Right
View
The
path to liberation from these miserable states
of being, as taught by the Buddha, has eight
points and is known as the eightfold path.
The first point is called right view -- the
right way to view the world. Wrong view occurs
when we impose our expectations onto things;
expectations about how we hope things will be,
or about how we are afraid things might be.
Right view occurs when we see things simply,
as they are. It is an open and accommodating
attitude. We abandon hope and fear and take
joy in a simple straight-forward approach to
life.
Right
Intention.
The
second point of the path is called right intention.
It proceeds from right view. If we are able
to abandon our expectations, our hopes and fears,
we no longer need to be manipulative. We don't
have to try to con situations into our preconceived
notions of how they should be. We work with
what is. Our intentions are pure.
Right
Speech.
The
third aspect of the path is right speech. Once
our intentions are pure, we no longer have to
be embarrassed about our speech. Since we aren't
trying to manipulate people, we don't have to
be hesitant about what we say, nor do we need
to try bluff our way through a conversation
with any sort of phony confidence. We say what
needs to be said, very simply in a genuine way.
Right
Discipline
The
fourth point on the path, right discipline,
involves a kind of renunciation. We need to
give up our tendency to complicate issues. We
practice simplicity. We have a simple straight-forward
relationship with our dinner, our job, our house
and our family. We give up all the unnecessary
and frivolous complications that we usually
try to cloud our relationships with.
Right
Livelihood
Right livelihood is the fifth step on the
path. It is only natural and right that we should
earn our living. Often, many of us don't particularly
enjoy our jobs. We can't wait to get home from
work and begrudge the amount of time that our
job takes away from our enjoyment of the good
life. Perhaps, we might wish we had a more glamorous
job. We don't feel that our job in a factory
or office is in keeping with the image we want
to project. The truth is, that we should be
glad of our job, whatever it is. We should form
a simple relationship with it. We need to perform
it properly, with attention to detail.
Right
Effort
The sixth aspect of the path is right effort.
Wrong effort is struggle. We often approach
a spiritual discipline as though we need to
conquer our evil side and promote our good side.
We are locked in combat with ourselves and try
to obliterate the tiniest negative tendency.
Right effort doesn't involve struggle at all.
When we see things as they are, we can work
with them, gently and without any kind of aggression
whatsoever.
Right
Mindfulness
Right mindfulness, the seventh step, involves
precision and clarity. We are mindful of the
tiniest details of our experience. We are mindful
of the way we talk, the way we perform our jobs,
our posture, our attitude toward our friends
and family, every detail.
Right
Concentration
Right concentration, or absorption is the eighth
point of the path. Usually we are absorbed in
absentmindedness. Our minds are completely captivated
by all sorts of entertainment and speculations.
Right absorption means that we are completely
absorbed in nowness, in things as they are.
This can only happen if we have some sort of
discipline, such as sitting meditation. We might
even say that without the discipline of sitting
meditation, we can't walk the eightfold path
at all. Sitting meditation cuts through our
absentmindedness. It provides a space or gap
in our preoccupation with ourselves.
The
Goal
Most
people have heard of nirvana. It has become equated
with a sort of eastern version of heaven. Actually,
nirvana simply means cessation. It is the cessation
of passion, aggression and ignorance; the cessation
of the struggle to prove our existence to the
world, to survive. We don't have to struggle to
survive after all. We have already survived. We
survive now; the struggle was just an extra complication
that we added to our lives because we had lost
our confidence in the way things are. We no longer
need to manipulate things as they are into things
as we would like them to be.