Pleasant breath sensations

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  • čas přidán 10. 06. 2024
  • Questioning the concept that concentrating on pleasant breath sensations can lead to liberation or achieve any semblance of Nobility.
    Suttas references:
    suttas.hillsidehermitage.org/...
    suttacentral.net/mn108
    ____________________________________
    If you wish to support the Hillside Hermitage Sangha and this channel you are very welcome to do so via:
    www.hillsidehermitage.org/sup...

Komentáře • 42

  • @HillsideHermitage
    @HillsideHermitage  Před 15 dny +15

    Questioning the concept that concentrating on pleasant breath sensations can lead to liberation or achieve any semblance of Nobility.
    Suttas references:
    suttas.hillsidehermitage.org/?q=mn50#mn50:13.1-mn50:13.10
    suttacentral.net/mn108
    ____________________________________
    If you wish to support the Hillside Hermitage Sangha and this channel you are very welcome to do so via:
    www.hillsidehermitage.org/support-us

  • @amirnikzad1352
    @amirnikzad1352 Před 15 dny +8

    May all be free from Mara's domain & reaching to the right view 🙏☘️

  • @tomaszcodasz
    @tomaszcodasz Před 15 dny +6

    This is so refreshing and true. For years I listened to other monks, but you are my ultimate one:)

  • @wijithagorakanage4560
    @wijithagorakanage4560 Před 15 dny +8

    Thanks bhante for clarifying this point. Sadhu

  • @cajuputoil3468
    @cajuputoil3468 Před 15 dny +9

    straight to the point! sadhu Bhante

  • @Anancientpath
    @Anancientpath Před 15 dny +7

    Good morning Dhamma Family

  • @bkhpanigha
    @bkhpanigha Před 15 dny +13

    (14:12) Since this sort of statement is often misunderstood, a further clarification may be useful.
    There's often the artificial division in contemporary teachings (not supported by the Suttas: Dhammapada 372) between
    samatha practice and vipassanā practice, and people would often have no problem acknowledging that "yes, of course breath-watching in itself won't lead to Nibbāna". But the point is that it doesn't lead to samatha _either_ , which, according to the Suttas, _does_ intrinsically slant the mind towards Nibbāna (SN 53.1). The same applies for actual ānāpānasati, which, even in its utmost basic form, centers around much more subtle and indirect aspects of experience than sensations, as do all forms of sati for that matter.
    Proficiency at breath/sensation observation won't help one on the path more than proficiency at eating with chopsticks or at solving a rubik's cube would.

  • @ThaniyoThero
    @ThaniyoThero Před 14 dny +5

    See our playlist on Mindfulness of breathing for further exploration on this topic:
    czcams.com/play/PLUPMn2PfEqIwuLnCiCoXvgcD89ZQj9TKi.html&feature=shared

  • @Rbnbhutungru
    @Rbnbhutungru Před 13 dny

    Greetings, venerable sir! After deeply contemplating the nature of *pleasures*, I have realised all pleasures to be painful & tiresome. Pleasures destroy body & mind, just like years of hard labour in a coal mine. Pleasure is not the opposite of Dukkha, but it is just a different form of dukkha. Pleasure does whatever dukkha does, but without making any noise. Pleasure is like a fire without heat & smoke, a fire that is still a *fire*.

  • @hariharry391
    @hariharry391 Před 15 dny +2

    🙏

  • @Anancientpath
    @Anancientpath Před 12 dny +1

    I noticed Venerable N. is from Serbia. If I may how is his English so perfect?

  • @Spiritualjourney259
    @Spiritualjourney259 Před 15 dny +5

    Exactly as Bhante says there is no problem with breath meditation just we should not believe that it can achieve the right view. As a beginner a breath meditation will lead one to master ones focus by stop focusing on the bad thought and instead putting ones entire focus on the breath which then will lead to purifying all the course bad thoughts and pains and the body will by default feel happy and pecaeful like a cloud. The breath meditation in the contemporary way should not be conflated with understanding the right view which is to unabsorb ourselfs only to the extent of our engagement with the bad thought while recogniznig that the bad thought has arisen on its own as a phenomenon.

  • @tfox2117
    @tfox2117 Před 15 dny +5

    How about using meditation technique (for example focused on a breath for some time at the morning) with intention to make your mind calmer and becoming more aware throughout the day, so it would help you keeping your sense restraint?

    • @ThaniyoThero
      @ThaniyoThero Před 14 dny +10

      The reason you are not calm and unaware is because of your decision to not keep your senses guarded, and no amount of breath watching will help with that because lack of breath watching is not the cause.
      If you finally take responsibility for your choice of non-restraint and relinquish that non-restraint, you would be calm and fully aware.
      You can either temporarily deal with your issue of non-calm mind by watching your breath or you can go to the root cause which is your choice of non-restraint, and thus cure your issues once a for all.
      Set your intention to use restraint as a technique and you will calm down and become fully aware of the roots of your problems. It is only after this point that the anapanasati that the Buddha encouraged can be practiced.
      We will upload a talk later which discusses that. But for now here is a sutta which you can take a look at:
      Sn54.6: To Arittha
      "Monks, do you cultivate this mindfulness using in-and-out breathing as a reference?"
      Ven. Arittha replied to the Blessed One, "I cultivate this mindfulness using in-and-out breathing as a reference, lord."
      "But how do you cultivate this mindfulness using in-and-out breathing as a reference, Arittha?
      "Having let go of desire for past and future sensual pleasures, and having thoroughly subdued perceptions of resistance with regard to internal and external events, I knowingly breathe in and knowingly breathe out."

    • @ThaniyoThero
      @ThaniyoThero Před 14 dny +1

      Another discussion that you might find useful:
      czcams.com/video/GrgV9KI5LeI/video.htmlfeature=shared

  • @kzantal
    @kzantal Před 13 dny +3

    I wonder what you make in the following "paradox" : in some suttas, the Buddha says that the reason why practitioners revert back to sensuality despite knowing the drawbacks/dangers is because they haven't found a higher pleasure outside of sensuality (I. E. Jhana). Yet the pleasure of Jhana is the result of abandoning sensuality. If you rephrase, you get: the reason why some practitioners revert back to sensuality is because they haven't given up sensuality. That is redundant, is it not? Or is it that they haven't given up enough and long enough? But then why doesn't the Buddha just say so?

    • @HillsideHermitage
      @HillsideHermitage  Před 12 dny +5

      Yes, despite "knowing" the dangers of sensuality, they haven't lived withdrawn from it LONG ENOUGH in order to fully UNDERSTAND it.

    • @LZ-un7ky
      @LZ-un7ky Před 12 dny +1

      @@HillsideHermitage👏🙏🙏🙏 thank you!

    • @Mountain_Dhamma
      @Mountain_Dhamma Před 3 dny

      @@HillsideHermitagewould you agree that immersion in the Dhamma (head in the stream as Han Shan writes) is characterized by a completely non-sensual, non-intellectual, bliss and often rapturous experience of freedom and and a deep sense of continuous understanding?

  • @benjaminmiller3075
    @benjaminmiller3075 Před 13 dny +1

    Practicing these pleasures and working to release attachment to them? Is this a path forward? When combined with inquiry into motives.

  • @zorananda
    @zorananda Před 15 dny +2

    Seeking pleasures of the breath is not better than seeking coarse sense pleasures because the former is more moral than the latter.
    Morality or immorality is not the issue.
    Pleasure of the breath is in the same domain as coarse sense pleasures because either way you are welcoming , seeking out and delighting in pleasure on account of a body and its senses which are subject to ruin and therefore are unownable. So the fallacy is that by delighting and enjoying on account of a body which does not belong to you in the first place, you are overstepping the boundaries and venturing into territory in which you have no say , so to say. You are basically ignoring the impermanent nature of the body. That is the reason why seeking and delighting in sensual pleasures is only possible on account of a misconception of reality.
    For how could one delight and enjoy or seek out joy and delight on account of a body if the perception of uncertainty and therefore the unownability of that body is rightly developed and maintained?
    That is the fallacy of all sensual pleasures. That on account of which one delights and enjoys ,is not seen as uncertain and therefore it is taken as for me and mine.
    So in a sense the immorality pertains to the fact that you have delighted on account of something that does not belong to you. And when the owner comes he has every right to take what is his. That will then be felt as disturbing and unpleasant. And that will be solely your own responsibility.

  • @integratingpresence
    @integratingpresence Před 15 dny +3

    Maybe unrelated or not: interested in the causes and conditions surrounding ill will and lack thereof

    • @ThaniyoThero
      @ThaniyoThero Před 14 dny +5

      Contemplation on Anger:
      czcams.com/video/Bw7DVHH_kNY/video.htmlfeature=shared

  • @martinratcliffe5987
    @martinratcliffe5987 Před 2 dny

    Slamming Goenka method

  • @user-qz8pm3pj9b
    @user-qz8pm3pj9b Před 15 dny +1

    Did you mean tactile as regarding to a sense of touch or sensuality in general 🤔🙏

    • @InojSameendra
      @InojSameendra Před 15 dny

      touch, otherwise "sensuality" would have been used.

    • @tfox2117
      @tfox2117 Před 15 dny

      Not Bhante, but I think he meant it as regarding to sense of touch only. In case of other senses you would have visual sensations, auditory sensations etc. and sensuality would be volitional lust towards that which manifests within the world (the 6 sense bases)

  • @pathfinder_strider
    @pathfinder_strider Před 13 dny

    What about the mind sense base?

  • @skrrskrr99
    @skrrskrr99 Před 13 dny

    I follow all the theravada monks.
    I've been mixing zazen and vipassana but mostly doing vipassana.
    I like vipassana because its focused but zazen because its directionless.
    It goes where it goes.

  • @metamurk
    @metamurk Před 15 dny +6

    Anapanasati, Absorbtion Jahnas - thats found in the suttas. Many references, many places. Abidharma and visudimagga just craved that more out. Concentration is not right view and has nothing to do with right view. Itgs right samadhi. It developes a mind state that is very suptle and sharp, so we can easiliy doing the right effort and develop the right wisdom. Joy is nothing bad. Its very supported by the suttas. Attachment to joy is the problem. So you dont do jahnas for pleasure, you do it for seeing the things as they are directly. Which is not pleasurable.

    • @SBCBears
      @SBCBears Před 15 dny +3

      I may be wrong, but I think he means that dwelling on the breath pleasure mentioned in the Anapanasati Sutta is a diversion into sensuality. Dwelling on it turns meditation into a sensual practice.

  • @michaelcosta-zx5up
    @michaelcosta-zx5up Před 10 dny

    This monk works out! Very odd for a bikkhu in the Theravadav tradition. I just met a layman who told me he is a rogue monk, with a few other monks who left the mona stery to live on their own. He obviously knows the dhamma by intellect but not sure the bhavana is there