘nothing is ever as it seems’ within Buddhism.

One of the difficulties that arose over time is the use of the word Buddha. This is because not only does it refer back to the historical human Siddhartha Gautama but it also relates to the ‘awakened mind’ of any other being that has realized the same experience as the historical Buddha.

It is suggested here that what we have now that falls into the umbrella category of Buddhism, is a number of new expressions or communications of the Dharma that have evolved at different points in history and communicated by other awakened minds, who may or may not have walked the original Dharma journey that was set out by the historical Buddha. They may well be linked by the realization experience of clarity, but the practices and methods communicated as the Dharma journey are poles apart. We also have expressions or communications of the experience of clarity that do not even have the word Buddhism attached to them at all, yet still point towards the same experience, but via a different method, which then complicates things even further.

For instance, (I’ll give you an exaggerated example to show you how ridiculous it all is) if I, as a Dharma practitioner, was waking through the park eating an orange and clarity was realized, I would become a Buddha. What I communicated following that would then be considered to be Buddhism. It is likely, that as part of my communication, I would link the experience to both walking in the park and eating an orange and would possibly suggest that what you would find helpful to do to realize clarity is to walk in the same park as I did and work towards finding the right orange that will assist your breakthrough into actuality. So, it comes as no surprise then that the Buddha promotes meditation as the primary key to unlocking the experience, as that is what he was doing at the moment clarity was realized.

In many respects it may have been more helpful if new names were created at each new communication point so it was not too confusing and misleading for people. For this reason where it is necessary to refer to different periods of development within this book the following terms will be used:

1. Theravadanism

2. Zenism

3. Tibetanism

4. Pure-Landism

5. Shingonism

It is made very clear here that this secular western context is not being dismissive or disrespectful to any of these great traditions by doing this. This book is about trying to cut through the institutionalised developments of classical Buddhism to try and find a way back to its roots. It is fully recognised that all of these developments have equal validity as expressions of the Dharma. The secular western approach does not subscribe to the historical one-upmanship that has been going on within the world of Buddhism throughout its history as each period of reformation happened.

If we were to peel back all of the multi-layered developments of Buddhism, so that we were back to its roots and then put to one side what was then Indian culture we would be left with the Buddha’s Dharma. This is what we will be attempting to do, as best as we can, in this book.

The life story of the historical figure we refer to as the Buddha plays a significant part in our understanding of what it was he was communicating over 2,600 years ago and the reasons he did so. It is a constant reminder, not only of the simplicity of the message, but also that what was realized back then, can be realized right now by us, if sufficient effort is made. The story itself plays a crucial role in understanding our own connection with the Buddha in the 21st century.

One of the difficulties we have when doing this, is that we have very little actual verifiable information to go on. There does not appear to be that many written records available from that period. What we do have is a traditionally handed down story that contains so many inconsistencies when viewed on the basis of plausibility. It also contains inconsistencies from a historical perspective based on what we now think we know about that period in history due to advances in science and technology. Added to this problem is the tendency of religious story tellers and writers to create myths and legends of mystical and magical proportions to promote the story and Buddhism is no exception.

In reflecting on his life we have to accept that we can never know with any certainty what details are accurate accounts of what actually happened back then. As long as we are aware of this fact and proceed along the lines of whether or not something is provisionally acceptable, even on the balance of probabilities, we shouldn’t be troubled too much by doubt and indecision. This is always one of the major stumbling blocks for making progress on the journey. This means that it is helpful to tread carefully as we try and find a route through the maze and the fog so we can arrive at what is relevant today.

It could be said that if, at some point in the future, a scholar or historian provided credible evidence, or even on the basis of the balance of probabilities, evidence that would suggest that no such character as the historical Buddha actually existed, it would not make much difference to the validity of the communication of the Dharma that is presented in his name. It has never been and never will be about the communicator. It has always been and always will be about the communication. There is a well known image within Buddhism that illustrates this point. It is a picture of a finger pointing towards the moon. The moon represents the Dharma, the realization of actuality and the finger represents the awakened mind that points towards it.

The life story of the Buddha is full of symbolism and inspiration that helps us to see why the communication of the Dharma in a secular western Buddhist context is as relevant for us today as it was back then. The single most important point about the story is that Siddhartha began his life as an ordinary human being the same as you and I. There was no divine intervention. There were no pre-ordained special circumstances. He arrived on this earth simply as a result of the human birth process that resulted from his parents having sex. Anything other than this plain and simple fact can only ever fall into the category of a blind belief of some kind.

Three: The Birth of the Buddha

The traditionally handed down story of the birth of the Buddha suggests he was born in a place called Lumbini, which is now situated within the borders of Nepal. As was the custom back then, his mother was making her way back to her own place of birth so the baby could be born there. En-route she went into labour and had no option but to give birth on the spot. The birth story itself (like many other stories within Buddhism) is of epic proportions and makes claims that can only be engaged with on the basis of irrational belief or blind faith, if the symbolism of them is taken to be literal.

We know for instance that there hasn’t been a single credible report of a newly born human baby being able to walk by its own effort from birth. Yet here in the story we find the new born Buddha-to-be striving off in all directions. The birth itself is described as a difficult one and the baby, we are told, was born from the mothers’ side and not the womb. Often, within classical Buddhism, this is pointed out to be of some higher significance. It is suggested here, that was done to support the later deification of the Buddha as a divine being and to give religious credibility to what eventually became Buddhism.

It is being suggested here that we need to explore, or at least consider other possibilities from those that are found in the traditional stories. Not out of mistrust or disrespect, but to try and find an actuality aspect to them that is based on rational and critical thinking, rather than just accepting something blindly. If we looked at this scenario on the basis of what we now know about modern birthing methods, it is possible at least, if not likely, that the difficulties that prevented the baby from being born from the womb were resolved by performing some kind of primitive caesarean section in order to save the life of the baby. We are told that the mother died a few days later. Wouldn’t, or couldn’t, this possibly be as a result of an infection considering the birth took place out in the open in primitive conditions and with no medical facilities? To many classical Buddhists just thinking in this way would be tantamount to Buddhist heresy.

Following the death of his mother the young Siddhartha, we are told, was raised by his aunt who later married his father. In the traditional story we find the Buddha-to-be elevated to the status of royalty and declared a prince with his father named as King. With what we now think we know of the history of this particular region and period of time, it is suggested that it is more probable that his father would have been the head of a local clan. This may well have afforded him great wealth, prestige, privilege and power, but there would have been no royal status as we understand it to be in the west. There is some suggestion that his fathers’ position as head of the clan was even an elected one with no line of succession as there is with royalty.

It is suggested here that it is the wealth and privilege that is significant to the story and this provides us with another opportunity to align our own position with that story to see its relevance for us today. Within Australian culture and possibly other western cultures, no matter what our individual personal or financial circumstances, we are, materialistically speaking at least, far better off than the young Siddhartha would ever have been. We have free education and free medical care. We also have the provision of a social security safety net. In comparison with possibly the majority of the world’s population, those who live within western culture are materialistically richer now and way beyond the wildest dreams of anyone 2,600 years ago.

Within the traditional story we are told that shortly after the birth of Siddhartha, his father sought the advice from some kind of apparent holy man, or prophet-come-fortune-teller. This person told the father that his new born son would either grow up to be a great ruler or a great religious leader. On the face of it, considering he would have been aware of the family history and its circumstances, he was pretty much on safe ground in making that prediction, considering they could have actually meant the same thing. Although this kind of superstitious nonsense was quite prevalent and in big demand in those days and to some extent still persists today, even within western culture, it would almost be as effective as predicting that the outcome of a pregnancy would result in a boy or a girl.

That aside, we are told that this prediction was of great concern to the father who took the decision to hide all of the unpleasant and harsh realities of life from his son and to keep him engaged in a life of perpetual pleasure. If we reflect on this part of the story, from the perspective of our own experience, we may come to the conclusion that what his father apparently attempted to do would be little different from what our parents tried to do for us, or even as parents ourselves, what we try to do with our own children. Parents, naturally it seems, want the best for their children and want to keep them free from harmful influences and maybe we might even consider that just as his fathers’ decision may seem a bit over the top and reactive, we too can be a little overprotective at times.

Little is known about the early life of Siddhartha. It is likely at least that he would have been trained in the skills of war such as archery, sword-fighting, spear throwing etc as that is what the role and function of his particular clan was. He would probably have been schooled in the various customs, beliefs, superstitions and traditions of his clan. Much of what he learned would have been passed down by word of mouth, as there is no evidence to suggest that he ever learned to read and write himself and this will be of some relevance later in the story. As to any religious input, although at that time in history there were many diverse religious influences that may eventually have amalgamated to some degree into what we now call Hinduism, the prevalent religion of the day had apparently yet to travel to the area where Siddhartha grew up as a child and his clan are now understood to have been followers of a sun-worshipping sect.

When we reflect on this part of the story we can see, just as Siddhartha from an early age was conditioned by the culture of his time, so have we been by ours. Again, if he could break free from the unhelpful influences of that conditioning, then there is no reason why we can’t break free from ours. He would have been educated or trained in what was considered important for him back then, just as we have been educated and trained to fulfill our expected or projected roles within our own society. In so many different respects, his early life would have matched ours with personal relationships, job, family, social network and an on-going pursuit of things that we like, whilst trying to avoid things we don’t like.

There is one significant incident from his early childhood that is worth mentioning now because it becomes of important significance later on in the story. It is a recollection by the Buddha of a time when he was a very young man sitting under the shade of a tree in the hot sun, whilst his father took part in a ritualistic ploughing of the field for the sowing of the first seeds of the year. He says that he became engrossed with the slow movements of the process and found himself experiencing a deep level of concentration that he had never experienced before. It is this memory that is said to have been the influence as to why he eventually sat under the Bodhi tree at Bodh Gaya, with the resolve to bring an end to his worries. Quite unintentionally it seems the young Siddhartha had stumbled into the world of meditation.