Buddhist Psychology
Buddhist Psychology
566 bc - 486 bc
Biography
When it came time for him to marry, he won the hand of Yashodhara, and they married
when both were 16 years old.
Siddhartha was kept in one or another of their three palaces, and was prevented from
experiencing much of what ordinary folk might consider quite commonplace. He was not
permitted to see the elderly, the sickly, the dead, or anyone who had dedicated themselves
to spiritual practices. Siddhartha grew increasing restless and curious about the world
beyond the palace walls and he finally demanded that he be permitted to see his people
and his lands.
The king carefully arranged that Siddhartha should not see the kind of suffering that he
feared would lead him to a religious life. But, inevitably, he saw old people, sick people, and
even death. He asked his friend and squire Chandaka the meaning of all these things, and
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Chandaka informed him of the simple truths that Siddhartha should have known all along:
That all of us get old, sick, and eventually die.
Siddhartha also saw an ascetic, a monk who had renounced all the pleasures of the flesh.
The peaceful look on the monks face would stay with Siddhartha for a long time to come.
Later, he would say this about that time:
When ignorant people see someone who is old, they are disgusted and horrified,
even though they too will be old some day. I thought to myself: I don’t want to
be like the ignorant people. After that, I couldn’t feel the usual intoxication with
youth anymore.
When ignorant people see someone who is sick, they are disgusted and
horrified, even though they too will be sick some day. I thought to myself: I don’t
want to be like the ignorant people. After that, I couldn’t feel the usual
intoxication with health anymore.
When ignorant people see someone who is dead, they are disgusted and
horrified, even though they too will die some day. I thought to myself: I don’t
want to be like the ignorant people. After that, I couldn’t feel the usual
intoxication with life anymore.
At the age of 29, Siddhartha came to realize that he could not be happy living as he had
been. He wanted more than anything to discover how one might overcome suffering. After
kissing his sleeping wife and newborn son Rahula goodbye, he snuck out of the palace and
into the forests of northern India.
He then began to practice the austerities and self-mortifications practiced by a group of five
ascetics. For six years, he practiced. The sincerity and intensity of his practice were so
astounding that, before long, the five ascetics became followers of Siddhartha. But the
answers to his questions were not forthcoming. He redoubled his efforts, refusing food and
water, until he was in a state of near death.
For six years, he practiced the ascetic life, eating only what he found on the ground,
drinking only rain water, wearing nothing but a loin cloth. When the answers he was
seeking wouldn't come to him, he tried even harder. But Siddhartha realized that these
extreme practices were leading him nowhere, that in fact it might be better to find some
middle way between the extremes of the life of luxury and the life of self-mortification.
Outside of the town of Bodh Gaya, Siddhartha decided that he would sit under a certain fig
tree as long as it would take for the answers to the problem of suffering to come. He sat
there for many days, first in deep concentration to clear his mind of all distractions, then in
mindfulness meditation, opening himself up to the truth. On the full moon of May, with the
rising of the morning star, Siddhartha finally understood the answer to the question of
suffering and became the Buddha, which means “he who is awake.”
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At the deer park in Sarnath near Benares, about one hundred miles from Bodh Gaya, he
preached his first sermon, which is called “setting the wheel of the teaching in motion.” In it,
he explained to the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path. The king of Magadha, having
heard Buddha’s words, granted him a monastery for use during the rainy season. This and
other generous donations permitted the community of converts to continue their practice
throughout the years, and gave many more people an opportunity to hear the teachings of
the Buddha.
His aunt and wife asked to be permitted into the Sangha, or monastic community, which
was originally composed only of men. The culture of the time ranked women far below men
in importance, and at first it seemed that permitting women to enter the community would
weaken it. But the Buddha relented, and his aunt and wife became the first Buddhist nuns.
The Buddha said that it didn’t matter what a person’s status in the world was, or what their
background or wealth or nationality might be. All were capable of enlightenment, and all
were welcome into the Sangha. The first ordained Buddhist monk, Upali, had been a
barber, yet he was ranked higher than monks who had been kings, only because he had
taken his vows earlier than they!
Buddha had achieved his enlightenment at the age of 35. He would teach the Dharma (the
way) throughout northeast India for another 45 years. When the Buddha was 80 years old,
he ate some spoiled food and became very ill. He went into a deep meditation under a
grove of sala trees and died. His last words were...
Soon after Buddha's death, five hundred monks met at the first council at Rajagrha, under
the leadership of Kashyapa. Upali recited the monastic code (Vinaya) as he remembered
it. Ananda, Buddha's cousin, friend, and favorite disciple -- and a man of prodigious
memory! -- recited Buddha's lessons (the Sutras). The monks debated details and voted
on final versions. These were then committed to memory by other monks, to be translated
into the many languages of the Indian plains. It should be noted that Buddhism remained
an oral tradition for over 200 years.
In the next few centuries, the original unity of Buddhism began to fragment. The most
significant split occurred after the second council, held at Vaishali 100 years after the first.
After debates between a more liberal group and traditionalists, the liberal group left and
labeled themselves the Mahasangha -- "the great sangha." They would eventually evolve
into the Mahayana tradition of northern Asia. The traditionalists would become known as
Theravada or "way of the elders," and be the tradition of Sri Lanka and most of southeast
Asia.
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Theory
Buddhism is an empirical philosophy. Buddha was very clear that we should judge the truth
of any philosophy by its consequences. In the Kalama Sutra, he makes this particularly
clear:
It is proper for you... to doubt, to be uncertain.... Do not go upon what has been
acquired by repeated hearing; nor upon tradition; nor upon rumor; nor upon what
is in a scripture; nor upon surmise; nor upon an axiom; nor upon specious
reasoning; nor upon a bias towards a notion that has been pondered over; nor
upon another's seeming ability; nor upon the consideration, 'The monk is our
teacher....'
What do you think...? Does greed appear in a man for his benefit or harm? Does
hate appear in a man for his benefit or harm? Does delusion appear in a man
for his benefit or harm?... being given to greed, hate, and delusion, and being
overwhelmed and vanquished mentally by greed, hate, and delusion, this man
takes life, steals, commits adultery, and tells lies; he prompts another too, to do
likewise. Will that be long for his harm and ill?" ...
...when you yourselves know: 'These things are bad; these things are
blamable; these things are censured by the wise; undertaken and observed,
these things lead to harm and ill,' abandon them.
The disciple... who has a hate-free mind, a malice-free mind, an undefiled mind,
and a purified mind, is one by whom four solaces are found here and now.
Suppose there is a hereafter and there is a fruit, result, of deeds done well or ill.
Then it is possible that at the dissolution of the body after death, I shall arise in
the heavenly world, which is possessed of the state of bliss. This is the first
solace...
Suppose there is no hereafter and there is no fruit, no result, of deeds done well
or ill. Yet in this world, here and now, free from hatred, free from malice, safe
and sound, and happy, I keep myself. This is the second solace...
Suppose evil results befall an evil-doer. I, however, think of doing evil to no one.
Then, how can ill results affect me who do no evil deed? This is the third
solace...
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Suppose evil results do not befall an evil-doer. Then I see myself purified in any
case. This is the fourth solace...
2. Sensations and feelings (vedana), coming out of contact between sense organs and
objects.
3. Perceptions and ideas (samjña), especially manifest in our ability to recognize things
and ideas.
The last four are called naman, name, meaning the psyche. Namarupa (name-form) is
therefore the Buddhist term for the person, mental and physical, which is nevertheless
anatman, without soul or essence.
Buddhism also differentiates among six "fields" (ayatana) for the five skandhas: sight,
hearing, smelling, tasting, touching, and mind, as well as the objects of these six senses.
The Four Noble Truths sound like the basics of any theory with therapeutic roots:
1. Life is suffering. Life is at very least full of suffering, and it can easily be argued that
suffering is an inevitable aspect of life. If I have senses, I can feel pain; if I have feelings, I
can feel distress; if I have a capacity for love, I will have the capacity for grief. Such is life.
Duhkha, the Sanskrit word for suffering, is also translated as stress, anguish, and
imperfection. Buddha wanted us to understand suffering as a foundation for improvement.
One key to understanding suffering is understanding anitya, which means that all things,
including living things, our loved ones, and ourselves, are impermanent. Our peculiar
position of being mortal and being aware of it is a major source of anxiety, but is also what
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makes our lives, and the choices we make, meaningful. Time becomes important only when
there is only so much of it. Doing the right thing and loving someone only have meaning
when you don't have an eternity to work with.
Another key concept is anatman, which means that all things -- even we -- have no "soul"
or eternal substance. With no substance, nothing stands alone, and no one has a separate
existence. We are all interconnected, not just with our human world, but with the universe.
2. Suffering is due to attachment. We might say that at least much of the suffering we
experience comes out of ourselves, out of our desire to make pleasure, happiness, and love
last forever and to make pain, distress, and grief disappear from life altogether.
We are not therefore to avoid all pleasure, happiness, and love. Nor are we to believe that
all suffering comes only from ourselves. It's just not necessary, being shot once with an
arrow, to shoot ourselves again, as the Buddha put it.
Attachment is one translation of the word trishna, which can also be translated as thirst,
desire, lust, craving, or clinging. When we fail to recognize that all things are imperfect,
impermanent, and insubstantial, we cling to them in the delusion that they are indeed
perfect, permanent, and substantial, and that by clinging to them, we, too, will be perfect,
permanent, and substantial.
Our lack of "essence" or preordained structure, our "nothingness," leads us to crave solidity.
We are, you could say, whirlwinds who wish they were rocks. We cling to things in the
hopes that they will provide us with a certain "weight." We try to turn our loved ones into
things by demanding that they not change, or we try to change them into perfect partners,
not realizing that a statue, though it may live forever, has no love to give us. We try to
become immortal, whether by anxiety-driven belief in fairy-tales, or by making our children
and grand-children into clones of ourselves, or by getting into the history books or onto the
talk shows. We even cling to unhappy lives because change is too frightening.
The most frightening things we've seen in this century are the mass movements -- the
Nazis, the Red Guard, the Ku Klux Klan, terrorist groups, and on and on. The thought
seems to be that, if I'm just a little puff of wind, maybe by joining others of my kind, I can be
a part of a hurricane! Beyond these are all the petty movements -- political ones,
revolutionary ones, religious ones, antireligious ones, ones involving nothing more than a
style or fashion. And hatred is the glue that holds them together.
A third aspect of attachment is avidya, meaning ignorance. At one level, it refers to the
ignorance of these Four Noble Truths -- not understanding the truth of imperfection and so
on. At a deeper level, it also means "not seeing," i.e. not directly experiencing reality, but
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instead seeing our personal interpretation of it. More than that, we take our interpretation of
reality as more real than reality itself!
In some sutras, Buddha adds one more aspect of attachment: anxiety. Fear, like hatred,
ties us to the very things that hurt us.
3. Suffering can be extinguished. At least that suffering we add to the inevitable suffering
of life can be extinguished. Or, if we want to be even more modest in our claims, suffering
can at least be diminished.
With decades of practice, some monks are able to transcend even simple, direct, physical
pain. I don't think, however, that us ordinary folk in our ordinary lives have the option of
devoting those decades to such an extreme of practice. For most of us, therapy is a matter
of specifically diminishing mental anguish rather than eliminating all pain.
Nirvana is the traditional name for the state of being (or non-being, if you prefer) wherein all
clinging, and so all suffering, has been eliminated. It is often translated as "blowing out,"
with the idea that we eliminate self like we blow out a candle. Another interpretation is that
nirvana is the blowing out a fire that threatens to overwhelm us, or even taking away the
oxygen that keeps the fires burning. By "blowing out" clinging, hate, and ignorance, we
"blow out" unnecessary suffering. Perhaps an even more useful translation for nirvana is
freedom!
4. And there is a way to extinguish suffering. This is what all therapists believe -- each in
his or her own way. Buddha called it the Eightfold Path.
The Eightfold Path is the equivalent of a therapy program, but one so general that it can
apply to anyone. The first two segments of the path are refered to as prajña, meaning
wisdom:
Right view -- understanding the Four Noble Truths, especially the nature of all things as
imperfect, impermanent, and insubstantial and our self-inflicted suffering as founded in
clinging, hate, and ignorance.
Right aspiration -- having the true desire, the dedication, to free oneself from attachment,
hatefulness, and ignorance. The idea that improvement comes only when the sufferer takes
the first step of aspiring to improvement is apparently 2500 years old.
Therapy is something neither the therapist nor the client takes lying down -- if you will
pardon the pun. The therapist must take an assertive role in helping the client become
aware of the reality of his or her suffering and its roots. Likewise, the client must take an
assertive role in working towards improvement -- even though it means facing the fears
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they've been working so hard to avoid, and especially facing the fear that they will "lose"
themselves in the process.
The next three segments of the path provide more detailed guidance in the form of moral
precepts, called sila:
Right speech -- abstaining from lying, gossiping, and hurtful speech generally. Speech is
often our ignorance made manifest, and is the most common way in which we harm others.
Modern psychologists emphasize that one should above all stop lying to oneself. But
Buddhism adds that by practicing being true to others, and one will find it increasingly
difficult to be false to oneself.
Right action -- behaving oneself, abstaining from actions that hurt others such as killing,
stealing, and irresponsible sex. Traditionally, Buddhists speak of the five moral precepts,
which are...
Monks and nuns living in monastic communities add over 100 more rules!
Right livelihood -- making one's living in an honest, non-hurtful way. Here's one we don't
talk about much in our society today. One can only wonder how much suffering comes out
of the greedy, cut-throat, dishonest careers we often participate in. This by no means
means we must all be monks: Imagine the good one can do as an honest, compassionate,
hard-working business person, lawyer, or politician!
This is a good place to introduce another term associated with Buddhism: karma. Basically,
karma refers to good and bad deeds and the consequences they bring. In some branches
of Buddhism, karma has to do with what kind of reincarnation to expect. But other branches
see it more simply as the negative (or positive) effects one's actions have on one's integrity.
Beyond the effects of your selfish acts have on others, for example, each selfish act
"darkens your soul," and makes happiness that much harder to find. On the other hand,
each act of kindness as the Romani say, "comes back to you three times over." To put it
simply, virtue is its own reward, and vice its own hell.
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The last three segments of the path are the ones Buddhism is most famous for, and
concern samadhi or meditation. For simple instructions, go to my page on meditation.
Right effort -- taking control of your mind and the contents thereof. Simple, direct practice
is what it takes, the developing of good mental habits: When bad thoughts and impulses
arise, they should be abandoned. This is done by watching the thought without attachment,
recognizing it for what it is (no denial or repression!), and letting it dissipate. Good thoughts
and impulses, on the other hand, should be nurtured and enacted. Make virtue a habit, as
the stoics used to say.
One of the most important moral precepts in Buddhism is the avoidance of consciousness-
diminishing or altering substances -- i.e. alcohol or drugs. This is because anything that
makes you less than fully aware sends you in the opposite direction of improvement into
deeper ignorance.
But there are other things besides drugs that diminish consciousness. Some people try to
avoid life by disappearing into food or sexuality. Others disappear into work, mindless
routine, or rigid, self-created rituals. Others still drown themselves in television and other
entertainment.
We can also drown awareness in material things -- fast cars, extravagant clothes, and so
on. Shopping has itself become a way of avoiding life. Worst of all is the blending of
materiality with entertainment. While monks and nuns avoid frivolous diversions and
luxurious possessions, we surround ourselves with commercials, infomercials, and entire
shopping networks, as if they were effective forms of "pain control!"
But just like the earlier paths provide a foundation for later paths, later ones often support
earlier ones. For example, a degree of "calm abiding" (shamatha), a version of
concentration, is essential for developing mindfulness, and is taught to all beginning
meditators. This is the counting of breaths or chanting of mantras most people have heard
of. This quieting of the mind is, in fact, important to mindfulness, effort, all moral practice,
and even the maintaining of view and aspiration. I believe that this simple form of meditation
is the best place for those who are suffering to begin -- though once again, the rest of the
eightfold path is essential for long-term improvement.
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Most therapists know: Anxiety is the most common manifestation of psychological suffering.
And when it's not anxiety, it's unresolved anger. And when it's not anger, it's pervasive
sadness. All three of these can be toned done to a manageable level by simple meditation.
Meditation will not eliminate these things -- that requires wisdom and morality and the entire
program -- but it will give the sufferer a chance to acquire the wisdom, morality, etc!
Bodhisattvas
A Bodhisattvas are enlightened beings who have chosen not to leave the cycle of birth,
death, and rebirth, but rather to remain in samsara (this existence) until they can bring all of
life into nirvana with them. Think of them as the Buddhist version of saints. In northern
Buddhism, they believe we all should strive to become Bodhisattvas.
How can you tell a bodhisattva from ordinary beings? They will have four outstanding
qualities, called the Brahma Vihara:
In northern Buddhism, the Bodhisattva has achieved "emptiness," sunyata. What this
means is that they have gone beyond the usual dualistic mind. You and I think in terms of
"this and that," "you versus me," "us and them," "either-or" and so on. The enlightened
person sees that all things blend into each other, we are all human, everything is one. We
are "empty."
In one form of Zen Buddhism, there is a tradition that involves asking young monks and
nuns unusual questions called koans. The monk or nun meditates on the koan in the
hopes of achieving a breakthrough into nondualistic mind. These questions are designed to
frustrate our usual way of thinking and perceiving the universe. The most famous of them is
"what is the sound of one hand clapping?"
The question has no answer in the ordinary sense: Any sound would, of course, be
incorrect, but then silence isn't really the answer either, because one hand clapping is not
just silent, it is a Silent beyond silence. The dimension from silence to sound doesn't apply
to something that cannot have either. It is like asking for the taste of blue or the smell of an
E minor chord. If you like, you could say that the answer is emptiness.
The "answer" that the master is looking for from his students is some clear indication that
they understand this emptiness. In Zen tradition, there are stories about how monks and
nuns responded correctly (or incorrectly) to these questions, which stories then become
new koans themselves. Some of these students respond by knocking over their master, by
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walking away, by putting their shoes on top of their heads, quoting Buddhist sayings, or
remaining quiet. For all the apparent nonsense, their responses indicate their
understanding.
Another koan is "if you speak, I will hit you; if you don't speak I will hit you." Perhaps you
can see that there is no answer to this dilemma, no way out. But that means it is not a
dilemma at all! There is no either-or. You will get hit. It is inevitable. And so it is nothing at
all. You are totally free to do whatever it is you would do if you had never been confronted
by the koan at all. The trick, of course, is to show that freedom. That's not so easy!
Buddhists have an expression: "nirvana is samsara." It means that the perfected life is this
life. While there is much talk about great insights and amazing enlightenments and even
paranormal events, what Buddhism is really all about is returning to this life, your very own
little life, with a "new attitude." By being more calm, more aware, a nicer person morally,
someone who has given up envy and greed and hatred and such, who understands that
nothing is forever, that grief is the price we willingly pay for love.... this life becomes at very
least bearable. We stop torturing ourselves and allow ourselves to enjoy what there is to
enjoy. And there is a good deal to enjoy!
Buddhists often use the term "practice" for what they do. They encourage each other to
"keep on practicing." Nobody is too terribly concerned if they aren't perfect -- they don't
expect that. As long as you pick yourself up and practice a little more. A good basis for
therapy.
©Copyright 2004, C. George Boeree. This webpage is made up of edited selections from
Introduction to Buddhism.
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