A Gift of Dharma for 2.9.10
by Danny Fisher
Today’s quote is another from the Venerable Ajahn Chah Subhaddo (1918-1992), an enormously influential twentieth-century teacher in the Thai Forest Tradition, whom I previously quoted and wrote a short bio for in this post. It’s from the book Food for the Heart: The Collected Teachings of Ajahn Chah, pg. 57-58:
Sometimes I’m giving a talk, just warming up to the subject, and some drunkard will call out, “Okay, make way, make way for the Venerable Sir, he’s coming out now!” — trying to drive me away! If I meet this kind of person I get a lot of food for reflection, I get an insight into human nature. It’s like a person having a bottle full of water and then asking for more. There’s nowhere to put it. It isn’t worth the time and energy to teach them, because their minds are already full. Pour any more in and it just overflows uselessly. If their bottle was empty there would be somewhere to put the water, and both the giver and the receiver would benefit.
In this way, when people are really interested in Dhamma and sit quietly, listening carefully, I feel more inspired to teach. If people don’t pay attention it’s just like the man with the bottle full of water… there’s no room to put anymore. It’s hardly worth my while talking to them. In situations like this I just don’t get any energy arising to teach. You can’t put much energy into giving when no-one’s putting much energy into receiving.
These days giving talks tends to be like this, and it’s getting worse all the time. People don’t search for truth, they study simply to find the necessary knowledge to make a living, raise families and look after themselves. They study for a livelihood. There may be some study of Dhamma, but not much. Students nowadays have much more knowledge than students of previous times. They have all the requisites at their disposal, everything is more convenient. But they also have a lot more confusion and suffering than before. Why is this? Because they only look for the kind of knowledge used to make a living.
Even the monks are like this. Sometimes I hear them say, “I didn’t become a monk to practice the Dhamma, I only ordained to study.” These are the words of someone who has completely cut off the path of practice. There’s no way ahead, it’s a dead end. When these monks teach it’s only from memory. They may teach one thing but their minds are in completely different place. Such teachings aren’t true.
This is how the world is. If you try to live simply, practicing the Dhamma and living peacefully, they say you are weird and anti-social. They say you’re obstructing progress in society. They even intimidate you. Eventually you might even start to believe them and revert to the worldly ways, sinking deeper and deeper into the world until it’s impossible to get out. Some people say, “I can’t get out now, I’ve gone in to deeply.” This is how society tends to be. It doesn’t appreciate the value of Dhamma.
The value of Dhamma isn’t to be found in books. those are just the external appearances of Dhamma, they’re not the realization of Dhamma as a personal experience. If you realize the Dhamma you realize your own mind, you see the truth there. When the truth becomes apparent it cuts off the stream of delusion.
