Found 208 results for giving up

The Buddha teaches the Dhamma for the giving up of everything based on the six sense bases and the process leading up to the arising of feeling and perception.

The eye should be given up, |forms::visible objects such as beautiful sights, faces, expressions, art, ornaments, possessions, status symbols, admired appearances, enticing scenery, or objects of desire and attachment [rūpe]| should be given up, |eye-consciousness::awareness of visible forms; it does not interpret or recognize meaning—only cognizes and distinguishes [cakkhuviññāṇa]| should be given up, |eye-contact::the meeting of eye, form, and eye-consciousness, giving rise to a visual impression/impingement/intrusion [cakkhusamphassa]| should be given up, and whatever |feeling::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, the felt experience, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| arises with eye-contact as condition—whether pleasant, painful, or neither-painful-nor-pleasant—that too should be given up.

If sentient beings knew the fruit of giving and sharing, they would not eat without first sharing, nor would the stain of stinginess occupy their minds.

“Bhikkhus, if |sentient beings::living beings [satta]| knew, as I know, the fruit of giving and sharing, they would not eat without first sharing, nor would the stain of stinginess occupy their minds. Even if it were their last morsel, their last mouthful, they would not consume it without sharing if there were anyone to receive it. But because sentient beings do not know, as I know, the fruit of giving and sharing, they eat without sharing, and the |stain of stinginess::tarnish of selfishness [maccheramala]| |occupies::obsesses, controls [pariyādāya]| their minds.”

The Buddha explains the four bases of a supportive relationship.

"Bhikkhus, there are these four bases of a supportive relationship. What four? Giving, kind speech, beneficial action, and impartiality.

The four kinds of clinging - 1) clinging to sensual pleasures, 2) clinging to views, 3) clinging to rules and observances, and 4) clinging to a doctrine of self - are described in brief. The four establishments of mindfulness should be cultivated for directly knowing, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these bonds.

“Bhikkhus, there are these four kinds of |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]|. What four? 1) Clinging to sensual pleasures, 2) |clinging to views::clinging to beliefs [diṭṭhupādāna]|, 3) |clinging to rules and observances::grasping at precepts and practices, adherence to rites and rituals [sīlabbatupādāna]|, and 4) |clinging to a doctrine of self::grasping at a theory of self, attachment to a soul theory [attavādupādāna]|. These are the four kinds of clinging.

The four kinds of clinging - 1) clinging to sensual pleasures, 2) clinging to views, 3) clinging to rules and observances, and 4) clinging to a doctrine of self - are described in brief. The Noble Eightfold Path is the way for direct knowledge, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these four kinds of clinging.

“Bhikkhus, there are these four kinds of |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]|. What four? 1) Clinging to sensual pleasures, 2) |clinging to views::clinging to beliefs [diṭṭhupādāna]|, 3) |clinging to rules and observances::grasping at precepts and practices, adherence to rites and rituals [sīlabbatupādāna]|, and 4) |clinging to a doctrine of self::grasping at a theory of self, attachment to a soul theory [attavādupādāna]|. These are the four kinds of clinging.

The Buddha distinguishes between two types of giving, sharing, and assistance—those based on material things and those based on the Dhamma. In each case, giving, sharing, and assisting with the Dhamma are declared the highest.

“Bhikkhus, there are these two kinds of |giving::the act of giving or donating, with an intention to give [dāna]|—the giving of material things and the giving of the |Dhamma::teachings of the Buddha that point to the nature of reality, the ultimate truth [dhamma]|. Of these two givings, bhikkhus, the giving of the Dhamma is |the best::foremost, the highest [etadagga]|.

The Buddha describes eight motivations for giving, including giving out of desire, aversion, and fear.

“Bhikkhus, there are eight |grounds::basis [vatthu]| for giving. What are the eight?

Consciousness, while persisting, might persist attached to form, feeling, perception, and intentional constructs. When passion for these is abandoned, the support for the establishment of consciousness is completely cut off. That consciousness, being unestablished, does not grow, and by not intentionally constructing, is liberated.

Consciousness, bhikkhus, while |persisting::remaining [tiṭṭhamāna]|, might persist |attached to form::attracted to form, engaged with materiality [rūpupaya]|, based on [the field of] form, with form as a support—and there, with a sprinkling of |delight::pleasure, enjoyment, relish [nandi]|—it comes to growth, increase, and full maturation.

The Buddha explains eight kinds of giving, including giving out of fear, giving to maintain a good reputation, and giving to purify the mind.

1) One |gives::the act of giving or donating, with an intention to give [dāna]| after |assaulting::attacking, offending, disrespecting [āsajja]| [the recipient].

The five aggregates that are subject to clinging - 1) form, 2) feeling, 3) perception, 4) intentional constructs, and 5) consciousness - are described in brief. The Noble Eightfold Path is the way for direct knowledge, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these five aggregates that are subject to clinging.

“Bhikkhus, there are these |five aggregates that are subject to clinging::the physical and mental heaps that are appropriated, grasped at, or taken as self; the fivefold collection of form, feeling, perception, formations, and consciousness bound up with attachment [pañca + upādānakkhandha]|. What five? 1) The |form::materiality, material existence, experience of the material world, i.e. encompassing both one's body and external objects, whether near or far, gross or subtle, deficient or refined; first of the five aggregates [rūpa]| aggregate subject to clinging, 2) the |feeling::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, the felt experience, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| aggregate subject to clinging, 3) the |perception::The mental process of recognizing and giving meaning to experience. It marks things by signs, labels, or associations drawn from memory and the field of contact. Perception shapes how one experiences the world; third of the five aggregates [sañña]| aggregate subject to clinging, 4) the |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, choices; mental and bodily volitional activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); kamma-producing processes; fourth of the five aggregates [saṅkhāra]| aggregate subject to clinging, and 5) the |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object; fifth of the five aggregates [viññāṇa]| aggregate subject to clinging. These are the five aggregates that are subject to clinging.

The five aggregates that are subject to clinging - 1) form, 2) feeling, 3) perception, 4) intentional constructs, and 5) consciousness - are described in brief. The four establishments of mindfulness should be cultivated for directly knowing, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these five aggregates that are subject to clinging.

“Bhikkhus, there are these |five aggregates that are subject to clinging::the physical and mental heaps that are appropriated, grasped at, or taken as self; the fivefold collection of form, feeling, perception, formations, and consciousness bound up with attachment [pañca + upādānakkhandha]|. What five? 1) The |form::materiality, material existence, experience of the material world, i.e. encompassing both one's body and external objects, whether near or far, gross or subtle, deficient or refined; first of the five aggregates [rūpa]| aggregate subject to clinging, 2) the |feeling::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, the felt experience, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| aggregate subject to clinging, 3) the |perception::The mental process of recognizing and giving meaning to experience. It marks things by signs, labels, or associations drawn from memory and the field of contact. Perception shapes how one experiences the world; third of the five aggregates [sañña]| aggregate subject to clinging, 4) the |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, choices; mental and bodily volitional activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); kamma-producing processes; fourth of the five aggregates [saṅkhāra]| aggregate subject to clinging, and 5) the |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object; fifth of the five aggregates [viññāṇa]| aggregate subject to clinging. These are the five aggregates that are subject to clinging.

The Buddha sits silently among the Saṅgha of bhikkhus on an Uposatha night when the assembly wasn't pure. Afterwards, the Buddha explains the eight wonderful and marvelous qualities of the Dhamma and Vinaya, likening them to similarly wonderful qualities of the great ocean.

3) Just as, bhikkhus, the great ocean does not tolerate a dead body and whatever dead body there is in the great ocean, it quickly carries it to the shore and casts it up on dry land; so too, bhikkhus, if there is a person who is unprincipled, endowed with harmful qualities, impure, of suspect behavior, who is underhanded in business, not a true ascetic though claiming to be one, who is not living the spiritual life though claiming to be living it, rotten within, oozing with lust, filthy; such a person the Saṅgha does not tolerate. Rather, they swiftly convene and suspend him. Even if he is seated in the midst of the Saṅgha, yet he is as if far away from the Saṅgha, and the Saṅgha is far from him. That the Saṅgha does not tolerate a person who is unprincipled, endowed with harmful qualities, impure, of suspect behavior, who is underhanded in business, not a true ascetic though claiming to be one, who is not living the spiritual life though claiming to be living it, rotten within, oozing with lust, filthy; and quickly meets to suspend such a person, bhikkhus, even if he sits among the Saṅgha yet is distant from it, bhikkhus, is the third wonderful and marvelous quality of this Dhamma and Vinaya, which, seeing again and again, bhikkhus delight in.

The Buddha explains the fruit, benefit, brightness, and reach of observing the Uposatha endowed with the eight factors in detail.

"Bhikkhus, when the |Uposatha::Occurring on specific lunar days such as the full moon, new moon, and quarter moons, this is a time for renewing virtue, deepening practice, and purifying the mind. [uposatha]| is observed, endowed with the eight factors, it is of great fruit, of great benefit, superbly bright, and far-reaching. And how, bhikkhus, is the Uposatha observed, endowed with the eight factors, of great fruit, of great benefit, superbly bright, and far-reaching?"

The Buddha describes five suitable times for giving a gift - to a guest, traveler, sick person, during famine, and to the virtuous.

“Bhikkhus, there are these five suitable times for giving a gift. What five? 1) Giving a gift to a |guest::visitor, stranger [āgantuka]|; 2) Giving a gift to a |traveler::who is going on a journey [gamika]|; 3) Giving a gift to someone who is |sick::ill, unwell [gilāna]|; 4) Giving a gift during a time of |famine::scarcity, dearth [dubbhikkha]|; and 5) Giving new harvest and fresh fruits first to the |virtuous::ethical, moral [sīlavant]|. These, bhikkhus, are the five suitable times for giving a gift.

The Buddha uses the simile of a bonfire to explain how perceiving gratification in objects that can be grasped at leads to clinging, to suffering, and how perceiving drawbacks in objects that can be grasped at leads to the cessation of clinging, to the ending of suffering.

"Bhikkhus, when one dwells perceiving |gratification::satisfaction, pleasure, enjoyment, sweetness [assāda]| in objects that can be |grasped at::clung to, taken possession of [upādāniya]|, |craving::wanting, yearning, longing, attachment, lit. thirst [taṇha]| increases. Dependent on craving, |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]| arises; dependent on clinging, |existence::continued conditional existence, the karmically conditioned mode of being that leads to future rebirth [bhava]| arises; dependent on existence, |birth::rebirth, conception, coming into existence [jāti]| arises; dependent on birth, aging and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair arise. Thus is the arising of this whole mass of suffering. This is called, bhikkhus, dependent co-arising.

The Uposatha, when observed endowed with the eight factors, of great fruit, of great benefit, superbly bright, and far-reaching. The eight factors are - 1) refraining from taking life, 2) refraining from taking what is not given, 3) refraining from sexual activity, 4) refraining from false speech, 5) refraining from intoxicants and states of negligence, 6) eating only one meal a day, 7) refraining from dancing, singing, music, and watching shows, and 8) refraining from high and luxurious beds.

"Bhikkhus, when the |Uposatha::Occurring on specific lunar days such as the full moon, new moon, and quarter moons, this is a time for renewing virtue, deepening practice, and purifying the mind. [uposatha]| is observed endowed with the eight factors, it is of great fruit, of great benefit, superbly bright, and far-reaching. How, bhikkhus, is the Uposatha observed endowed with the eight factors, of great fruit, of great benefit, superbly bright, and far-reaching?

The Buddha does not dispute with the world, but rather the world disputes with him. He agrees with what the wise in the world accept as existing and not existing, and then explains the characteristics of the five aggregates in regards to what exists and what does not exist.

"Bhikkhus, I do not |dispute::argue, disagree [vivadati]| with the world; rather, it is the world that disputes with me. Bhikkhus, one who speaks in accordance with the |Dhamma::teachings of the Buddha that point to the nature of reality, the ultimate truth [dhamma]| does not dispute with anyone in the world. Of that which is accepted as not existing by the wise in the world, I also say, 'It does not exist.' Of that which is accepted as existing by the wise in the world, I also say, 'It exists.'

The Buddha explains how to overcome complacency and doubt by guarding the sense faculties, applying moderation in eating, being dedicated to wakefulness, developing insight into wholesome qualities, and engaging in the development of the awakening factors during the first and last watch of the night.

Then the preceptor taking his pupil with him, approached the Blessed One. After paying respects to the Blessed One, they sat down to one side. Once seated, the preceptor said to the Blessed One: "Venerable sir, this bhikkhu says: 'At present, I feel as if my body is intoxicated, the directions seem unclear to me, the teachings do not spring to mind, complacency completely occupies my mind, I do not find enjoyment in the spiritual life, and I have doubts about the teachings.'"

The Buddha explains how to overcome Māra by not clinging to the five aggregates of form, felt experience, perception, intentional constructs, and consciousness.

“|In clinging::in grasping, in being attached, in holding onto [upādiyamāna]|, bhikkhu, one is bound by |Māra::embodiment of all forces that keeps beings trapped in the cycle of rebirth [māra]|; |by not clinging::by not attaching to, by not taking as mine, by not grasping [anupādiyamāna]|, one is freed from the |Evil One::profoundly immoral and wicked, having evil quality, epithet of Māra [pāpimant]|.”

The Buddha explains the proximate causes for the ending of the mental defilements. The twelve factors leading to the ending of defilements are explained along with twelve factors that lead to suffering.

Just as, bhikkhus, when a great downpour occurs atop a mountain, the cascading water naturally progresses, filling up the mountain's hollows, gullies, and crevices. These, once filled, replenish the small ponds. The small ponds, upon reaching their capacity, replenish the larger ponds. The larger ponds, once full, replenish the streams. The streams, having been replenished, fill the rivers. The rivers, upon being filled, replenish the great ocean.

The Buddha expresses an inspired utterance after reflecting on his own giving up of the proliferation of conceptual perceptions.

Then, the Blessed One, having understood his own giving up of the proliferation of conceptual perceptions, at that time expressed this inspired utterance:

The Buddha shares a simile of a mountain to illustrate the inevitability of old age and death, and the importance of living by the Dhamma.

"I inform you, great king, I declare to you: Old age and death are advancing upon you, great king. When old age and death are advancing upon you, what should be done in such a situation?"

The Buddha explains how anxiety arises through clinging and how there is freedom from anxiety through non-clinging.

"Bhikkhus, I will explain to you the arising of |anxiety through clinging::agitation through grasping, turmoil by holding on, nervousness arising from attachment [upādāparitassana]| and the freedom from anxiety through non-clinging. Listen to this and pay close attention, I will speak."

The Buddha explains that one is incapable of entering and abiding in the first jhāna without giving up these five things.

1) |Stinginess::selfishness, meanness, tight-fistedness [macchariya]| regarding |dwelling place::residence, home [āvāsa]|, 2) stinginess regarding supporting families, 3) stinginess regarding |acquisitions::gain, money, profit, possessions [lābha]|, 4) stinginess regarding |praise::approval [vaṇṇa]|, and 5) stinginess regarding the |Dhamma::teachings of the Buddha that point to the nature of reality, the ultimate truth [dhamma]|. These, bhikkhus, are the five things that, without giving up, one is incapable of entering and abiding in the first jhāna.

A lay disciple named Dīghāvu, who is gravely ill, is visited by the Buddha. The Buddha teaches him how to develop the qualities of a stream-enterer.

"Therefore, Dīghāvu, you should train yourself thus: 'I will be endowed with experiential confidence in the Buddha — thus indeed is the Blessed One: an Arahant, perfectly Awakened One, accomplished in true knowledge and conduct, who has reached the destination, knower of the world, unsurpassed guide of trainable persons, teacher of gods and humans, Buddha, Fortunate One. I will be endowed with experiential confidence in the Dhamma... I will be endowed with experiential confidence in the Sangha... I will be endowed with the virtues loved by the Noble Ones — unbroken, unblemished, unspotted, untarnished, leading to collectedness.' Thus should you train yourself, Dīghāvu."

The Buddha teaches about the harmful view of practicing while engaging in obstructions, and the simile of the water snake. The Buddha also teaches about the raft simile, the six views, and the abandoning of what is not yours.

When this was said, venerable sir, Ariṭṭha, the bhikkhu who was formerly a vulture catcher, responded to us: 'Yes, indeed, friends, I do understand the Dhamma taught by the Blessed One in such a way that those things declared by the Blessed One to be obstructions are not capable of obstructing one who practices while engaging in them.' Then, venerable sir, we, desiring to separate Ariṭṭha, the bhikkhu who was formerly a vulture catcher, from this harmful view, cross-questioned, asked for reasons, and advised him: 'Do not say so, friend Ariṭṭha, do not misrepresent the Blessed One; it is not good to misrepresent the Blessed One. The Blessed One would not speak thus. In many ways, friend Ariṭṭha, the Blessed One has declared these things to be obstructions and capable of obstructing one who practices while engaging in them. The Blessed One has declared that sensual pleasures provide little gratification, much suffering and despair, and the danger in them is still more. Sensual pleasures are declared by the Blessed One to be like a skeleton ... like a piece of meat ... like a grass torch ... like a pit of burning coals ... like a dream ... like borrowed goods ... like the fruits on a tree ... like the butcher's knife and chopping block ... like swords and spears ... like a snake's head, much suffering, much despair, and the danger in them is still more.'

The four floods of sensual pleasures, continued existence, views, and ignorance are described in brief. The Noble Eightfold Path is the way to directly knowing, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these floods.

Bhikkhus, for the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these four floods, the Noble Eightfold Path |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabba]|."

The four bonds of sensual pleasures, continued existence, views, and ignorance are described in brief. The Noble Eightfold Path is the way to directly knowing, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these bonds.

Bhikkhus, for the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these four bonds, the Noble Eightfold Path |should be developed::should be cultivated [bhāvetabba]|."

The four floods of sensual pleasures, continued existence, views, and ignorance are described in brief. The four establishments of mindfulness should be cultivated for directly knowing, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these floods.

Bhikkhus, for the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these four floods, the four establishments of mindfulness |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabba]|.”

The four bonds of sensual pleasures, continued existence, views, and ignorance are described in brief. The four establishments of mindfulness should be cultivated for directly knowing, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these bonds.

Bhikkhus, for the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these four bonds, the four establishments of mindfulness |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabba]|.”

The Buddha presents a series of similes for the five aggregates - physical form is akin to a lump of foam, feelings akin to water bubbles, perception like a mirage, intentional constructs are like a tree without a core, and consciousness is similar to a magic trick.

Seeing thus, bhikkhus, the instructed noble disciple grows disenchanted with form, grows disenchanted with feelings, grows disenchanted with perceptions, grows disenchanted with intentional constructs, grows disenchanted with consciousness. Disenchanted, he becomes dispassionate. Through dispassion, he is liberated. When liberated, there is insight that he is liberated. He understands: 'Birth is ended, the spiritual life has been lived, what had to be done has been done, there is no more coming to any state of existence.'

The five cords of sensual pleasure are described in brief. The Noble Eightfold Path is the way for direct knowledge, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these five cords of sensual pleasure.

“Bhikkhus, there are these five cords of sensual pleasure. What five? 1) |Forms::visible objects such as beautiful sights, faces, expressions, art, ornaments, possessions, status symbols, admired appearances, enticing scenery, or objects of desire and attachment [rūpe]| cognizable by the eye that are desirable, lovely, agreeable, pleasing, sensual, and |enticing::arousing, tantalizing [rajanīya]|, 2) |sounds::auditory experiences such as speech, music, praise, blame, ambient noise, verbal expression, or melodic tones—any sound that can stir emotion, craving for praise, aesthetic delight, or attachment to communication and identity [saddā]| cognizable by the ear that are desirable, lovely, agreeable, pleasing, sensual, and enticing, 3) |odors::smells and fragrances experienced through the nose, including perfumes, flowers, food aromas, earth after rain, incense, or even stench—any olfactory experience that may evoke craving, aversion, nostalgia, comfort, or sensual pleasure [gandhā]| cognizable by the nose that are desirable, lovely, agreeable, pleasing, sensual, and enticing, 4) |tastes::flavors experienced through the tongue such as sweetness, bitterness, sourness, saltiness, spiciness, richness, or subtle tastes like umami or astringency—any gustatory experience that can become an object of craving, indulgence, comfort, or sensory delight [rasā]| cognizable by the tongue that are desirable, lovely, agreeable, pleasing, sensual, and enticing, and 5) |tangible objects::tangible contact such as the feel of skin, warmth, softness, intimacy, physical affection, or sensations like massage, breath, water, air, pressure—anything felt through the body that can become an object of desire, arousal, comfort, or emotional attachment [phoṭṭhabba]| cognizable by the body that are desirable, lovely, agreeable, pleasing, sensual, and enticing. These are the five cords of sensual pleasure.

The five cords of sensual pleasure are described in brief. The four establishments of mindfulness should be cultivated for directly knowing, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these five cords of sensual pleasure.

“Bhikkhus, there are these five cords of sensual pleasure. What five? 1) |Forms::visible objects such as beautiful sights, faces, expressions, art, ornaments, possessions, status symbols, admired appearances, enticing scenery, or objects of desire and attachment [rūpe]| cognizable by the eye that are desirable, lovely, agreeable, pleasing, sensual, and |enticing::arousing, tantalizing [rajanīya]|, 2) |sounds::auditory experiences such as speech, music, praise, blame, ambient noise, verbal expression, or melodic tones—any sound that can stir emotion, craving for praise, aesthetic delight, or attachment to communication and identity [saddā]| cognizable by the ear that are desirable, lovely, agreeable, pleasing, sensual, and enticing, 3) |odors::smells and fragrances experienced through the nose, including perfumes, flowers, food aromas, earth after rain, incense, or even stench—any olfactory experience that may evoke craving, aversion, nostalgia, comfort, or sensual pleasure [gandhā]| cognizable by the nose that are desirable, lovely, agreeable, pleasing, sensual, and enticing, 4) |tastes::flavors experienced through the tongue such as sweetness, bitterness, sourness, saltiness, spiciness, richness, or subtle tastes like umami or astringency—any gustatory experience that can become an object of craving, indulgence, comfort, or sensory delight [rasā]| cognizable by the tongue that are desirable, lovely, agreeable, pleasing, sensual, and enticing, and 5) |tangible objects::tangible contact such as the feel of skin, warmth, softness, intimacy, physical affection, or sensations like massage, breath, water, air, pressure—anything felt through the body that can become an object of desire, arousal, comfort, or emotional attachment [phoṭṭhabba]| cognizable by the body that are desirable, lovely, agreeable, pleasing, sensual, and enticing. These are the five cords of sensual pleasure.

The four knots of craving, ill will, clinging to rules and observances, and clinging to the idea that 'This is the truth' are described. The four establishments of mindfulness should be cultivated for directly knowing, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these knots.

Bhikkhus, for the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these four knots, the four establishments of mindfulness |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabba]|.”

The five hindrances - 1) sensual desire, 2) ill will, 3) dullness and drowsiness, 4) restlessness and worry, and 5) doubt - are described in brief. The Noble Eightfold Path is the way for direct knowledge, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these five hindrances.

For the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these five hindrances, the Noble Eightfold Path |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabba]|.”

The Buddha explains the benefits of cultivating loving-kindness compared to giving donations.

"Bhikkhus, if someone were |to give a donation::the act of giving or donating, with an intention to give [dāna]| of a hundred pots [of food] in the morning, a hundred pots of food at noon, and a hundred pots of food in the evening, and if someone else were to cultivate a |mind of loving-kindness::friendly heart, kind mind, benevolent mind [mettācitta]| even for the brief moment it takes to milk a cow, whether in the morning, at noon, or in the evening — this [cultivation of loving-kindness] would yield far greater fruit than those givings.

The four knots of 1) craving, 2) ill will, 3) clinging to rules and observances, and 4) clinging to the idea that 'This is the truth' are described in brief. The Noble Eightfold Path is the way for direct knowledge, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these knots.

Bhikkhus, for the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these four knots, the Noble Eightfold Path |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabba]|.”

The five lower fetters - 1) personality view, 2) doubt, 3) attachment to rites and rituals, 4) sensual desire, and 5) ill will - are described in brief. The Noble Eightfold Path is the way for direct knowledge, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these five lower fetters.

For the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these five lower fetters, the Noble Eightfold Path |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabbo]|.”

The five hindrances - 1) sensual desire, 2) ill will, 3) dullness and drowsiness, 4) restlessness and worry, and 5) doubt - are described in brief. The four establishments of mindfulness should be cultivated for directly knowing, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these five cords of sensual pleasure.

For the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these five hindrances, the four establishments of mindfulness |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabba]|.”

The seven underlying tendencies - 1) sensual desire, 2) aversion, 3) wrong view, 4) doubt, 5) conceit, 6) attachment to existence, and 7) ignorance - are described in brief. The Noble Eightfold Path is the way for direct knowledge, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these tendencies.

Bhikkhus, for the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these seven underlying tendencies, the Noble Eightfold Path |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabba]|.”

The five lower fetters - 1) personality view, 2) doubt, 3) attachment to rites and rituals, 4) sensual desire, and 5) ill will - are described in brief. The four establishments of mindfulness should be cultivated for directly knowing, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these five lower fetters.

For the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these five lower fetters, the four establishments of mindfulness |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabbo]|.”

The seven underlying tendencies - 1) sensual desire, 2) aversion, 3) wrong view, 4) doubt, 5) conceit, 6) attachment to existence, and 7) ignorance - are described in brief. The four establishments of mindfulness should be cultivated for directly knowing, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these tendencies.

Bhikkhus, for the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these seven underlying tendencies, the four establishments of mindfulness |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabba]|.”

The five higher fetters - 1) Passion for worldly existence, 2) passion for formless existence, 3) conceit, 4) restlessness, and 5) ignorance - are described in brief. The four establishments of mindfulness should be cultivated for direct knowledge, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these five higher fetters.

“Bhikkhus, there are these five higher fetters. What five? 1) |Passion for worldly existence::desire for material existence [rūparāga]|, 2) |passion for formless existence::desire for non-material existence [arūparāga]|, 3) |conceit::self-view expressed as comparison—seeing oneself as superior, inferior, or equal; the persistent “I am” conceit (asmimāna) that underlies identification and fuels rebirth [māna]|, 4) |restlessness::mental agitation, distraction, excitement [uddhacca]|, and 5) |ignorance::fundamental unawareness or misunderstanding of the true nature of reality, not experientially understanding the four noble truths [avijjā]|. These are the five higher fetters.

The five higher fetters - 1) Passion for worldly existence, 2) passion for formless existence, 3) conceit, 4) restlessness, and 5) ignorance - are described in brief. The Noble Eightfold Path is the way for direct knowledge, full understanding, complete exhaustion, and giving up of these five higher fetters.

For the |direct knowledge::experiential understanding [abhiññāya]|, |full understanding::complete comprehension [pariññāya]|, |complete exhaustion::gradual and complete wearing away [parikkhaya]|, and for |giving up::letting go, abandoning [pahāna]| of these five higher fetters, the Noble Eightfold Path |should be cultivated::should be developed [bhāvetabbo]|. What is the Noble Eightfold Path? Here, bhikkhus, a bhikkhu develops right view |dependent on seclusion::supported by detachment, by means of disengagement [vivekanissita]|, |supported by dispassion::based on fading of desire [virāganissita]|, |based on ending::supported by cessation [nirodhanissita]|, |culminating in complete relinquishment::ripening in release, culminating in letting go [vossaggapariṇāmī]|; similarly he develops right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right collectedness, dependent on seclusion, supported by dispassion, based on ending, culminating in complete relinquishment.

The Buddha explains the eight gifts of a true person, including giving what is pure, excellent, and at the proper time.

7) When giving, they gladden the mind,

The Buddha shares the importance of giving, sharing, assisting and making an offering of the Dhamma.

Bhikkhus, there are these two kinds of |giving::the act of giving or donating, with an intention to give [dāna]|—the giving of material things and the giving of the Dhamma. Of these two givings, bhikkhus, the giving of the Dhamma is |the best::foremost, the highest [etadagga]|.

The causes, supporting conditions for the arising of the five aggregates are impermanent, so then how could the five aggregates be stable?

"|form::materiality, material existence, experience of the material world, i.e. encompassing both one's body and external objects, whether near or far, gross or subtle, deficient or refined; first of the five aggregates [rūpa]|, bhikkhus, is |impermanent::unstable, transient, unreliable [anicca]|. Whatever cause, whatever supporting condition there is for the arising of form, that is also impermanent. Arising from what is impermanent, bhikkhus, how could form be |permanent::stable, not in flux [nicca]|?

The spiritual life is not lived for the purpose of deceiving people, nor for the purpose of winning favor with people, nor for the sake of acquisitions, respect, and popularity, nor for the thought 'Let people know me.' But rather, this spiritual life is lived for the purpose of restraint and for the purpose of letting go.

“Bhikkhus, this spiritual life is not lived for the purpose of deceiving people, nor for the purpose of winning favor with people, nor for the sake of |acquisitions::gain, money, profit, possessions [lābhā]|, |respect::honor, accolade, reverence [sakkāra]|, and |popularity::fame, praise [siloka]|, nor for the thought 'Let people know me.' But rather, bhikkhus, this spiritual life is lived |for the purpose of restraint::for the sake of self-control, following of the precepts and sense-restraint [saṃvaratthaṃ]| and |for the purpose of letting go::for the sake of giving up [pahānattha]|.”

What is the burden and who bears it, what is the taking up of the burden and the putting down of it.

What, bhikkhus, is the burden? It should be said: The |five aggregates that are subject to clinging::the physical and mental heaps that are appropriated, grasped at, or taken as self; the fivefold collection of form, feeling, perception, formations, and consciousness bound up with attachment [pañca + upādānakkhandha]|. Which five? The |form aggregate subject to clinging::attaching to the physical body or external objects as part of one's identity or as something that provides lasting satisfaction [rūpupādānakkhandha]|, the |feeling aggregate subject to clinging::becoming attached to feelings of pleasure, resisting or rejecting feelings of pain, and becoming indifferent or unaware of neutral feelings. This clinging leads to grasping after pleasant sensations, aversion to painful ones, and ignorance of neutral feelings [vedanupādānakkhandha]|, the |perception aggregate subject to clinging::becoming attached to how one interprets and perceives things — believing one's perceptions are fixed, true, or part of our self. It can also involve attaching to concepts, labels, and judgments that arise from perception. [saññupādānakkhandha]|, the |intentional constructs aggregate subject to clinging::attachment to, or identification with one's intentions, emotions, and decisions as part of "who I am." This creates a strong sense of self around one's volitional activities, as if "I am the one who wills, chooses, or acts." [saṅkhārupādānakkhandha]|, and the |consciousness aggregate subject to clinging::attachment to, or identification with, quality of awareness — subjective awareness of experiences and the knowing of objects through the six sense doors [sight, sound, smell, taste, touch, and mind] [viññāṇupādānakkhandha]|. This, bhikkhus, is called the burden.

One who delights in personal existence does not have an auspicious death. One who delights in Nibbāna and gives up personal existence has an auspicious death.

"Friends, a bhikkhu |passes his time::dwells [viharati]| in such a way that he does not have an |auspicious::fine, excellent [bhaddaka]| death. And how does a bhikkhu pass his time in such a way that he does not have an auspicious death?

The Buddha describes the four right efforts concisely and precisely.

Here, bhikkhus, a bhikkhu produces |a wholesome motivation::an aspiration, a goal, an interest, an objective [chanda]|, |exerts effort::engages in intentional effort [vāyamati]|, |initiates and sustains energy::the initial spark of motivation and action along with the persistence needed to follow through, even as challenges arise [vīriya + ārabhati]|, |uplifts::befriends and holds it up [paggaṇhāti]| the mind, and strives to prevent the arising of unarisen |harmful::injurious, destructive, bad, or evil [pāpaka]| and |unwholesome::unhealthy, unskillful, unbeneficial, or karmically unprofitable [akusala]| qualities;

A laywoman should wish for her son to become like the foremost lay disciples Citta and Hatthaka, and if he goes forth, wish that acquisitions, respect, and popularity not come upon him while he is still a trainee.

Therefore, bhikkhus, you should train yourselves thus: 'We will abandon the arisen acquisitions, respect and popularity, and we will not let the arisen acquisitions, respect, and popularity to continue |occupying::obsessing, controlling [pariyādāya]| our minds.' Thus, bhikkhus, you should train yourselves.”

The spiritual life is not lived for the purpose of deceiving people, nor for the purpose of winning favor with people, nor for the sake of acquisitions, respect, and popularity, nor for the thought 'Let people know me.' But rather, this spiritual life is lived for the purpose of direct knowledge and full understanding.

“Bhikkhus, this spiritual life is not lived for the purpose of deceiving people, nor for the purpose of winning favor with people, nor for the sake of |acquisitions::gain, money, profit, possessions [lābhā]|, |respect::honor, accolade, reverence [sakkāra]|, and |popularity::fame, praise [siloka]|, nor for the thought 'Let people know me.' But rather, bhikkhus, this spiritual life is lived |for the purpose of direct knowledge::for the sake of higher understanding [abhiññattha]| and |for the purpose of full understanding::for the sake of complete comprehension [pariññattha]|.”

One who delights in personal existence dies with regret and their passing away is not fortunate. One who delights in Nibbāna and gives up personal existence dies without regret and their passing away is fortunate.

Friends, when a bhikkhu passes his time in such a way, he dies with regret and his passing away is not |fortunate::auspicious, good [bhaddikā]|. This is called a bhikkhu who delights in |personal existence::individual identity, embodied being, view that one is the owner of the body and mind [sakkāya]|, who has not given up personal existence to completely make an end of |suffering::discomfort, unpleasantness, discontentment, dissatisfaction, stress, pain, disease, i.e. mild or intense suffering [dukkha]|.

Dhammapada verses 167-178 emphasize living in accordance with the Dhamma, avoiding negligence, not embrace wrong view, and not indulging in the world. One should rise up, live with good conduct, and not live with unwholesome conduct. The world is blind, and only a few see clearly. Swans travel the pathway of the sun, and the wise are emancipated from the world.

For one who has transgressed a single principle, a person who engages in |false speech::lying, deliberately speaking falsehood [musāvāda]|; |Who has disregarded the afterlife::who has rejected, given up or neglected the next world [vitiṇṇaparaloka]|, there is no injurious action that is |not do-able::impossible to do [akāriya]|.

The Buddha shares vivid similes to illustrate the benefits of developing the recognition of impermanence. This practice gradually exhausts all passion for sensual pleasure, materiality, becoming, ignorance, and uproots the conceit ‘I am.’

Just as, bhikkhus, in the autumn season, when the sky is clear and free from clouds, the sun, ascending and dispelling all the |darkness::gloom [tamagata]| spread across the sky, shines forth, radiates heat, and illuminates brightly, so too, bhikkhus, when the recognition of impermanence is developed and frequently practiced, it exhausts all passion for sensual pleasure, all passion for materiality, all desire for becoming, all ignorance, and it utterly uproots the conceit ‘I am.’

The Buddha teaches on how to know and see the impermanence of the six sense bases and the process leading up to the arising of feeling and perception for the abandoning of ignorance and the arising of wisdom.

“Bhikkhu, when one knows and sees the eye as impermanent, ignorance is abandoned and wisdom arises. When one knows and sees |forms::visible objects such as beautiful sights, faces, expressions, art, ornaments, possessions, status symbols, admired appearances, enticing scenery, or objects of desire and attachment [rūpe]| as impermanent, ignorance is abandoned and wisdom arises. When one knows and sees |eye-consciousness::awareness of visible forms; it does not interpret or recognize meaning—only cognizes and distinguishes [cakkhuviññāṇa]| as impermanent, ignorance is abandoned and wisdom arises. When one knows and sees |eye-contact::the meeting of eye, form, and eye-consciousness, giving rise to a visual impression/impingement/intrusion [cakkhusamphassa]| as impermanent, ignorance is abandoned and wisdom arises. Whatever |feeling::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, the felt experience, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| arises with eye-contact as condition—whether pleasant, painful, or neither-painful-nor-pleasant—when one knows and sees that feeling as impermanent, ignorance is abandoned and wisdom arises.

The Buddha could live for an aeon due to his mastery of the four bases of psychic powers, but Ananda is unable to comprehend and the Buddha then gives up the life force at the Cāpāla Shrine.

The Blessed One has also said: 'I will not attain final Nibbāna until this spiritual life has been well-established, well-developed, widespread, well-proclaimed, and well-established among gods and humans.' Now, venerable sir, this spiritual life has been well-established, well-developed, widespread, well-proclaimed, and well-established among gods and humans. Let the Fortunate One now attain final Nibbāna, let the Blessed One now attain final Nibbāna. Now is the time for the Blessed One's final Nibbāna."

The Buddha describes five kinds of gifts of a true person - 1) giving out of faith, 2) giving with respect, 2) giving at a suitable time, 4) giving unreservedly, and 5) giving without harming oneself or another.

“Bhikkhus, there are these five kinds of gifts of a |true person::good person, worthy one, awakened being [sappurisa]|. What five? 1) One gives a gift out of |faith::confidence, conviction, trust [saddha]|; 2) one gives a gift respectfully; 3) one gives a gift at a suitable time; 4) one gives a gift |unreservedly::not grasping in one's thoughts [anuggahitacitta]|; 5) one gives a gift without injuring oneself or another.

Dhammapada verses 256-272 emphasize the qualities that define true wisdom, nobility, and spiritual attainment. These verses critique superficial markers such as age, outward appearance, or rituals. The chapter underscores the importance of avoiding harm, evaluating actions with discernment, and not resting content until there is the complete elimination of mental defilements.

Not |by mere eloquence::virtue of polished conversation, mere polite speech [vākkaraṇamattena]|, or by |outward appearance::beauty of complexion [vaṇṇapokkharatāya]|; does one become a |good::respectable, of distinguished quality [sādhurūpa]| person, if they are |envious::jealous, covetous [issukī]|, |miserly::stingy, greedy [maccharī]|, or |deceitful::dishonest, cunning [saṭha]|.

Dhammapada verses 221-234 emphasize abandoning anger, conceit, and mental defilements while cultivating restraint in body, speech, and mind. The verses highlight overcoming harmful actions by giving and speaking truth, the inevitability of criticism, and the value of moral discipline. Those intent on Nibbāna, ever watchful, and well-restrained are beyond reproach and honored even by the gods.

One should guard against |irritability in speech::being agitated when speaking, using harmful speech [vacīpakopa]|, be restrained in speech; Having abandoned |verbal misconduct::false speech, harsh speech, divisive speech, idle chatter [vacīduccarita]|, one should practice good conduct in speech.

The Buddha expounds the noble right collectedness complete with its supporting conditions, clarifying how the factors of the noble eightfold path give rise to either mundane or supramundane fruits. He shows how right view leads to the sequential development of the path, culminating in right knowledge and right liberation.

And what, bhikkhus, is wrong speech? |False speech::lying, deliberately speaking falsehood [musāvāda]|, |divisive speech::defamatory words, slanderous speech, speech intended to create division [pisuṇāya + vācā]|, |harsh speech::speech that is rough, rude, or unkind [pharusa + vācā]|, |frivolous chatter::meaningless talk, gossip, idle speech [samphappalāpa]|—this is wrong speech.

The young brahmin Subha questions the Buddha about whether householders or renunciants are superior and what brings the greatest merit. The Buddha explains that he evaluates actions with discernment, and then teaches the path to companionship with Brahmā through cultivation of the qualities of loving-kindness, compassion, appreciative joy, and equanimity.

Here, young man, a bhikkhu is an undertaker of spiritual practice ... lives the spiritual life ... who is devoted to studying ... who practices generosity. Thinking, ‘I am abundant in generosity,’ he gains inspiration from realization of meaning, gains inspiration in the Dhamma, gains joy connected with the Dhamma. It is this joy connected with the wholesome that I tell as the support of the mind—namely, for the cultivation of a mind that is without hatred and free of affliction. Those five things, young man, that the brahmins teach for performing merit, for successfully achieving the wholesome, I say these are supports of the mind—namely, for the cultivation of a mind that is without hatred and free of affliction.

The Buddha distinguishes pleasant abidings in the here and now from the way of effacement leading upwards to complete quenching. Effacement is shown as the gradual chipping away of defilements through restraint, cultivation of the noble eightfold path, and diligent training, culminating in the complete freedom of Nibbāna.

Suppose, Cunda, that all unwholesome mental qualities are of a nature to lead downwards, and that all wholesome mental qualities are of a nature to lead upwards. So too, Cunda: 1. For a person given to cruelty, non-cruelty leads upwards. 2. For a person who kills living beings, abstention from killing living beings leads upwards. 3. - 43. cultivation of wholesome/abstention from unwholesome leads upwards ... 44. For a person who clings to their own views, holds on tightly, and relinquishes with difficulty, not clinging to their own views, not holding on tightly, and easily relinquishing leads upwards.

The Buddha uses the gradual purification of gold as a metaphor for mental cultivation through meditation. Just as a goldsmith removes coarse, medium, and subtle impurities until the gold is workable and radiant, a meditator abandons defilements in stages. This gradual refinement leads to deep collectedness of mind, forming the foundation for supernormal abilities and, ultimately, liberation.

If he wishes: 'May I, with the |divine eye::the faculty of clairvoyance, the ability to see beyond the ordinary human range [dibbacakkhu]|, purified and surpassing human vision, see beings passing away and being reborn—inferior and superior, beautiful and ugly, in fortunate and unfortunate destinations—and understand beings according to their actions: These beings, engaged in bodily, verbal, and mental misconduct, revilers of the Noble Ones, holding wrong views, undertaking actions based on wrong views—upon the breaking up of the body, after death, have arisen in a state of loss, a bad destination, a place of ruin, even in hell. But these beings, engaged in good bodily, verbal, and mental conduct, not revilers of the Noble Ones, holding right views and undertaking actions based on right views—upon the breaking up of the body, after death, have arisen in a good destination, the heavenly world. In this way, may I, with the divine eye, purified and surpassing the human vision, see beings as they pass away and are reborn, inferior and superior, beautiful and unattractive, in fortunate and unfortunate destinations, and understand beings according to their actions,' he is capable of realizing it, there being a suitable basis.

The spiritual life is not lived for the purpose of deceiving people, nor for the purpose of winning favor with people, nor for the sake of acquisitions, respect and popularity, nor for the thought 'Let people know me.'

"Bhikkhus, this spiritual life is not lived for the purpose of deceiving people, nor for the purpose of winning favor with people, nor for the sake of |acquisitions::gain, money, profit, possessions [lābha]|, respect, and popularity, nor for the thought 'Let people know me.' Rather, bhikkhus, this spiritual life is led |for the purpose of restraint::for the sake of self-control, following of the precepts and sense-restraint [saṃvaratthaṃ]|, |for the purpose of letting go::for the sake of giving up [pahānattha]|, |for the purpose of dispassion::for the sake of detachment [virāgattha]|, and |for the purpose of cessation::for the sake of ending [nirodhatthaṃ]|.

A lay disciple asks the Buddha why greed, aversion, and illusion still occupy and remain in his mind. The Buddha explains the importance of cultivating discernment of the gratification, drawback, and escape in the case of sensual pleasures along with cultivating the joy and happiness apart from sensual pleasures. He then recounts a conversation with the Nigaṇṭhas on this topic.

Then, Mahānāma the Sakyan approached the Blessed One; having drawn near, he paid homage to the Blessed One and sat down to one side. Seated to one side, Mahānāma the Sakyan said to the Blessed One: “For a long time, venerable sir, I have understood the |Dhamma::teachings of the Buddha that point to the nature of reality, the ultimate truth [dhamma]| taught by the Blessed One in this way: ‘|Greed::a grasping mental quality of craving, possessiveness, or lustful wanting that clings to objects or experiences; it fuels attachment and obstructs renunciation and contentment [lobha]| is an |impurity::blemish, flaw, imperfection [upakkilesa]| that defiles the mind, |aversion::ill will, hatred, hostility, mental attitude of rejection, fault-finding, resentful disapproval [dosa]| is an impurity that defiles the mind, |illusion::delusion, hallucination, misapprehension, distorted view; that which fuels further confusion and doubt [moha]| is an impurity that defiles the mind.’ Yet while I understand the Dhamma taught by the Blessed One thus, there are times when greed |occupies::obsesses, controls [pariyādāya]| and remains in my mind, aversion occupies and remains in my mind, illusion occupies and remains in my mind. I have wondered, venerable sir: ‘What quality within me has not yet been abandoned, by reason of which, there are times when greed, aversion, and illusion occupy and remain in my mind.’”

A deity asks the Buddha how the complexion of those dwelling in the wilderness and living the spiritual life becomes serene.

"For those dwelling in the wilderness, peaceful ones who live the spiritual life; Eating only one meal a day, how does their complexion become serene?"

One is incapable of ending suffering without directly knowing and completely comprehending greed, without the mind detaching from it and without abandoning it. One is capable of ending suffering by directly knowing and completely comprehending greed, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it.

“Bhikkhus, without directly knowing, without completely comprehending |greed::a grasping mental quality of craving, possessiveness, or lustful wanting that clings to objects or experiences; it fuels attachment and obstructs renunciation and contentment [lobha]|, with the mind |not detaching::not losing interest, not losing desire for, remaining passionate [avirājayanta]| from it, and |without abandoning::not giving up, not letting go of [appajahaṁ]| it, one is incapable of ending suffering.

Six qualities to abandon to dwell in the first jhāna - 1) thoughts of sensual desire, 2) thoughts of ill will, 3) thoughts of harm, 4) perception of sensual desire, 5) perception of ill will, 6) perception of harm.

"Bhikkhus, without |giving up::letting go, abandoning, removing [pahāna]| these six things, one is incapable of entering and abiding in the first jhāna. What are the six?

One is incapable of ending suffering without directly knowing and completely comprehending anger, without the mind detaching from it and without abandoning it. One is capable of ending suffering by directly knowing and completely comprehending anger, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it.

“Bhikkhus, without directly knowing, without completely comprehending |anger::rage, wrath, fury, indignation [kodha]|, with the mind |not detaching::not losing interest, not losing desire for, remaining passionate [avirājayanta]| from it, and |without abandoning::not giving up, not letting go of [appajahaṁ]| it, one is incapable of ending suffering. Indeed bhikkhus, by directly knowing and completely comprehending anger, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it, one is capable of ending suffering.”

One is incapable of ending suffering without directly knowing and completely comprehending contempt, with the mind detaching from it and without abandoning it. One is capable of ending suffering by directly knowing, by completely comprehending contempt, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it.

“Bhikkhus, without directly knowing, without completely comprehending |contempt::ungratefulness, depreciation, denigration, disrespect, belittlement, disparagement [makkha]|, with the mind |not detaching::not losing interest, not losing desire for, remaining passionate [avirājayanta]| from it, and |without abandoning::not giving up, not letting go of [appajahaṁ]| it, one is incapable of ending suffering. Indeed bhikkhus, by directly knowing, by completely comprehending contempt, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it, one is capable of ending suffering.”

One is incapable of ending suffering without directly knowing and completely comprehending everything, without the mind detaching from it and without abandoning it. One is capable of ending suffering by directly knowing and completely comprehending everything, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it.

“Bhikkhus, without directly knowing, not completely comprehending everything, with the mind |not detaching::not losing interest, not losing desire for, remaining passionate [avirājayanta]| from it and |without abandoning::not giving up, not letting go of [appajahaṁ]| it, one is incapable of ending |suffering::pain, discomfort, unease, unpleasantness, trouble, stress [dukkha]|. Indeed bhikkhus, by directly knowing and completely comprehending everything, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it, one is capable of ending suffering.”

One is incapable of ending suffering without directly knowing and completely comprehending aversion, without the mind detaching from it and without abandoning it. One is capable of ending suffering by directly knowing and completely comprehending aversion, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it.

“Bhikkhus, without directly knowing, without completely comprehending |aversion::ill will, hatred, hostility, mental attitude of rejection, fault-finding, resentful disapproval [dosa]|, with the mind |not detaching::not losing interest, not losing desire for, remaining passionate [avirājayanta]| from it, and |without abandoning::not giving up, not letting go of [appajahaṁ]| it, one is incapable of ending suffering. Indeed bhikkhus, by directly knowing, by fully comprehending aversion, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it, one is capable of ending suffering.”

One is incapable of ending suffering without directly knowing and completely comprehending illusion, without the mind detaching from it and without abandoning it. One is capable of ending suffering by directly knowing and completely comprehending illusion, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it.

“Bhikkhus, without directly knowing, without completely comprehending |illusion::delusion, hallucination, misapprehension, distorted view; that which fuels further confusion and doubt [moha]|, with the mind |not detaching::not losing interest, not losing desire for, remaining passionate [avirājayanta]| from it, and |without abandoning::not giving up, not letting go of [appajahaṁ]| it, one is incapable of ending suffering. Indeed bhikkhus, by directly knowing, by completely comprehending illusion, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it, one is capable of ending suffering.”

The Buddha describes the seven underlying tendencies toward 1) sensual desire, 2) aversion, 3) views, 4) doubt, 5) conceit, 6) passion for existence, and 7) ignorance that are present in living beings.

“Bhikkhus, there are these seven |underlying tendencies::dormant dispositions; lit: sleeping alongside [anusayā]|. What seven?

The formless existence is more peaceful than the form realm. Yet, cessation is more peaceful than the formless existence.

Touching the deathless element with the body, having reached the state |free from attachment::free from grasping, not taking as mine, not appropriating [nirūpadhi]|; |Abandoning all identification::relinquishing all appropriation, giving up acquisitions [upadhippaṭinissagga]|, having personally realized the |taint-less::undefiled, free from effluents [anāsava]|; The perfectly Awakened One teaches, the sorrow-free, |unblemished::pure, stainless [viraja]| state.”

One is incapable of ending suffering without directly knowing and completely comprehending conceit, without the mind detaching from it and without abandoning it. One is capable of ending suffering by directly knowing and completely comprehending conceit, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it.

“Bhikkhus, without directly knowing, without completely comprehending |conceit::self-view expressed as comparison—seeing oneself as superior, inferior, or equal; the persistent “I am” conceit (asmimāna) that underlies identification and fuels rebirth [māna]|, with the mind |not detaching::not losing interest, not losing desire for, remaining passionate [avirājayanta]| from it, and |without abandoning::not giving up, not letting go of [appajahaṁ]| it, one is incapable of ending suffering. Indeed bhikkhus, by directly knowing and completely comprehending conceit, with the mind detaching from it, and by abandoning it, one is capable of ending suffering.”

Bāhiya of the Bark Cloth realizes the Dhamma and attains final Nibbāna immediately after receiving a concise teaching from the Buddha.

Thus have I heard—At one time, the Blessed One was dwelling at Sāvatthi, in Jeta's Grove, Anāthapiṇḍika's park. Now, at that time, Bāhiya of the |Bark Cloth::dressed in bark strips [dārucīriya]| was living in |Suppāraka::an ancient western seaport, modern-day Nala Sopara [suppāraka]|, by the seashore. He was honored, respected, revered, worshipped, and esteemed. He was a recipient of the four requisites: robes, alms-food, lodging, and medicines. Then, while Bāhiya was alone in seclusion, the following |train of thought::reflection, contemplation [parivitakka]| arose in his mind: "Whoever in the world are |Arahants::fully awakened ones, free from all mental defilements; worthy of offerings and veneration; also an epithet of the Buddha [arahant]| or have entered the |path to Arahantship::way of practice to the full awakening [arahattamagga]|, I am one of them."

The Buddha describes the foremost of his bhikkhu disciples in various categories.

... among those who speak on the |Dhamma::teachings of the Buddha that point to the nature of reality, the ultimate truth [dhamma]| is |Puṇṇa Mantāṇiputta::foremost disciple in giving Dhamma talks [puṇṇamantāṇiputta]|.

Dhammapada verses 235-255 emphasize on the urgency of striving swiftly, not being negligent, discerning gradually, stains of various qualities. A contrast is drawn on the lives of one who is shameless and one with a sense of right and wrong, on finding the faults of others and one's own, and on the path of the Tathāgatas.

Drinking liquor, wine, and beer, such a person gives oneself up; Right here, in this very world, they |uproot::dig up [khaṇati]| their own foundation.

The Buddha describes the foremost of his bhikkhunī disciples in various categories.

... among those with |psychic power::supernormal abilities [iddhimant]| is |Uppalavaṇṇā::foremost bhikkhunī of the Buddha in psychic power [uppalavaṇṇā]|.

The Buddha describes the diversity of the external elements - 1) the forms, 2) sounds, 3) smells, 4) tastes, 5) tangible objects, and 6) mental objects.

And what, bhikkhus, is the diversity of elements? The |form element::the elemental basis for visual objects—such as shapes, colors, light, bodily forms, gestures, ornaments, scenery, or textures visible through the eye—anything whose appearance enables seeing and may condition perception, attraction, or craving [rūpadhātu]|, |sound element::the elemental basis for auditory experience—such as tones, voices, musical patterns, shouts, praises, speech, or ambient noise—anything whose vibratory quality enables hearing and can become a basis for perception, emotional response, or craving [saddadhātu]|, |odor element::the elemental basis for smells—such as fragrances, stench, food aromas, floral scents, perfumes, or earthy odors—anything whose scent-bearing nature forms the condition for olfactory experience and may lead to craving or attachment [gandhadhātu]|, |taste element::the elemental basis for gustatory experience—such as sweet, bitter, sour, salty, spicy, or subtle flavor properties that arise in dependence on tongue contact with substances, forming the condition for taste perception and potentially giving rise to craving or attachment [rasadhātu]|, |tangible object element::the elemental basis for touch sensation—such as hardness, softness, warmth, coolness, pressure, movement, or contact with textures and bodies—anything that, when contacted by the body, can give rise to tactile experience and potentially become an object of desire, arousal, comfort, or emotional attachment [phoṭṭhabbadhātu]|, and |mental object element::the elemental basis for mental phenomena—such as thoughts, emotions, perceptions, volitions, conceptual constructs, and internal representations—that arise within the mind and form the condition for knowing, imagining, interpreting, or craving [dhammadhātu]|. This is called the diversity of elements.

Because the five aggregates are impermanent, the well-studied disciple of the Noble Ones becomes disenchanted with form, felt experience, perception, intentional constructs, and consciousness.

"|Form::materiality, material existence, experience of the material world, i.e. encompassing both one's body and external objects, whether near or far, gross or subtle, deficient or refined; first of the five aggregates [rūpa]|, bhikkhus, is impermanent, |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling felt on contact through eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, mind; second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| is impermanent, |perception::The mental process of recognizing and giving meaning to experience. It marks things by signs, labels, or associations drawn from memory and the field of contact. Perception shapes how one experiences the world; third of the five aggregates [sañña]| is impermanent, |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, choices; mental and bodily volitional activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); kamma-producing processes; fourth of the five aggregates [saṅkhāra]| are impermanent, |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object; fifth of the five aggregates [viññāṇa]| is impermanent.

A bhikkhu asks the Buddha if there exists any form, feeling, perception, intentional constructs, or consciousness that is stable, enduring, and not subject to change.

“Venerable sir, does there exist any |form::a visible object such as a beautiful sight, a face, an expression, art, ornament, possession, status symbol, admired appearance, or enticing scenery—anything seen that can produce desire, attachment, or self-view [rūpa]| that is |permanent::stable, not in flux [nicca]|, |enduring::continuous, regular [dhuva]|, |everlasting::eternal [sassata]|, |not subject to change::with unchanging nature [avipariṇāmadhamma]|, that will remain the same forever? Does there exist any |feeling::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, the felt experience, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]|, any |perception::The mental process of recognizing and giving meaning to experience. It marks things by signs, labels, or associations drawn from memory and the field of contact. Perception shapes how one experiences the world; third of the five aggregates [sañña]|, any |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, and choices expressed as mental, verbal, and bodily activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); processes that produce kamma [saṅkhāra]|, or any |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object [viññāṇa]| that is permanent, enduring, everlasting, not subject to change, that will remain the same forever?”

One who is fond of conceit cannot be tamed, nor can one who is uncollected attain sagehood. Dwelling with negligence, such a one would not cross beyond the realm of death.

[The Blessed One]: "Having given up conceit, |completely calm within::thoroughly settled within [susamāhitatta]|, with a pure mind, released in all respects; For one living |diligently::attentively, with care, with carefulness, heedfully [pamatta]| in the forest, would cross beyond the realm of death."

The Buddha teaches the things to be fully understood and what full understanding is.

What are the |things::phenomena, mental qualities [dhammā]| to be fully understood? |Form::materiality, material existence, experience of the material world, i.e. encompassing both one's body and external objects, whether near or far, gross or subtle, deficient or refined; first of the five aggregates [rūpa]|, bhikkhus, is a thing to be fully understood; |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| is a thing to be fully understood; |perception::The mental process of recognizing and giving meaning to experience. It marks things by signs, labels, or associations drawn from memory and the field of contact. Perception shapes how one experiences the world; third of the five aggregates [sañña]| is a thing to be fully understood; |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, and choices expressed as mental, verbal, and bodily activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); processes that produce kamma [saṅkhāra]|are a thing to be fully understood; |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object [viññāṇa]| is a thing to be fully understood. These are called, bhikkhus, the things to be fully understood.

Using the simile of a great tree nourished by sap, the Buddha explains that perceiving gratification in graspable objects fuels craving and perpetuates suffering, whereas seeing their drawbacks leads to the cessation of craving and the end of suffering.

“Bhikkhus, when one dwells perceiving |gratification::satisfaction, pleasure, enjoyment, sweetness [assāda]| in objects that can be |grasped at::clung to, taken possession of [upādāniya]|, |craving::wanting, yearning, longing, attachment, lit. thirst [taṇha]| increases. Dependent on craving, |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]| arises; dependent on clinging, |existence::continued conditional existence, the karmically conditioned mode of being that leads to future rebirth [bhava]| arises; dependent on existence, |birth::rebirth, conception, coming into existence [jāti]| arises; dependent on birth, aging and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair arise. Thus is the arising of this whole mass of suffering.

The Buddha explains to Jīvaka the circumstances in which meat may be consumed and the demerit of slaughtering living beings for the Tathāgata or his disciples.

I declare, Jīvaka, that there are three circumstances in which meat should not be consumed: when it is seen, heard, or |suspected::doubted, distrusted [parisaṅkita]| that the living being has been slaughtered specifically for oneself — in these three circumstances, I declare that meat should not be consumed.

The Buddha explains the importance of the Perfectly Awakened One and the wheel-turning monarch, shares about the two types of Buddhas, who does not tremble when a thunder strikes, how living with the unvirtuous and virtuous occurs, and the consequences of not internally settling contention of views and resentment arising from a disciplinary issue.

"Bhikkhus, seeing two reasons, the |Kiṁpurisās::some beings that resemble humans, associated with the realms of the deities| do not speak human speech. What are the two? 'Let us not speak falsely,' and 'Let us not accuse another falsely.' Seeing these two reasons, bhikkhus, the Kiṁpurisas do not speak human speech."

When one dwells perceiving enjoyment in things that are the basis for fetters, there is a descent of consciousness. When one dwells perceiving the drawback in things that are the basis for fetters, there is no descent of consciousness.

Dependent on consciousness, |name and form::mentality and materiality—the integrated structure of mental capacities (intention, attention, contact, feeling, perception) and physical form that together constitute and sustain an individual being [nāmarūpa]| arise; dependent on name and form, the |six sense bases::The six internal sense bases—eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, and mind—are the faculties that enable sensory contact and experience. They are not the physical organs themselves, but the functional conditions that enable consciousness to meet an object [saḷāyatana]| arise; dependent on the six sense bases, |contact::sense impingement, raw experience, touch [phassa]| arises; dependent on contact, |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| arises; dependent on felt experience, |craving::wanting, yearning, longing, attachment, lit. thirst [taṇha]| arises; dependent on craving, |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]| arises; dependent on clinging, |existence::continued conditional existence, the karmically conditioned mode of being that leads to future rebirth [bhava]| arises; dependent on existence, |birth::rebirth, conception, coming into existence [jāti]| arises; dependent on birth, aging and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair arise. Thus is the arising of this whole mass of suffering.

Three kinds of persons are found in the world - 1) one like a rainless cloud, 2) one like a cloud that rains in a certain area, and 3) one like a cloud that rains everywhere.

A person |who supports beggars::encourages alms giving [subhikkhavāca]|, compassionate towards all beings; Rejoicing, he distributes, saying, ‘Give! Give!’

Dhammapada verses 90-99 describe the qualities and conduct of the Arahant, a fully awakened being who has reached the end of the path. Free from defilements and clinging, their actions leave no trace, like birds in the sky. At peace and delighting in solitude, wherever they dwell becomes a place of beauty.

Whose senses have become tranquil, like horses |well-tamed::well trained, well controlled [sudanta]| by a charioteer; Giving up |conceit::self-view expressed as comparison—seeing oneself as superior, inferior, or equal; the persistent “I am” conceit (asmimāna) that underlies identification and fuels rebirth [māna]| and free from defilements, even the gods hold dear such a person.

The Buddha describes the three kinds of misconduct - by body, speech and mind.

“There are three kinds of misconduct, bhikkhus. Which three? |Bodily misconduct::killing living beings, harming others, theft, or sexual misconduct [kāyaduccarita]|, |verbal misconduct::false speech, harsh speech, divisive speech, idle chatter [vacīduccarita]|, and |mental misconduct::yearning with strong eagerness and desire, having ill will or hatred, delighting in harm [manoduccarita]|. These, bhikkhus, are the three kinds of misconduct.”

The three unwholesome thoughts are blinding, produce lack of clarity, cause ignorance, obstruct wisdom, and are troublesome and not conducive to Nibbāna. The three wholesome thoughts give sight, produce clarity and create insight, grow wisdom, and are trouble-free and conducive to Nibbāna.

1) |Thought of renunciation::thought related to giving up, letting go of sense pleasures [nekkhamma + vitakka]|, bhikkhus, gives sight, produces clarity and creates insight, grows wisdom, is trouble-free and conducive to Nibbāna. 2) |Thought of good will::thought of benevolence, kindness, goodwill [abyāpādavitakka]| gives sight, produces clarity and creates insight, grows wisdom, is trouble-free and conducive to Nibbāna. 3) |Thought of harmlessness::thought of non-harming, non-violence [avihiṁsāvitakka]| gives sight, produces clarity and creates insight, grows wisdom, is trouble-free and conducive to Nibbāna. These, bhikkhus, are the three wholesome thoughts which give sight, produce clarity and create insight, grow wisdom, which are trouble-free and conducive to Nibbāna.”

The Buddha describes how dependent on the diversity of elements, there arises a diversity of contacts.

And what is the diversity of elements? The |form element::the elemental basis for visual objects—such as shapes, colors, light, bodily forms, gestures, ornaments, scenery, or textures visible through the eye—anything whose appearance enables seeing and may condition perception, attraction, or craving [rūpadhātu]|, |sound element::the elemental basis for auditory experience—such as tones, voices, musical patterns, shouts, praises, speech, or ambient noise—anything whose vibratory quality enables hearing and can become a basis for perception, emotional response, or craving [saddadhātu]|, |odor element::the elemental basis for smells—such as fragrances, stench, food aromas, floral scents, perfumes, or earthy odors—anything whose scent-bearing nature forms the condition for olfactory experience and may lead to craving or attachment [gandhadhātu]|, |taste element::the elemental basis for gustatory experience—such as sweet, bitter, sour, salty, spicy, or subtle flavor properties that arise in dependence on tongue contact with substances, forming the condition for taste perception and potentially giving rise to craving or attachment [rasadhātu]|, |tangible object element::the elemental basis for touch sensation—such as hardness, softness, warmth, coolness, pressure, movement, or contact with textures and bodies—anything that, when contacted by the body, can give rise to tactile experience and potentially become an object of desire, arousal, comfort, or emotional attachment [phoṭṭhabbadhātu]|, and |mental object element::the elemental basis for mental phenomena—such as thoughts, emotions, perceptions, volitions, conceptual constructs, and internal representations—that arise within the mind and form the condition for knowing, imagining, interpreting, or craving [dhammadhātu]|. This is called the diversity of elements.

DhammaPada verses 1-20 share on the power of the mind in shaping one's experiences, the importance of letting go of resentment and hostility, the consequences of living without restraint and moderation, the distinction between essence and non-essence, the sorrow and joy tied to one's actions, the importance of acting according to the Dhamma, and who partakes in the true ascetic life.

Even if a person speaks few eloquent words, If they act according to the |Dhamma::teachings of the Buddha that point to the nature of reality, the ultimate truth [dhamma]|; Abandoning passion, |aversion::ill will, hatred, hostility, mental attitude of rejection, fault-finding, resentful disapproval [dosa]|, and |illusion::delusion, hallucination, misapprehension, distorted view; that which fuels further confusion and doubt [moha]|, |Clearly comprehending::fully understanding [sammappajāna]| with a well-liberated mind, |Not clinging to::not taking as mine, not grasping onto, not taking possession of [anupādiyāna]| here or there, They partake in the true ascetic life.

The Buddha uses an example of grass, wood, branches, and leaves in Jeta's Grove to illustrate the nature of the five aggregates.

"Whatever, bhikkhus, is not yours, abandon [grasping at] it. When you have abandoned it, that will lead to your |benefit::good, welfare [hitāya]| and |ease::comfort, contentment [sukhāya]|. And what, bhikkhus, is not yours? |form::materiality, material existence, experience of the material world, i.e. encompassing both one's body and external objects, whether near or far, gross or subtle, deficient or refined; first of the five aggregates [rūpa]|, bhikkhus, is not yours; abandon grasping at it. Abandoning it will lead to your benefit and ease.

One is incapable of ending suffering without directly knowing and fully understanding the five aggregates, without becoming dispassionate towards them and without abandoning them.

"Bhikkhus, |without directly knowing::not knowing for oneself [anabhijānanta]| and |without fully understanding::not completely comprehending [aparijānanta]| |form::materiality, material existence, experience of the material world, i.e. encompassing both one's body and external objects, whether near or far, gross or subtle, deficient or refined; first of the five aggregates [rūpa]|, |without becoming dispassionate::without experiencing fading of desire [avirājayanta]| towards it and without abandoning it, one is incapable of achieving the |complete ending of suffering::extinction of stress, complete wearing away of discontentment [dukkhakkhaya]|;

The Buddha describes the five signs that appear when a deity is about to pass away, and the three blessings that the gods give to the deity.

Having given up bodily misconduct, and misconduct in speech; Giving up the mind’s misdeeds too, and all that is tainted by defilement.

The Buddha describes how dependent on the diversity of elements, there arises a diversity of contacts, and not the other way around.

And what is the diversity of elements? The |form element::the elemental basis for visual objects—such as shapes, colors, light, bodily forms, gestures, ornaments, scenery, or textures visible through the eye—anything whose appearance enables seeing and may condition perception, attraction, or craving [rūpadhātu]|, |sound element::the elemental basis for auditory experience—such as tones, voices, musical patterns, shouts, praises, speech, or ambient noise—anything whose vibratory quality enables hearing and can become a basis for perception, emotional response, or craving [saddadhātu]|, |odor element::the elemental basis for smells—such as fragrances, stench, food aromas, floral scents, perfumes, or earthy odors—anything whose scent-bearing nature forms the condition for olfactory experience and may lead to craving or attachment [gandhadhātu]|, |taste element::the elemental basis for gustatory experience—such as sweet, bitter, sour, salty, spicy, or subtle flavor properties that arise in dependence on tongue contact with substances, forming the condition for taste perception and potentially giving rise to craving or attachment [rasadhātu]|, |tangible object element::the elemental basis for touch sensation—such as hardness, softness, warmth, coolness, pressure, movement, or contact with textures and bodies—anything that, when contacted by the body, can give rise to tactile experience and potentially become an object of desire, arousal, comfort, or emotional attachment [phoṭṭhabbadhātu]|, and |mental object element::the elemental basis for mental phenomena—such as thoughts, emotions, perceptions, volitions, conceptual constructs, and internal representations—that arise within the mind and form the condition for knowing, imagining, interpreting, or craving [dhammadhātu]|. This is called the diversity of elements.

Dhammapada verses 290–305 share on the renunciation of lesser happiness for greater joy, mindfulness of the body, and applying effort to overcome defilements. Further, the verses highlight the harm of neglecting what should be done, consequence of imposing suffering on another, while praising recollection of the Buddha, Dhamma, and Saṅgha as well as the qualities of mindfulness, non-violence, and cultivation. The verses conclude with the benefits of solitude and the wilderness for those who are energetic and self-restrained.

If, by giving up a |limited happiness::small comfort [mattāsukha]|, one sees vast happiness; The wise one should renounce the limited happiness, |having seen::considering [sampassanta]| the vast happiness.

The Venerable Rādha asks the Buddha on how to know and see so that the underlying tendencies to self-identification, possessiveness, and conceit cease to arise.

Then the Venerable Rādha approached the Blessed One. Having drawn near, he addressed him: “Venerable sir, how must one know, how must one see, so that in regard to this body with consciousness and in regard to all external |signs::symbols, mental images, mental representations [nimitta]|, |I-making::self-identification, concept of individuality, I am this, this is me [ahaṅkāra]|, |mine-making::possessiveness, attachment, self-interest [mamaṅkāra]|, and the underlying tendency to |conceit::self-view expressed as comparison—seeing oneself as superior, inferior, or equal; the persistent “I am” conceit (asmimāna) that underlies identification and fuels rebirth [māna]| cease to arise?”

The Buddha explains that when you see someone faring well, you should conclude that you too have experienced the same over the long span of time of cyclic existence.

For what reason? Bhikkhus, this cyclic existence is without a discoverable beginning. A first point is not evident of beings who, obstructed by ignorance and fettered by craving, run on and wander in this cycle of existence. For such a long time, bhikkhus, you have experienced |suffering::discomfort, unpleasantness, discontentment, dissatisfaction, stress, pain, disease, i.e. mild or intense suffering [dukkha]|, |agony::intense suffering, anguish [tibba]|, and |calamity::disaster [byasana]|, the |cemetery::charnel ground [kaṭasī]| has been filled up with your bones. Therefore, bhikkhus, it is enough |to become disenchanted::to become disillusioned [nibbindituṃ]|, |to become detached::to become dispassionate [virajjituṁ]| and |to become free from::to be liberated from [vimuccituṃ]| |all conditions::all formations, all activities, all fabrications [sabbasaṅkhāra]|.

Dhammapada verses 320–333 highlight self-discipline, wisdom, and perseverance through the imagery of elephants. They highlight inner mastery over strength, the value of solitude over company of immature persons, and the importance of taming one’s mind. Honoring parents, cultivating virtue, and letting go of suffering lead to true ease.

Friends bring |ease::contentment, happiness, pleasant abiding [sukha]| when a need arises, Contentment is ease in all situations; |Merit::good deeds, spiritual wealth [puññā]| is ease at life's end, The |giving up::letting go, abandoning, removing [pahāna]| of all |suffering::discomfort, unpleasantness, discontentment, dissatisfaction, stress, pain, disease, i.e. mild or intense suffering [dukkha]| is the highest ease.

Verses on the way of practice to peace through the cultivation of loving-kindness for all beings without an exception and at all times whether one is standing, walking, sitting, or lying down.

This should be done by one who is skilled in goodness, And understands the path to peace: Let them be able, upright and approachable, Gentle in speech, humble in deeds, and free of conceit.

When the venerable Ānanda wishes to go for a solitary retreat, the Buddha teaches him to contemplate the five aggregates subject to appropriation and being assumed as one's self.

“What do you think, Ānanda—is |form::materiality, material existence, experience of the material world, i.e. encompassing both one's body and external objects, whether near or far, gross or subtle, deficient or refined; first of the five aggregates [rūpa]| |permanent::stable, not in flux [nicca]| or |impermanent::not lasting, transient, unreliable [anicca]|?”

The Buddha explains the Four Noble Truths and the five aggregates subject to clinging.

And what, bhikkhus, is the Noble Truth of suffering? It should be said: 'The five aggregates subject to clinging.' Namely: the |form aggregate subject to clinging::attaching to the physical body or external objects as part of one's identity or as something that provides lasting satisfaction [rūpupādānakkhandha]|, the |feeling aggregate subject to clinging::becoming attached to feelings of pleasure, resisting or rejecting feelings of pain, and becoming indifferent or unaware of neutral feelings. This clinging leads to grasping after pleasant sensations, aversion to painful ones, and ignorance of neutral feelings [vedanupādānakkhandha]|, the |perception aggregate subject to clinging::becoming attached to how one interprets and perceives things — believing one's perceptions are fixed, true, or part of our self. It can also involve attaching to concepts, labels, and judgments that arise from perception. [saññupādānakkhandha]|, the |intentional constructs aggregate subject to clinging::attachment to, or identification with one's intentions, emotions, and decisions as part of "who I am." This creates a strong sense of self around one's volitional activities, as if "I am the one who wills, chooses, or acts." [saṅkhārupādānakkhandha]|, and the |consciousness aggregate subject to clinging::attachment to, or identification with, quality of awareness — subjective awareness of experiences and the knowing of objects through the six sense doors [sight, sound, smell, taste, touch, and mind] [viññāṇupādānakkhandha]|. This, bhikkhus, is called the Noble Truth of suffering.

The Buddha shares qualities that inspire confidence in the spiritual life.

“Bhikkhus, this is certainly a type of gain—namely, speaking on the |Dhamma::teachings of the Buddha that point to the nature of reality, the ultimate truth [dhamma]|.“

The Buddha describes how dependent on the diversity of elements, there arises a diversity of contacts, and dependent on the diversity of contacts, there arises a diversity of felt experiences.

And what is the diversity of elements? The |form element::the elemental basis for visual objects—such as shapes, colors, light, bodily forms, gestures, ornaments, scenery, or textures visible through the eye—anything whose appearance enables seeing and may condition perception, attraction, or craving [rūpadhātu]|, |sound element::the elemental basis for auditory experience—such as tones, voices, musical patterns, shouts, praises, speech, or ambient noise—anything whose vibratory quality enables hearing and can become a basis for perception, emotional response, or craving [saddadhātu]|, |odor element::the elemental basis for smells—such as fragrances, stench, food aromas, floral scents, perfumes, or earthy odors—anything whose scent-bearing nature forms the condition for olfactory experience and may lead to craving or attachment [gandhadhātu]|, |taste element::the elemental basis for gustatory experience—such as sweet, bitter, sour, salty, spicy, or subtle flavor properties that arise in dependence on tongue contact with substances, forming the condition for taste perception and potentially giving rise to craving or attachment [rasadhātu]|, |tangible object element::the elemental basis for touch sensation—such as hardness, softness, warmth, coolness, pressure, movement, or contact with textures and bodies—anything that, when contacted by the body, can give rise to tactile experience and potentially become an object of desire, arousal, comfort, or emotional attachment [phoṭṭhabbadhātu]|, and |mental object element::the elemental basis for mental phenomena—such as thoughts, emotions, perceptions, volitions, conceptual constructs, and internal representations—that arise within the mind and form the condition for knowing, imagining, interpreting, or craving [dhammadhātu]|. This is called the diversity of elements.

The Buddha describes the diversity of elements that shapes one's experience.

"I will teach you the diversity of elements, bhikkhus. Listen to it and pay close attention, I will speak."

The Buddha describes the two behaviors that lead to suffering and rebirth in hell if not abandoned.

The Blessed One spoke on this matter. In this regard, it is said:

By clinging to the five aggregates, one experiences pleasure and pain.

“Bhikkhus, when what exists, by |clinging to::grasping (at), acquiring, appropriating, taking possession (of), identifying (with) [upādāya]| what, do |pleasure and pain::ease and discomfort, happiness and sorrow [sukhadukkha]| arise internally?”

The Buddha shares the consequences of causing division within the monastic community.

“One who causes the splitting apart of the community is |destined for a miserable state::to be reborn in suffering [āpāyika]|, destined for |hell::a place of intense suffering, lit. no good fortune [niraya]|, and will |remain there for an aeon::lasting a world cycle, a vast cosmic time span [kappaṭṭha]|; Taking pleasure in division, and not living in accordance with the |Dhamma::teachings of the Buddha that point to the nature of reality, the ultimate truth [dhamma]|, that one falls away from security and peace; Having ruptured the |unified::harmonious [samagga]| community, that one suffers in hell for an aeon.”

DhammaPada verses 179-196 describe the boundless and traceless nature of the Buddha, the teachings of all the Buddhas, rarity of a human birth, rarity of the arising of a Buddha, what is a safe refuge that leads to release from suffering, and the merit gained by ones who honor the Buddhas or their disciples.

Those wise ones who are |intent on jhāna::devoted to meditation [jhānapasuta]|, who delight in |tranquility of renunciation::peace of giving up sensual pleasure [nekkhammūpasama]|— Even the gods |hold them dear::care for them [piyāyati]|, the |Awakened Ones::epithet of the Buddha, one who has fully understood [sambuddha]|, who are |mindful::attentive, fully present [satīmant]|.

The Buddha explains the faults concerning this life and the next life, the strivings for laypeople and those who have gone forth, the things that cause regret and do not cause regret, the importance of not resting content with wholesome qualities, the two things that cause regret and do not cause regret, the two dark and bright qualities, and the two occasions for approaching the rains retreat.

Bhikkhus, if you also were to strive with tireless energy: 'Let only my skin, sinews, and bones remain, and let the flesh and blood dry up in my body, but I will not relax my energy so long as I have not attained what can be attained by human strength, human energy, and human persistence,' you too, bhikkhus, before long, will realize for yourselves with |direct knowledge::experiential realization [abhiññā]|, in this very life, the |perfection of the spiritual life::ideal of the spiritual path, culmination of the spiritual life [brahmacariyapariyosāna]|, for the sake of which clansmen rightly go forth from the household life into homelessness, and having realized it, you will |abide::live, dwell, stay, remain, continue [viharati]| in it.

The Buddha describes how beings only become disillusioned with and escape from the five aggregates when they directly know their gratification, drawback, and escape as they truly are.

Bhikkhus, as long as beings have |not directly known::have not experientially understood [nābbhaññāsi]|, as they truly are, the gratification as gratification, the drawback as drawback, and the escape as escape in regard to these |five aggregates that are subject to clinging::the physical and mental heaps that are appropriated, grasped at, or taken as self; the fivefold collection of form, feeling, perception, formations, and consciousness bound up with attachment [pañca + upādānakkhandha]|, they do not, bhikkhus, dwell freed, |disentangled::disengaged, unfettered [visaṁyutta]|, and with minds released beyond limitations, in the world its deities, |Māras::demons, tempters, beings of delusion|, |Brahmas::Gods; celestial beings residing in the Brahmā realms, often considered to be highly refined and long-lived deities. [brahmā]|, its ascetics and brahmins, kings and commoners.

Verses depicting the path to liberation through the central metaphor of a serpent shedding its skin. Each stanza illustrates how a bhikkhu abandons defilements like anger, passion, craving, and conceit, thereby casting off attachment to this world and the next.

One whose thoughts have been entirely |dispelled::dispersed [vidhūpita]|, internally clarified and settled without remainder; That bhikkhu abandons this world and the next, like a serpent casting off its old worn-out skin.

Endowed with ten powers and four assurances, the Buddha reveals the impermanence of the five aggregates and teaches dependent co-arising.

Namely, |dependent on::contingent on, supported by, grounded on [paṭicca]| |ignorance::fundamental unawareness or misunderstanding of the true nature of reality, not experientially understanding the four noble truths [avijjā]|, bhikkhus, |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, and choices expressed as mental, verbal, and bodily activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); processes that produce kamma [saṅkhāra]| [arise]; dependent on intentional constructs, |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object [viññāṇa]| arises; dependent on consciousness, |name and form::mentality and materiality—the integrated structure of mental capacities (intention, attention, contact, feeling, perception) and physical form that together constitute and sustain an individual being [nāmarūpa]| arise; dependent on name and form, the |six sense bases::The six internal sense bases—eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, and mind—are the faculties that enable sensory contact and experience. They are not the physical organs themselves, but the functional conditions that enable consciousness to meet an object [saḷāyatana]| arise; dependent on the six sense bases, |contact::sense impingement, raw experience, touch [phassa]| arises; dependent on contact, |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| arises; dependent on felt experience, |craving::wanting, yearning, longing, attachment, lit. thirst [taṇha]| arises; dependent on craving, |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]| arises; dependent on clinging, |existence::continued conditional existence, the karmically conditioned mode of being that leads to future rebirth [bhava]| arises; dependent on existence, |birth::rebirth, conception, coming into existence [jāti]| arises; dependent on birth, aging and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair arise. Thus is the arising of this whole mass of suffering.

Only after fully understanding the gratification, drawback, and escape in the case of form, felt experience, perception, intentional constructs, and consciousness, the Buddha declared that he had attained the unsurpassed perfect awakening.

"Bhikkhus, even before my awakening, when I was still a |bodhisatta::Buddha before his awakening, aspirant Buddha [bodhisatta]|, this thought occurred to me:

The Buddha explains how his teaching of the Dhamma inspires fear and dread in the deities, just as the lion's roar inspires fear in the animals.

In the same way, bhikkhus, when the Tathāgata arises in the world, the Arahant, perfectly Awakened One, accomplished in wisdom and conduct, who has reached the destination, knower of the world, the unsurpassed guide of trainable persons, the teacher of gods and humans, Buddha, Fortunate One, he teaches the Dhamma thus: 'Such is |form::materiality, material existence, experience of the material world, i.e. encompassing both one's body and external objects, whether near or far, gross or subtle, deficient or refined; first of the five aggregates [rūpa]|, such is the |arising::appearance, origination [samudaya]| of form, such is the |passing away::disappearance, vanishing, subsiding [atthaṅgama]| of form; such is |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling felt on contact through eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, mind; second of the five aggregates [vedanā]|, such is the arising of felt experience, such is the passing away of felt experience; such is |perception::The mental process of recognizing and giving meaning to experience. It marks things by signs, labels, or associations drawn from memory and the field of contact. Perception shapes how one experiences the world; third of the five aggregates [sañña]|, such is the arising of perception, such is the passing away of perception; such are |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, choices; mental and bodily volitional activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); kamma-producing processes; fourth of the five aggregates [saṅkhāra]|, such is the arising of intentional constructs, such is the passing away of intentional constructs; such is |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object; fifth of the five aggregates [viññāṇa]|, such is the arising of consciousness, such is the passing away of consciousness.'

The world is empty of self and what belongs to a self.

The eye, Ānanda, is empty of self and of what belongs to a self. |forms::visible objects such as beautiful sights, faces, expressions, art, ornaments, possessions, status symbols, admired appearances, enticing scenery, or objects of desire and attachment [rūpe]| are empty of self and of what belongs to a self, |eye-consciousness::awareness of visible forms; it does not interpret or recognize meaning—only cognizes and distinguishes [cakkhuviññāṇa]| is empty of self and of what belongs to a self, |eye-contact::the meeting of eye, form, and eye-consciousness, giving rise to a visual impression/impingement/intrusion [cakkhusamphassa]| is empty of self and of what belongs to a self.

The Buddha explains the five faculties of faith, energy, mindfulness, collectedness, and wisdom.

And what, bhikkhus, is the |faculty of collectedness::mental faculty of stability of mind, mental composure [samādhindriya]|? Here, bhikkhus, a disciple of the Noble Ones, having made letting go his basis, attains stability of mind, attains unification of mind. Having secluded from sensual pleasures and |unwholesome::unhealthy, unskillful, unbeneficial, or karmically unprofitable [akusala]| mental qualities, he enters and dwells in the first jhāna, which is |accompanied by reflection::with thinking [savitakka]| and |examination::with investigation, evaluation [savicāra]|, |born from seclusion::secluded from the defilements [vivekaja]|, and is |filled with joyful pleasure::imbued with joy and happiness, with delight and ease, sometimes experienced as an intense joy or pleasure, rapture [pītisukha]|. With the |settling::calming, conciliation, subsiding [vūpasama]| of reflection and examination, he enters and dwells in the second jhāna, which is characterized by internal |tranquility::calming, settling, confidence [sampasādana]| and |unification::singleness, integration [ekodibhāva]| of mind, is without reflection and examination, |born from collectedness::born from a stable mind [samādhija]|, and is filled with joyful pleasure. With the fading away of joyful pleasure, he dwells in a |state of equanimity::mental poised, mentally balanced, equanimous, non-reactive, disregarding [upekkhaka]|, |mindful and fully aware::attentive and completely comprehending [sata + sampajāna]|, experiencing |ease::comfort, contentedness, happiness, pleasure [sukha]| with the body. He enters and dwells in the third jhāna which the Noble Ones describe as 'one who dwells equanimous, mindful and at ease.' With the abandonment of ease and |discontentment::discomfort, unpleasantness, something unsatisfactory, stress [dukkha]|, and with the settling down of |joy and sorrow::craving and aversion, pleasure and displeasure, satisfaction and dissatisfaction, gladness and dejection, positive state of mind and negative state of mind [somanassadomanassa]|, he enters and dwells in the fourth jhāna, which is characterized by purification of |mindfulness::full awareness and recollection of the body, feelings, mind, and mental qualities, observing them clearly with sustained attention, free from craving and distress [sati]| through |equanimity::mental poise, mental balance, equipoise, non-reactivity, composure [upekkhā]|, experiencing a feeling which is neither-painful-nor-pleasant. This, bhikkhus, is called the faculty of collectedness.

The Buddha describes how dependent on the diversity of elements, there arises a diversity of contacts, and dependent on the diversity of contacts, there arises a diversity of felt experiences. However, diversity of contacts does not arise dependent on the diversity of felt experiences, and diversity of elements does not arise dependent on the diversity of contacts.

And what is the diversity of elements? The |form element::the elemental basis for visual objects—such as shapes, colors, light, bodily forms, gestures, ornaments, scenery, or textures visible through the eye—anything whose appearance enables seeing and may condition perception, attraction, or craving [rūpadhātu]|, |sound element::the elemental basis for auditory experience—such as tones, voices, musical patterns, shouts, praises, speech, or ambient noise—anything whose vibratory quality enables hearing and can become a basis for perception, emotional response, or craving [saddadhātu]|, |odor element::the elemental basis for smells—such as fragrances, stench, food aromas, floral scents, perfumes, or earthy odors—anything whose scent-bearing nature forms the condition for olfactory experience and may lead to craving or attachment [gandhadhātu]|, |taste element::the elemental basis for gustatory experience—such as sweet, bitter, sour, salty, spicy, or subtle flavor properties that arise in dependence on tongue contact with substances, forming the condition for taste perception and potentially giving rise to craving or attachment [rasadhātu]|, |tangible object element::the elemental basis for touch sensation—such as hardness, softness, warmth, coolness, pressure, movement, or contact with textures and bodies—anything that, when contacted by the body, can give rise to tactile experience and potentially become an object of desire, arousal, comfort, or emotional attachment [phoṭṭhabbadhātu]|, and |mental object element::the elemental basis for mental phenomena—such as thoughts, emotions, perceptions, volitions, conceptual constructs, and internal representations—that arise within the mind and form the condition for knowing, imagining, interpreting, or craving [dhammadhātu]|. This is called the diversity of elements.

The Buddha describes how diverse perceptions arise dependent on the diversity of elements, and how the arising of diverse intentions, desires, fevers, and quests depends on the diversity of perceptions.

And what is the diversity of elements? The |form element::the elemental basis for visual objects—such as shapes, colors, light, bodily forms, gestures, ornaments, scenery, or textures visible through the eye—anything whose appearance enables seeing and may condition perception, attraction, or craving [rūpadhātu]|, |sound element::the elemental basis for auditory experience—such as tones, voices, musical patterns, shouts, praises, speech, or ambient noise—anything whose vibratory quality enables hearing and can become a basis for perception, emotional response, or craving [saddadhātu]|, |odor element::the elemental basis for smells—such as fragrances, stench, food aromas, floral scents, perfumes, or earthy odors—anything whose scent-bearing nature forms the condition for olfactory experience and may lead to craving or attachment [gandhadhātu]|, |taste element::the elemental basis for gustatory experience—such as sweet, bitter, sour, salty, spicy, or subtle flavor properties that arise in dependence on tongue contact with substances, forming the condition for taste perception and potentially giving rise to craving or attachment [rasadhātu]|, |tangible object element::the elemental basis for touch sensation—such as hardness, softness, warmth, coolness, pressure, movement, or contact with textures and bodies—anything that, when contacted by the body, can give rise to tactile experience and potentially become an object of desire, arousal, comfort, or emotional attachment [phoṭṭhabbadhātu]|, and |mental object element::the elemental basis for mental phenomena—such as thoughts, emotions, perceptions, volitions, conceptual constructs, and internal representations—that arise within the mind and form the condition for knowing, imagining, interpreting, or craving [dhammadhātu]|. This is called the diversity of elements.

DhammaPada verses 197-208 describe the happiness of those who live without hatred, affliction, and anxiety. It includes poetic verses on happiness and Nibbāna, and emphasizes seeing, dwelling, and association with the wise, Noble Ones.

Victory breeds hatred, for the defeated sleep uncomfortably; |The composed::calmed, tranquil [upasanta]| sleep with ease, having abandoned |victory and defeat::conquest and loss [jayaparājaya]|.

The Buddha uses the simile of a person being carried down by a lovely and alluring river current to illustrate the painful results of craving and indulgence in the internal sense bases.

‘The waves,’ bhikkhus, is a designation for |anger and irritation::rage and being upset [kodhupāyāsa]|.

How an uninstructed ordinary person and a learned disciple of the Noble Ones respond to the five unobtainable states of aging, illness, death, perishing, and loss.

Through chanting, mantras, or well-spoken words, through giving out or according to tradition; wherever and however one might gain one's good, there one should exert oneself accordingly.

The Buddha shares the six roots of disputes - 1) irritable nature and resentment, 2) denigration and contention, 3) envy and miserliness, 4) deceit and hypocrisy, 5) evil desires and wrong view, 6) clinging to views, holding on to them, and insisting on them - that lead to one not fulfilling the training, to dispute in the community, and to the harm and suffering of many.

6 Furthermore, bhikkhus, a bhikkhu is |clinging to his own views::who adheres to his own belief system [sandiṭṭhiparāmāsī]|, |holding on tightly::clutching [ādhānaggāhī]|, and |giving up with difficulty::not relinquishing quickly [duppaṭinissaggī]|. When a bhikkhu is clinging to his own views, holding on tightly, and giving up with difficulty, he dwells without respect and deference toward the Teacher, the Dhamma, and the Saṅgha, and he does not fulfill the training. Such a bhikkhu creates a dispute in the Saṅgha that leads to the harm of many people, to the unhappiness of many people, to the ruin, harm, and suffering of gods and humans. If, bhikkhus, you see such a root of dispute within yourselves or in others, you should practice to ensure that this harmful root of dispute does not arise in the future. In this way, there is the abandoning of this harmful root of dispute. In this way, there is non-arising of this harmful root of dispute in the future.

The Buddha explains how many aeons have passed and gone by with a simile of four disciples with a hundred-year lifespan each recollecting a hundred thousand aeons each day and still not being able to count them all.

"Suppose, bhikkhus, there were four disciples here each with a life span of a hundred years, living a hundred years, and each day they were each to recollect a hundred thousand aeons. There would still be aeons not yet recollected by them when those four disciples each with a life span of a hundred years, living a hundred years, would pass away at the end of a hundred years. It is not easy to count them and say that they are so many aeons, or so many hundreds of aeons, or so many thousands of aeons, or so many hundreds of thousands of aeons.

Ugga, the householder of Vesālī is endowed with eight wonderful and marvelous qualities.

2 Venerable sir, with a confident mind, I attended upon the Blessed One. The Blessed One gradually gave me a discourse, first on giving, then on virtue, and then on the heavens. He explained the dangers, degradation, and defilement of sensual pleasures and the benefit of renunciation. When the Blessed One knew that my mind was ready, receptive, free of hindrances, uplifted, and confident, he then expounded to me the distinctive teaching of the Buddhas: suffering, its arising, its cessation, and the path. Just as a clean cloth with no dark spots would perfectly absorb dye, so too, as I was sitting there, the stainless, immaculate Dhamma eye arose in me: 'Whatever is subject to arising, is subject to cessation.' Venerable sir, I then became one who has seen the Dhamma, who has attained the Dhamma, who has understood the Dhamma, who has deeply penetrated the Dhamma, having crossed beyond doubt, with no more uncertainty, self-assured, and independent of others in the Teacher's instruction. Right there, I went for refuge to the Buddha, the Dhamma, and the Sangha, and I undertook the training rules with celibacy as the fifth. This, venerable sir, is the second wonderful and marvelous quality that is found in me.

Venerable Sāriputta explains the ten strengths of a bhikkhu who has exhausted the defilements.

5) Furthermore, venerable sir, for a bhikkhu who has exhausted the defilements, the |four right efforts::The four right efforts prevent the arising and lead to giving up of unarisen harmful and unwholesome qualities, and lead to the arising, stability, retention, growth, and full development of wholesome qualities. [Read more in AN 4.13 - Padhāna sutta - Striving](/an4.13) [cattāro + sammappadhāna]| are cultivated and well developed. And even this, venerable sir, for a bhikkhu who has exhausted the defilements, is a strength, by which strength a bhikkhu who has exhausted the defilements declares the exhaustion of the taints: 'The defilements are exhausted in me.'

The Buddha explains how thoughts of sensuality, ill will, and harming arise from a cause and how to abandon them.

And how, bhikkhus, does a thought of sensuality arise from a cause, and not without a cause? How does a thought of ill will arise from a cause, and not without a cause? How does a thought of harming arise from a cause, and not without a cause? Dependent on the |domain of sensual pleasures::realm of desire [kāmadhātu]|, bhikkhus, arises the |perception::The mental process of recognizing and giving meaning to experience. It marks things by signs, labels, or associations drawn from memory and the field of contact. Perception shapes how one experiences the world; third of the five aggregates [sañña]| of sensuality; dependent on the perception of sensuality arises the |intention::thought, volition, conception, plan [saṅkappa]| of sensuality; dependent on the intention of sensuality arises sensual desire; dependent on sensual desire arises sensual |fever::mental torment, distress, strong desire, discomfort [pariḷāha]|; dependent on sensual fever arises |search for sensual pleasures::looking for objects of sensual desire [kāmapariyesanā]|. When seeking sensual pleasures, bhikkhus, the uninstructed ordinary person practices improperly in three ways: by body, by speech, and by mind.

The Buddha explains how the six sense bases and their objects are burning with the fires of passion, aversion, and delusion, and how to become disenchanted, dispassionate, and liberated.

The eye, bhikkhus, is burning; |forms::visible objects such as beautiful sights, faces, expressions, art, ornaments, possessions, status symbols, admired appearances, enticing scenery, or objects of desire and attachment [rūpe]| are burning; |eye-consciousness::awareness of visible forms; it does not interpret or recognize meaning—only cognizes and distinguishes [cakkhuviññāṇa]| is burning; |eye-contact::the meeting of eye, form, and eye-consciousness, giving rise to a visual impression/impingement/intrusion [cakkhusamphassa]| is burning. Whatever |feeling::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, the felt experience, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| arises with eye-contact as condition—whether pleasant, painful, or neither-painful-nor-pleasant, that too is burning. With what is it burning? 'It is burning with the fire of |passion::intense desire, strong emotion, infatuation, obsession, lust [rāga]|, with the fire of |aversion::ill will, hatred, hostility, mental attitude of rejection, fault-finding, resentful disapproval [dosa]|, with the fire of |illusion::delusion, hallucination, misapprehension, distorted view; that which fuels further confusion and doubt [moha]|; it is burning with birth, aging, death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair, I say.

The Buddha explains in detail each factor of the noble eightfold path—right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right collectedness.

And what, bhikkhus, is right speech? That which, bhikkhus, is abstention from |false speech::lying, deliberately speaking falsehood [musāvāda]|, abstention from |divisive speech::defamatory words, slanderous speech, speech intended to create division [pisuṇāya + vācā]|, abstention from |harsh speech::speech that is rough, rude, or unkind [pharusa + vācā]|, abstention from |frivolous chatter::meaningless talk, gossip, idle speech [samphappalāpa]|—this is called right speech, bhikkhus.

The Buddha, endowed with the ten powers and four assurances, reveals the impermanence of the five aggregates and teaches dependent co-arising. He then urges the bhikkhus to practice with diligence for their highest welfare as well as for the welfare of others.

Namely, |dependent on::contingent on, supported by, grounded on [paṭicca]| |ignorance::fundamental unawareness or misunderstanding of the true nature of reality, not experientially understanding the four noble truths [avijjā]|, bhikkhus, |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, and choices expressed as mental, verbal, and bodily activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); processes that produce kamma [saṅkhāra]| [arise]; dependent on intentional constructs, |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object [viññāṇa]| arises; dependent on consciousness, |name and form::mentality and materiality—the integrated structure of mental capacities (intention, attention, contact, feeling, perception) and physical form that together constitute and sustain an individual being [nāmarūpa]| arise; dependent on name and form, the |six sense bases::The six internal sense bases—eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, and mind—are the faculties that enable sensory contact and experience. They are not the physical organs themselves, but the functional conditions that enable consciousness to meet an object [saḷāyatana]| arise; dependent on the six sense bases, |contact::sense impingement, raw experience, touch [phassa]| arises; dependent on contact, |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| arises; dependent on felt experience, |craving::wanting, yearning, longing, attachment, lit. thirst [taṇha]| arises; dependent on craving, |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]| arises; dependent on clinging, |existence::continued conditional existence, the karmically conditioned mode of being that leads to future rebirth [bhava]| arises; dependent on existence, |birth::rebirth, conception, coming into existence [jāti]| arises; dependent on birth, aging and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair arise. Thus is the arising of this whole mass of suffering.

After examining the impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, and the changing nature of the five aggregates, the Buddha teaches how to see them with proper wisdom, as not being suitable to identify with.

The Blessed One said this. The group of five bhikkhus were satisfied and rejoiced in the Blessed One's words. And while this discourse was being spoken, the minds of the group of five bhikkhus were liberated from the |mental defilements::mental outflows, discharges, taints [āsava]| through non-clinging.

The Buddha explains to Sutavā, the wanderer, that an arahant is incapable of transgressing in nine ways.

"Indeed, Sutavā, this was well heard, well learned, well attended to, and well retained by you. Before and now, I declare: 'A bhikkhu who is an arahant, whose defilements are destroyed, who has fulfilled the spiritual life, who has done what had to be done, having put down the burden, who has achieved the highest goal, who has exhausted the fetter of existence, and who is liberated through complete comprehension, is incapable of transgressing in nine ways — incapable of intentionally take the life of a living being, incapable of taking what is not given, incapable of engaging in sexual intercourse, incapable to knowingly speak falsely, incapable to use stored-up goods as he did before, when he was a householder, incapable to act out of |impulse::based on desire|, incapable to act out of |aversion::based on ill will|, incapable to act out of |delusion::tendency of the mind to not closely examine and verify|, and incapable to act out of fear.' Before and now, I declare: 'He who is a bhikkhu who is an arahant, whose defilements are destroyed, who has fulfilled the spiritual life, who has done what had to be done, having put down the burden, who has achieved the highest goal, who has exhausted the fetter of existence, and who is liberated through complete comprehension is incapable of transgressing in these nine ways.'"

Dhammapada verses 306–319 warn of the suffering that follows false speech, misconduct, and wrong view. The verses highlight the danger of negligence, hypocrisy, and slack effort in spiritual practice. Those who cultivate right view, ethical conduct, and firm effort attain a good destination, while those who embrace wrong views and harmful actions fall into misery.

Just as |kusa grass::sharp-bladed grass used in the ancient India in ceremonies and symbolic contexts [kusa]|, if wrongly grasped, cuts the hand; So too, the |spiritual life::ascetic life, monkhood [sāmañña]|, if wrongly undertaken, drags one down to hell.

The Blessed One explains the two thoughts that frequently arise in him - the thought of safety for beings and the thought of seclusion.

Dwell delighting in seclusion and devoted to seclusion. For you, bhikkhus, who dwell delighting in seclusion and devoted to seclusion, this very thought will frequently arise: 'What is unwholesome? What has yet not been |abandoned::dispelled, given up [pahīna]|? What shall we abandon?'”

King Pasenadi expresses deep sorrow over his grandmother's death. The Buddha teaches him that all beings, without exception, are subject to death and cannot escape it, likening it to a potter's pots that are all bound to break.

The Blessed One said this. Having spoken thus, the Well-Gone One further said this:

The Buddha explains the wrong way of practice as that which leads to the arising of suffering, and the right way of practice as that which leads to the ending of suffering.

"And what, bhikkhus, is the wrong way of practice? Dependent |on::contingent on, supported by, grounded on [paṭicca]| |ignorance::fundamental unawareness or misunderstanding of the true nature of reality, not experientially understanding the four noble truths [avijjā]|, bhikkhus, volitional |formations::intentions, choices, decisions, karmic activity [saṅkhāra]| arise; dependent on intentional constructs, |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object [viññāṇa]| arises; dependent on consciousness, name and |form::combination of mental processes [intending, attention, contact, sensation, and perceiving] and physical form that constitute an individual being, the mental and physical objects of consciousness [nāmarūpa]| arise; dependent on name and form, the six sense |bases::the six internal sense faculties - eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, and mind - that enable sensory experience [saḷāyatana]| arise; dependent on the six sense bases, |contact::sense impingement, raw experience, touch [phassa]| arises; dependent on contact, |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| arises; dependent on felt experience, |craving::wanting, yearning, longing, attachment, lit. thirst [taṇha]| arises; dependent on craving, |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]| arises; dependent on clinging, |existence::continued conditional existence, the karmically conditioned mode of being that leads to future rebirth [bhava]| arises; dependent on existence, |birth::rebirth, conception, coming into existence [jāti]| arises; dependent on birth, aging and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair arise. Thus is the arising of this whole mass of suffering. This is called, bhikkhus, the wrong way of practice.

The seven wonderful and marvelous qualities of Nandamātā, a female lay disciple.

"Venerable sir, that is not the only wonderful and marvelous quality of mine. I have another wonderful and marvelous quality. Here, venerable sir, as long as I wish, I can enter and dwell in the first jhāna, having secluded myself from sensual pleasures and unwholesome mental states, with reflection and examination, born of seclusion, and filled with joyful pleasure. With the subsiding of reflection and examination, experiencing internal tranquility and unification of mind, devoid of reflection and examination, born of collectedness and filled with joyful pleasure, I can enter and dwell in the second jhāna. With the fading away of joyful pleasure, I dwell equanimous and mindful, fully aware, and experience physical pleasure, which the Noble Ones describe as 'one who dwells happily, equanimous and mindful.' Thus, I can enter and dwell in the third jhāna. With the abandonment of |ease::contentment, happiness, pleasant abiding [sukha]| and |suffering::discontentment, stress|, and with the subsiding of previous pleasure and displeasure, experiencing neither-painful-nor-pleasant sensation, and with purification of mindfulness by |equanimity::mental poise, mental balance, equipoise, non-reactivity, composure [upekkhā]|, I can enter and dwell in the fourth jhāna."

Ugga, the householder of Hatthigāma is endowed with eight wonderful and marvelous qualities. The 6th quality is different from [AN 8.21](/an8.21).

2 With a confident mind, I attended upon the Blessed One. The Blessed One gradually gave me a discourse, first on giving, then on virtue, and then on the heavens. He explained the dangers, degradation, and defilement of sensual pleasures and the benefit of renunciation. When the Blessed One knew that my mind was ready, receptive, free of hindrances, uplifted, and confident, he then expounded to me the distinctive teaching of the Buddhas: suffering, its arising, its cessation, and the path. Just as a clean cloth with no dark spots would perfectly absorb dye, so too, as I was sitting there, the stainless, immaculate Dhamma eye arose in me: 'Whatever is subject to arising, is subject to cessation.' Venerable sir, I then became one who has seen the Dhamma, who has attained the Dhamma, who has understood the Dhamma, who has deeply penetrated the Dhamma, having crossed beyond doubt, with no more uncertainty, confident and self-assured, and independent of others in the Teacher's instruction. Right there, I went for refuge to the Buddha, the Dhamma, and the Sangha, and I undertook the training rules with celibacy as the fifth. This, venerable sir, is the second wonderful and marvelous quality that is found in me.

The Buddha explains how the livelihood of subsisting on alms, although an extreme of livelihoods, is a sensible choice for those who hope to discern a complete end to the entire mass of suffering.

“Bhikkhus, this is the extreme of livelihoods, namely, subsisting on alms. In this world, it is considered a curse: 'You wander about with bowl in hand!' Yet, grounded on good purpose, this is what sensible sons of good family engage in — not |because authorities force them::because of the king [rājābhinīta]|, nor because thieves drive them out, nor because they are |debt-ridden::fallen into debt [iṇaṭṭa]|, afflicted with fear, or have |difficulty earning a living::problems with livelihood [ājīvikāpakata]|. Rather, they do so because they are afflicted by birth, aging, death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair — overwhelmed by suffering, consumed by |suffering::discomfort, unpleasantness, discontentment, dissatisfaction, stress, pain, disease, i.e. mild or intense suffering [dukkha]|. They hope that, perhaps the |complete ending of::relief from [antakiriyā]| this entire mass of suffering |could be discerned::can become evident [paññāyetha]|. In this way, the son of a good family |renounces::ordains, goes forth [pabbajita]|.

Verses depicting the uncertain, brief, and suffering-laden nature of mortal life, emphasizing the inevitability of death for all beings, like ripe fruits fated to fall. The Buddha counsels against futile grief and lamentation over the departed, urging the wise to understand the world's relentless course of decay and death.

Uncertain and unknown, is the life of mortals here; It is difficult and brief, and bound up with |suffering::discomfort, unpleasantness, discontentment, dissatisfaction, stress, pain, disease, i.e. mild or intense suffering [dukkha]|.

The Buddha describes how dependent on the diversity of elements, there arises a diversity of perceptions, intentions, contacts, felt experiences connected with contact, desires, fevers, quests, and acquisitions.

"Bhikkhus, |dependent on::contingent on, supported by, grounded on [paṭicca]| the |diversity of elements::variety of foundational properties making up experience—earth, water, fire, air, space, and consciousness; basis for bodily and mental phenomena; multiplicity of conditioned building blocks mistaken for self [dhātunānatta]|, there arises the |diversity of perceptions::variety of conceptions, manifold notions [saññānānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of perceptions, there arises the |diversity of intentions::variation in volitional aims and mental resolve; diversity in motivational tendencies, goals, or directed thoughts; multiplicity of intention-patterns shaping behavior [saṅkappanānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of intentions, there arises the |diversity of contacts::multiplicity of sensory encounters; variety of experiential junctions where sense faculty, object, and consciousness converge; conditioned points of experience giving rise to feeling [phassanānānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of contacts, there arises the |diversity of felt experiences::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensations, feelings, second of the five aggregates [vedanānānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of felt experiences, there arises the |diversity of desires::motivational inclinations, goal-directed drives, wishful tendencies, aspiring interests, aims rooted in either craving or resolve [chandanānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of desires, there arises the |diversity of fevers::emotional heat of passion and craving; burning impulses, obsessive attachments, infatuations, and restless desire-states [pariḷāhanānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of fevers, there arises the |diversity of quests::variety in pursuits and searches; multiplicity of aims in seeking satisfaction or meaning—ranging from sensual gratification to liberation [pariyesanānānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of quests, there arises the |diversity of acquisitions::variety of gains and attainments; forms of possession, advantage, or profit—material, social, or conceptual—sought or clung to as ‘mine’ [lābhanānatta]|.

Consciousness arises in dependence on the duality of the six sense bases and their respective objects. Contact arises through the meeting of these three things. Contacted, one feels, intends, and perceives.

Depending on the eye and |forms::visible objects such as beautiful sights, faces, expressions, art, ornaments, possessions, status symbols, admired appearances, enticing scenery, or objects of desire and attachment [rūpe]|, |eye-consciousness::awareness of visible forms; it does not interpret or recognize meaning—only cognizes and distinguishes [cakkhuviññāṇa]| arises. The eye is |impermanent::not lasting, transient, unreliable [anicca]|, changing, becoming otherwise. Forms are impermanent, changing, becoming otherwise. Thus this duality is |unsteady::unstable, shaky, fickle [cala]| and |wavering::tottering, wobbly [byatha]|, impermanent, changing, becoming otherwise. Eye-consciousness is impermanent, changing, becoming otherwise. The cause and condition for the arising of eye-consciousness is also impermanent, changing, becoming otherwise. When, bhikkhus, eye-consciousness has arisen in dependence on a condition that is impermanent, how could it be |permanent::stable, not in flux [nicca]|?

The Buddha's serene conduct on an alms round catches the attention of King Bimbisāra. In the ensuing encounter, the king offers him wealth and royal pleasures, but the Buddha shares his insight on the drawbacks in sensual pleasures, his view of renunciation as security and where his mind delights in.

Having gone forth, he avoided, |injurious actions::harmful, bad, potentially evil intention or action [pāpakamma]| with his body; Having abandoned |verbal misconduct::false speech, harsh speech, divisive speech, idle chatter [vacīduccarita]|, he purified his livelihood.

The Buddha analyzes each of the twelve links of dependent co-arising, and explains how there is an arising and ending of the whole mass of suffering.

"And what, bhikkhus, is dependent co-arising? |Dependent on::contingent on, supported by, grounded on [paṭicca]| |ignorance::fundamental unawareness or misunderstanding of the true nature of reality, not experientially understanding the four noble truths [avijjā]|, bhikkhus, |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, and choices expressed as mental, verbal, and bodily activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); processes that produce kamma [saṅkhāra]| [arise]; dependent on intentional constructs, |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object [viññāṇa]| arises; dependent on consciousness, |name and form::mentality and materiality—the integrated structure of mental capacities (intention, attention, contact, feeling, perception) and physical form that together constitute and sustain an individual being [nāmarūpa]| arises; dependent on name and form, the |six sense bases::The six internal sense bases—eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, and mind—are the faculties that enable sensory contact and experience. They are not the physical organs themselves, but the functional conditions that enable consciousness to meet an object [saḷāyatana]| arise; dependent on the six sense bases, |contact::sense impingement, raw experience, touch [phassa]| arises; dependent on contact, |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| arises; dependent on felt experience, |craving::wanting, yearning, longing, attachment, lit. thirst [taṇha]| arises; dependent on craving, |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]| arises; dependent on clinging, |existence::continued conditional existence, the karmically conditioned mode of being that leads to future rebirth [bhava]| arises; dependent on existence, |birth::rebirth, conception, coming into existence [jāti]| arises; dependent on birth, aging and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair arise. Thus is the arising of this whole mass of suffering. This is called, bhikkhus, dependent co-arising.

The Buddha describes how the diversity of quests is not the cause for the arising of diversity of fevers, desires, intentions, perceptions, and elements. Rather, dependent on the diversity of elements, there is arises a diversity of perceptions, intentions, desires, fevers, and quests.

And what is the diversity of elements? The |form element::the elemental basis for visual objects—such as shapes, colors, light, bodily forms, gestures, ornaments, scenery, or textures visible through the eye—anything whose appearance enables seeing and may condition perception, attraction, or craving [rūpadhātu]|, |sound element::the elemental basis for auditory experience—such as tones, voices, musical patterns, shouts, praises, speech, or ambient noise—anything whose vibratory quality enables hearing and can become a basis for perception, emotional response, or craving [saddadhātu]|, |odor element::the elemental basis for smells—such as fragrances, stench, food aromas, floral scents, perfumes, or earthy odors—anything whose scent-bearing nature forms the condition for olfactory experience and may lead to craving or attachment [gandhadhātu]|, |taste element::the elemental basis for gustatory experience—such as sweet, bitter, sour, salty, spicy, or subtle flavor properties that arise in dependence on tongue contact with substances, forming the condition for taste perception and potentially giving rise to craving or attachment [rasadhātu]|, |tangible object element::the elemental basis for touch sensation—such as hardness, softness, warmth, coolness, pressure, movement, or contact with textures and bodies—anything that, when contacted by the body, can give rise to tactile experience and potentially become an object of desire, arousal, comfort, or emotional attachment [phoṭṭhabbadhātu]|, and |mental object element::the elemental basis for mental phenomena—such as thoughts, emotions, perceptions, volitions, conceptual constructs, and internal representations—that arise within the mind and form the condition for knowing, imagining, interpreting, or craving [dhammadhātu]|. This is called the diversity of elements.

DhammaPada verses 60-75 describe the traits and consequences for an immature person. They suffer from delusion, cling to false views of self and possessions, perform harmful actions, seek status without wisdom, and long for recognition. In contrast, the wise avoid their company and pursue seclusion and true understanding of the Dhamma.

Even if for a whole lifetime, an immature person, |associates closely with::honors, respects [payirupāsati]| a wise person; They do not understand the Dhamma, just as a spoon does not know the taste of soup.

The Buddha shares the three kinds of best confidence - 1) in the Buddha, 2) in the mental quality of fading of desire, and 3) in the community of the Blessed One's disciples.

Bhikkhus, however many |mental qualities::characteristics, traits, and tendencies of the mind, shaped by repeated actions and sustained attention, guided by particular ways of understanding; they may be wholesome or unwholesome, bright or dark [dhammā]| there are—whether |conditioned::constructed, created, fabricated [saṅkhata]| or |unconditioned::not created, unconstructed, unformed, epithet of Nibbāna [asaṅkhata]|—the |fading of desire::disappearance of desire, dispassion, disenchantment, detachment [virāga]| is regarded as the foremost among them. That is, the |crushing of conceit::removing vanity, subduing pride [madanimmadana]|, the |dispelling of thirst::removal of thirst [pipāsavinaya]|, the |uprooting of clinging::eradication of attachment [ālayasamugghāta]|, the |breaking off the cycle of existence::ending continued existence [vaṭṭupaccheda]|, the |wearing away of craving::depletion of desire, extinction of longing [taṇhakkhaya]|, the fading of desire, |gradual ending::cessation, termination [nirodha]|, |Nibbāna::complete cooling, letting go of everything, deathless, freedom from calamity, the non-disintegrating [nibbāna]|. Those, bhikkhus, who place their confidence in the teaching of fading of desire, place their confidence in the best. And for those who place their confidence in the best, the result is the best.

The Blessed One teaches Visākhā on the nature of attachment and suffering.

Thus have I heard—At one time, the Blessed One was dwelling at Sāvatthi, in the Eastern Park, at Migāramātā's mansion. At that time, |Visākhā's, also known as Migāramātā::one of the foremost laywomen and devoted supporters of the Buddha, also known as Migāramātā (Migāra's mother) from a significant event in her life when she skillfully guided her father-in-law, Migāra, towards the Dhamma| pleasing and beloved granddaughter had passed away. Then, Visākhā, with wet clothes and hair, approached the Blessed One during the day; having approached, she paid homage to the Blessed One and sat down to one side. As she was seated to one side, the Blessed One addressed her:

The Buddha advises Soṇa on the importance of balanced energy and breaking through to a balanced state of the faculties with the example of the lute strings.

"Venerable sir, the bhikkhu who is an arahant, whose defilements are destroyed, who has fulfilled the spiritual life, who has done what had to be done, having put down the burden, who has achieved the highest goal, |who has exhausted the fetter of existence::who has worn away the bonds of continued conditional existence, i.e. the karmically conditioned mode of being that leads to future rebirth [parikkhīṇabhavasaṃyojana]|, and who is liberated through complete comprehension, is established in six things — he is established in |renunciation::giving up of sensual pleasures|, established in seclusion, established in harmlessness, established in non-craving, established in non-clinging, and established in |non-delusion::fully aware with mental clarity and unconfused, established in close examination and verification|.

The Buddha explains what causes the hindrances to arise and how to abandon them.

"Bhikkhus, I do not see any other single quality that prevents unarisen restlessness and worry from arising, or causes arisen restlessness and worry to be abandoned, as |settling of::calming of, subsiding of, conciliation of, peace of [vūpasama]| the mind. Bhikkhus, when the mind is settled, unarisen restlessness and worry do not arise, and arisen restlessness and worry are abandoned."

The Buddha explains the eight causes and conditions that lead to the attainment, further development, growth, cultivation, and fulfillment of wisdom that pertains to the fundamentals of the spiritual life.

8 He dwells |seeing the arising and passing away::observing the formation and dissolution of [udayabbayānupassī]| of the |five aggregates that are subject to clinging::the physical and mental heaps that are appropriated, grasped at, or taken as self; the fivefold collection of form, feeling, perception, formations, and consciousness bound up with attachment [pañca + upādānakkhandha]|: 'Such is |form::materiality, material existence, experience of the material world, i.e. encompassing both one's body and external objects, whether near or far, gross or subtle, deficient or refined; first of the five aggregates [rūpa]|, such is the arising of form, such is the passing away of form; such is |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling felt on contact through eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, mind; second of the five aggregates [vedanā]|, such is the arising of felt experience, such is the passing away of felt experience; such is |perception::The mental process of recognizing and giving meaning to experience. It marks things by signs, labels, or associations drawn from memory and the field of contact. Perception shapes how one experiences the world; third of the five aggregates [sañña]|, such is the arising of perception, such is the passing away of perception; such are |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, choices; mental and bodily volitional activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); kamma-producing processes; fourth of the five aggregates [saṅkhāra]|, such is the arising of intentional constructs, such is the passing away of intentional constructs; such is |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object; fifth of the five aggregates [viññāṇa]|, such is the arising of consciousness, such is the passing away of consciousness.' This, bhikkhus, is the eighth cause, the eighth condition that leads to the attainment, further development, growth, cultivation, and fulfillment of wisdom that pertains to the fundamentals of the spiritual life.

An Anthology of Discourses from the Pali Canon

### 5. The Way to a Fortunate rebirth 1. The Law of kamma 1. [Four Kinds of Kamma - AN 4.232](/an4.232) 2. Why Beings Fare as They Do after Death - MN 41 3. Kamma and Its Fruits - MN 135 2. Merit. The Key to Good fortune 1. [Meritorious Deeds - ITI 22](/iti22) 2. Three Bases of Merit - AN 8.36 3. The Best Kinds of Confidence - AN 4.34 3. Giving 1. [If People Knew the Result of Giving - ITI 26](/iti26) 2. [Reasons for Giving - AN 8.33](/an8.33) 3. The Gift of Food - AN 4.57 4. [A Superior Person's Gifts - AN 5.148](/an5.148) 5. [Mutual Support - ITI 107](/iti107) 6. Rebirth on Account of Giving - AN 8.35 4. Moral discipline 1. The Five Precepts - AN 8.39 2. [The Uposatha Observance - AN 8.41](/an8.41) 5. Meditation 1. [The Development of Loving-Kindness](/iti27) 2. [The Four Divine Abodes - MN 99](/mn99#path-to-companionship-with-brahm) 3. Insight Surpasses All - AN 9.20

The Buddha explains how to cultivate the higher mind through similes whenever a harmful or unwholesome thought associated with desire, aversion, or delusion arises. Applying these five methods in a gradual sequence leads to abandoning of unwholesome thoughts, and to steadiness, calming, unification and collectedness of the mind.

This is called, bhikkhus, a bhikkhu who is skilled in the shaping of thoughts. Whatever thought he wishes to think, he will think it. Whatever thought he does not wish to think, he will not think it. He has cut off |craving::wanting, yearning, longing, attachment, lit. thirst [taṇha]|, uprooted the |fetters::chains, bonds, attachments, thing which binds [saṁyojana]|, and through the full understanding of |conceit::self-view expressed as comparison—seeing oneself as superior, inferior, or equal; the persistent “I am” conceit (asmimāna) that underlies identification and fuels rebirth [māna]|, he has made an end of |suffering::from intense and painful suffering to the mildest of discontentedness, stress, unsatisfactoriness, dis-ease [dukkha]|."

The Buddha explains how to rein in the mind when desire, passion, aversion, illusion, or repulsion arises in regard to the six sense bases using the simile of a watchman and an ox and the simile of a lute.

He would then split that lute into ten or even a hundred pieces. After splitting it into ten or a hundred pieces, he would break it down into splinters. After breaking it into splinters, he would burn it in the fire. After burning it in the fire, he would reduce it to ashes. After reducing it to ashes, he would either scatter it into the great wind or let it be washed away by a swift-flowing river.

The Buddha describes the four kinds of kamma (actions) and their results in detail.

And what, bhikkhus, is kamma that is dark with dark results? Here, bhikkhus, someone generates |bodily constructions::bodily processes associated with breathing, specifically the in-and-out breath. It encompasses the physical movements and sensations that arise from the act of breathing. [kāyasaṅkhāra]| that are |afflictive::hurtful, harmful [sabyābajjha]|, |verbal constructions::mental speech processes, such as internal talk, thoughts in language, or verbal intentions in the mind [vacīsaṅkhāra]| that are afflictive, and |mental constructions::mental impulses such as perception, feeling, and intention that initiate or shape mental action [cittasaṅkhāra]| that are afflictive. Having generated bodily, verbal, and mental constructions that are afflictive, he is reborn in an afflictive world. Being reborn in an afflictive world, he is affected by contacts that are afflictive. Being contacted by those afflictive contacts, he experiences afflictive feeling — exclusively painful — just like the beings living in hell. This, bhikkhus, is called kamma that is dark with dark results.

Dhammapada verses 129-145 explore the themes of non-violence, the consequences of harmful actions, and the importance of self-discipline. Through metaphors of a broken gong, a well-trained horse, and skilled artisans, the verses emphasize that true purification comes not from external austerities but from inner restraint, mindfulness, and ethical conduct. The inevitability of death and the suffering caused by harming others are highlighted alongside the rewards of peace and wisdom for those who cultivate virtuous behavior.

Do not speak |harshly::severely, sharply [pharusa]| to anyone, for if spoken to, they might respond to you; Indeed, |angry words::quarrelsome speech, argumentative talk [sārambhakathā]| bring suffering, and retaliation may |affect::harm, impact [phuseyyu]| you.

Everything, when not directly known, not completely comprehended, not detached from, and not let go of, is incapable of resulting in the wearing away of suffering.

The eye, bhikkhus, when not directly known, not completely comprehended, not detached from, and not let go of, is incapable of resulting in the wearing away of suffering. |forms::visible objects such as beautiful sights, faces, expressions, art, ornaments, possessions, status symbols, admired appearances, enticing scenery, or objects of desire and attachment [rūpe]|, when not directly known, not completely comprehended, not detached from, and not let go of, lack this capability. |Eye-consciousness::awareness of visible forms; it does not interpret or recognize meaning—only cognizes and knows [cakkhuviññāṇa]|, when not directly known, not completely comprehended, not detached from, and not let go of, lacks this capability. |Eye-contact::the meeting of eye, form, and eye-consciousness, giving rise to a visual impression/impingement/intrusion [cakkhusamphassa]|, when not directly known, not completely comprehended, not detached from, and not let go of, lacks this capability. Whatever |feeling::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, the felt experience, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| arises conditioned by eye-contact, whether it be pleasant, painful or neither pleasant-nor-painful, all, when not directly known, not completely comprehended, not detached from, and not let go of, is incapable of resulting in the wearing away of suffering.

Short teachings on the benefits of cultivating mindfulness of the body.

"One factor, bhikkhus, when developed and extensively cultivated, leads to the breakthrough to wisdom ... to extinction without |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]|. What one factor? Mindfulness of the body. This one factor, bhikkhus, when developed and extensively cultivated, leads to the breakthrough to wisdom ... to extinction without clinging."

The Buddha has gone beyond all speculative views. He states the spiritual goal with the simile of a fire and explains how the Tathāgata is freed from classification by the aggregates.

Vaccha, the view 'the world is eternal' is a view, a tangle of views, a thicket of views, a distortion of views, a writhing of views, a fetter of views. It is accompanied by suffering, distress, despair, and fever, and does not lead to disenchantment, dispassion, cessation, tranquility, higher knowledge, awakening, or Nibbāna. The view 'the world is not eternal' ... The view 'the world is finite' ... The view 'the world is infinite' ... The view 'the soul and the body are the same' ... The view 'the soul is one thing and the body is another' ... The view 'the Tathāgata exists after death' ... The view 'the Tathāgata does not exist after death' ... The view 'the Tathāgata both exists and does not exist after death' ... The view 'the Tathāgata neither exists nor does not exist after death' is a view, a tangle of views, a thicket of views, a distortion of views, a writhing of views, a fetter of views. It is accompanied by suffering, distress, despair, and feverishness, and does not lead to disenchantment, dispassion, cessation, tranquility, higher knowledge, awakening, or Nibbāna. Seeing this danger, Vaccha, I do not take up any of these views.

The uninclined is the ending of desire, aversion, and delusion. The 37 factors leading to the uninclined are described in brief.

And what, bhikkhus, is the way of practice leading to the uninclined? Here, bhikkhus, a bhikkhu produces |a wholesome motivation::an aspiration, a goal, an interest, an objective [chanda]|, |exerts effort::engages in intentional effort [vāyamati]|, |initiates and sustains energy::the initial spark of motivation and action along with the persistence needed to follow through, even as challenges arise [vīriya + ārabhati]|, |uplifts::befriends and holds it up [paggaṇhāti]| the mind, and strives to prevent the arising of unarisen |harmful::injurious, destructive, bad, or evil [pāpaka]| and |unwholesome::unhealthy, unskillful, unbeneficial, or karmically unprofitable [akusala]| qualities. This, bhikkhus, is called the way of practice leading to the uninclined.

The Buddha explains the nutriment and the lack of nutriment for the five hindrances and the seven factors of awakening.

2. And what, bhikkhus, is the nutriment for the arising of unarisen |awakening factor of investigation of states::the quality of discriminative investigation into states, mental qualities and other phenomena; analyzing the teaching as an factor of enlightenment; second of the seven awakening factors [dhammavicayasambojjhaṅga]| and for the development and completion of the arisen awakening factor of investigation of states? There are, bhikkhus, wholesome and unwholesome things, blamable and blameless things, inferior and superior things, and things similar to the dark and the bright. Frequently giving careful attention to them is the nutriment for the arising of unarisen awakening factor of investigation of states and for the development and completion of the arisen awakening factor of investigation of states.

The Buddha reflects on who he should honor and respect after his full awakening. Brahmā Sahampati encourages him to honor and respect the Dhamma.

It would be for the sake of completing an incomplete aggregate of the |knowledge and vision of liberation::understanding and realization of liberation, total understanding of emancipation [vimuttiñāṇadassana]| that I would honor, respect, and dwell in dependence on another ascetic or brahmin. However, I see no one in the world with its deities, Māras, Brahmas, its ascetics and brahmins, kings and commoners, who possesses wisdom and vision of liberation superior to my own, to whom I could honor and respect and dwell in dependence on. Let me then honor, respect, and dwell in dependence on the very |Dhamma::teachings of the Buddha that point to the nature of reality, the ultimate truth [dhamma]| to which I have fully awakened.”

The Buddha contrasts the immature and wise persons, shares on who misrepresents the Buddha, virtuous and unprincipled behavior, wrong and right view, why he dwells in forests and remote lodgings, and the importance of tranquility and insight.

"Bhikkhus, there are these two who |misrepresent::slander, falsely accuse, speak untruthfully about [abbhācikkhanti]| the Tathāgata. Which two? One who is |corrupt::spoiled, seduced, festering, angry, evil [duṭṭha]|, |harboring malice::bearing anger, with aversion [dosantara]|, or one who is |devout::faithful, confident, believing, devoted, trusting [saddha]| |with a wrong grasp::with misunderstanding, with a poor comprehension, with an incorrect understanding [duggahitena]|. These are the two who misrepresent the Tathāgata, bhikkhus."

The Buddha reflects on who he should honor and respect after his full awakening. Brahmā Sahampati encourages him to honor and respect the Dhamma.

Then, bhikkhus, |Brahmā Sahampati::name of the Brahma who inspired the Buddha to teach [sahampati]|, perceiving with his own mind the train of thought in my mind, just as easily as a strong man might extend his drawn-in arm or draw in his extended arm, disappeared from the Brahmā world and reappeared before the Blessed One. He draped his outer robe over one shoulder and raised his hands in reverence towards the Blessed One, and said to him: 'So it is, Blessed One! So it is, Well-Gone One! Venerable sir, those who were the |Arahant::a worthy one, an epithet of a fully awakened being [arahant]|s, |perfectly Awakened One::fully awakened being, fully enlightened being [sammāsambuddha]|s in the past—those Blessed Ones too honored, respected, and dwelled in dependence just on the Dhamma itself. Those who will be the Arahants, perfectly Awakened Ones in the future—those Blessed Ones too will honor, respect, and dwell in dependence just on the Dhamma itself. Let the Blessed One too, who is at present the Arahant, the perfectly Awakened One, honor, respect, and dwell in dependence just on the Dhamma itself.'

The Buddha explains to King Pasenadi of Kosala how to recognize the character of another person.

Venerable sir, these men of mine are thieves, spies, who go undercover to roam and scout the countryside. Once they have scouted, I will then advance. Now, venerable sir, having brushed off the dust and dirt, bathed, applied ointments, with neatly trimmed hair and beards, and dressed in white clothes, they will indulge themselves, fully supplied and engaged with the five chords of sensual pleasure."

The Buddha describes how the diversity of acquisitions is not the cause for the arising of diversity of fevers, desires, felt experiences connected with contact, contacts, intentions, perceptions, and elements. Rather, dependent on the diversity of elements, there arises a diversity of perceptions, intentions, contacts, felt experiences connected with contact, desires, fevers, quests, and acquisitions.

"Bhikkhus, |dependent on::contingent on, supported by, grounded on [paṭicca]| the |diversity of elements::variety of foundational properties making up experience—earth, water, fire, air, space, and consciousness; basis for bodily and mental phenomena; multiplicity of conditioned building blocks mistaken for self [dhātunānatta]|, there arises a |diversity of perceptions::variety of conceptions, manifold notions [saññānānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of perceptions, there arises a |diversity of intentions::variation in volitional aims and mental resolve; diversity in motivational tendencies, goals, or directed thoughts; multiplicity of intention-patterns shaping behavior [saṅkappanānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of intentions, there arises a |diversity of contacts::multiplicity of sensory encounters; variety of experiential junctions where sense faculty, object, and consciousness converge; conditioned points of experience giving rise to feeling [phassanānānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of contacts, there arises a |diversity of felt experiences::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensations, feelings, second of the five aggregates [vedanānānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of felt experiences, there arises a |diversity of desires::motivational inclinations, goal-directed drives, wishful tendencies, aspiring interests, aims rooted in either craving or resolve [chandanānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of desires, there arises the |diversity of fevers::emotional heat of passion and craving; burning impulses, obsessive attachments, infatuations, and restless desire-states [pariḷāhanānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of fevers, there arises the |diversity of quests::variety in pursuits and searches; multiplicity of aims in seeking satisfaction or meaning—ranging from sensual gratification to liberation [pariyesanānānatta]|, dependent on the diversity of quests, there arises the |diversity of acquisitions::variety of gains and attainments; forms of possession, advantage, or profit—material, social, or conceptual—sought or clung to as ‘mine’ [lābhanānatta]|. Diversity of quests does not arise dependent on the diversity of acquisitions, diversity of fevers does not arise dependent on the diversity of quests, diversity of desires does not arise dependent on the diversity of fevers, diversity of felt experiences does not arise dependent on the diversity of desires, diversity of contacts does not arise dependent on the diversity of felt experiences, diversity of intentions does not arise dependent on the diversity of contacts, diversity of perceptions does not arise dependent on the diversity of intentions, and diversity of elements does not arise dependent on the diversity of perceptions.

The Buddha explains the five lower fetters and the way of practice for abandoning them.

Furthermore, Ānanda, with the complete surpassing of |perceptions of form::recognition of matter, concept of materiality [rūpasaññā]|, with the disappearance of |perceptions of sensory impact::recognition of sense impression [paṭighasaññā]|, and non-attention to |perceptions of diversity::recognition of diversity, perception of multiplicity [nānattasaññā]|, a bhikkhu enters and dwells in the |base of boundless space::field of boundless expanse, sometimes translated as dimension of infinite space [ākāsānañcāyatana]|, aware that 'space is boundless.' Whatever phenomena are present there, whether pertaining to sensations, perceptions, formations, or consciousness - he perceives as impermanent, suffering, a disease, a boil, a dart, misery, an affliction, alien, disintegrating, empty, and not-self. He turns his mind away from these phenomena. Having turned his mind away, he directs it towards the deathless element, reflecting: 'This is peaceful, this is sublime, namely the stilling of all formations, the relinquishment of all attachments, the wearing away of craving, dispassion, cessation, Nibbāna.' If he is steady in that state, he experiences the wearing away of the mental defilements. But if he does not experience the wearing away of the mental defilements because of that desire for the Dhamma, that delight in the Dhamma, then, with the wearing away of the five lower fetters, he becomes one due to reappear spontaneously in the Pure Abodes, and there he will attain final Nibbāna without ever returning from that world. This, indeed, Ānanda, is also the path, the way of practice for the abandonment of the five lower fetters.

The Buddha affirms the Four Noble Truths as the core of his teaching and praises venerable Sāriputta’s deep understanding of them, who then expounds the truths, detailing suffering in all its forms, the arising of suffering rooted in craving, the ending of suffering, and the Noble Eightfold Path as the way of practice leading to the end suffering.

And what, friends, is right effort? 1) Here, friends, a bhikkhu produces |a wholesome motivation::an aspiration, a goal, an interest, an objective [chanda]|, |exerts effort::engages in intentional effort [vāyamati]|, |initiates and sustains energy::the initial spark of motivation and action along with the persistence needed to follow through, even as challenges arise [vīriya + ārabhati]|, |uplifts::befriends and holds it up [paggaṇhāti]| the mind, and strives to prevent the arising of unarisen |harmful::injurious, destructive, bad, or evil [pāpaka]| and |unwholesome::unhealthy, unskillful, unbeneficial, or karmically unprofitable [akusala]| qualities; 2) He produces a wholesome motivation, exerts effort, initiates and sustains energy, uplifts the mind, and strives for the |giving up::letting go, abandoning, removing [pahāna]| of arisen harmful and unwholesome qualities; 3) He produces a wholesome motivation, exerts effort, initiates and sustains energy, uplifts the mind, and strives for the |arising::appearance, coming into being [uppāda]| of unarisen |wholesome::healthy, beneficial, useful [kusala]| qualities; 4) He produces a wholesome motivation, exerts effort, initiates and sustains energy, uplifts the mind, and strives for the |stability::establishment, constancy, continuity [ṭhiti]| and |retention::non-confusion and non-decline [asammosa]|, |growth::further development, multiplication [bhiyyobhāva]| and |full development::expansion and maturity [vepulla]| of arisen wholesome qualities — this, friends, is called right effort.

The Buddha describes four ways to attain final Nibbāna with or without exertion.

And how, bhikkhus, does a person attain final Nibbāna without exertion in this very life? Here, bhikkhus, a bhikkhu, having secluded himself from sensual pleasures and |unwholesome::unhealthy, unskillful, unbeneficial, or karmically unprofitable [akusala]| mental qualities, enters and dwells in the first jhāna, which is |accompanied by reflection::with thinking [savitakka]| and |examination::with investigation, evaluation [savicāra]|, |born from seclusion::secluded from the defilements [vivekaja]|, and is |filled with joyful pleasure::imbued with joy and happiness, with delight and ease, sometimes experienced as an intense joy or pleasure, rapture [pītisukha]|. With the |settling::calming, conciliation, subsiding [vūpasama]| of reflection and examination, the bhikkhu enters and dwells in the second jhāna, which is characterized by internal |tranquility::calming, settling, confidence [sampasādana]| and |unification::singleness, integration [ekodibhāva]| of mind, is without reflection and examination, |born from collectedness::born from a stable mind [samādhija]|, and is filled with joyful pleasure. With the fading away of joyful pleasure, he dwells in a |state of equanimity::mental poised, mentally balanced, equanimous, non-reactive, disregarding [upekkhaka]|, |mindful and fully aware::attentive and completely comprehending [sata + sampajāna]|, experiencing |ease::comfort, contentedness, happiness, pleasure [sukha]| with the body. He enters and dwells in the third jhāna, which the Noble Ones describe as 'one who dwells equanimous, mindful and at ease.' With the abandonment of ease and |discontentment::discomfort, unpleasantness, something unsatisfactory, stress [dukkha]|, and with the settling down of |joy and sorrow::craving and aversion, pleasure and displeasure, satisfaction and dissatisfaction, gladness and dejection, positive state of mind and negative state of mind [somanassadomanassa]|, he enters and dwells in the fourth jhāna, which is characterized by purification of |mindfulness::full awareness and recollection of the body, feelings, mind, and mental qualities, observing them clearly with sustained attention, free from craving and distress [sati]| through |equanimity::mental poise, mental balance, equipoise, non-reactivity, composure [upekkhā]|, experiencing a feeling which is neither-painful-nor-pleasant. He lives relying on these five powers of a trainee: the power of confidence, the power of moral shame, the power of moral dread, the power of persistence, and the power of wisdom. These five spiritual faculties develop strongly in him: the faculty of faith, the faculty of energy, the faculty of mindfulness, the faculty of collectedness, and the faculty of wisdom. Because these five faculties have developed strongly in him, he attains final Nibbāna without exertion in this very life. Thus, bhikkhus, a person attains final Nibbāna without exertion in this very life.

The Buddha likens the six types of desirable sense objects to baited hooks, set in the world for the misfortune of beings—those who cling to them fall under Māra’s power.

“Suppose, bhikkhus, a fisherman casts a baited hook into a deep lake. A fish with an eye for bait swallows it. That fish, having swallowed the fisherman's hook, would meet with misfortune and disaster, and the fisherman could do with it as he wishes.

The Buddha explains the four qualities that lead to the benefit and happiness in this life and in the future life.

1 And what, Byagghapajja, is |accomplishment in initiative::accomplishment in undertakings [uṭṭhānasampadā]|? Here, Byagghapajja, a son of a good family supports his livelihood through various occupations - whether by farming, trading, cow herding, archery, government service, serving the king, or other crafts. He is skillful and |industrious::energetic, active, not lazy [analasa]|, endowed with investigation and examination, capable of completing and organizing. This, Byagghapajja, is called accomplishment in initiative.

The Buddha explains how one can verify that they are a stream-enterer by reflecting on the five perilous animosities, the four factors of stream-entry, and clearly seeing with wisdom the noble principle of dependent co-arising.

That is, |dependent on::contingent on, supported by, grounded on [paṭicca]| |ignorance::fundamental unawareness or misunderstanding of the true nature of reality, not experientially understanding the four noble truths [avijjā]|, bhikkhus, |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, and choices expressed as mental, verbal, and bodily activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); processes that produce kamma [saṅkhāra]| [arise]; dependent on intentional constructs, |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object [viññāṇa]| arises; dependent on consciousness, |name and form::mentality and materiality—the integrated structure of mental capacities (intention, attention, contact, feeling, perception) and physical form that together constitute and sustain an individual being [nāmarūpa]| arise; dependent on name and form, the |six sense bases::The six internal sense bases—eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, and mind—are the faculties that enable sensory contact and experience. They are not the physical organs themselves, but the functional conditions that enable consciousness to meet an object [saḷāyatana]| arise; dependent on the six sense bases, |contact::sense impingement, raw experience, touch [phassa]| arises; dependent on contact, |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]| arises; dependent on felt experience, |craving::wanting, yearning, longing, attachment, lit. thirst [taṇha]| arises; dependent on craving, |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]| arises; dependent on clinging, |existence::continued conditional existence, the karmically conditioned mode of being that leads to future rebirth [bhava]| arises; dependent on existence, |birth::rebirth, conception, coming into existence [jāti]| arises; dependent on birth, aging and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair arise. Thus is the arising of this whole mass of suffering. With the |complete fading away and ending::remainderless dispassion and cessation [asesavirāganirodha]| of ignorance comes ending of intentional constructs; with the ending of intentional constructs, ending of consciousness; with the ending of consciousness, ending of name and form; with the ending of name and form, ending of the six sense bases; with the ending of the six sense bases, ending of contact; with the ending of contact, ending of felt experience; with the ending of felt experience, ending of craving; with the ending of craving, ending of clinging; with the ending of clinging, ending of existence; with the ending of existence, ending of birth; with the ending of birth, aging and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair cease. Thus is the ending of this whole mass of suffering. This is the noble principle that has been clearly seen and thoroughly penetrated with wisdom.

A series of questions and answers between Venerable Sāriputta and Venerable Mahākoṭṭhika on clarifying subtle yet important aspects of the teachings. Topics covered include wisdom, consciousness, felt experience, perception, purified mind-consciousness, right view, existence, first jhāna, the five faculties, vital formations, and the release of the mind.

"Friend, with a purified mind-consciousness, released from the five faculties, the |base of boundless space::field of boundless expanse, sometimes translated as dimension of infinite space [ākāsānañcāyatana]| can be cognized as 'space is boundless'; the |base of boundless consciousness::field of limitless awareness [viññāṇañcāyatana]| can be cognized as 'consciousness is boundless'; and the |base of nothingness::field of awareness centered on the absence of any distinct "something" to grasp or hold onto [ākiñcaññāyatana]| can be cognized as 'there is nothing.'"

The venerable Nandaka teaches Sāḷha and his friend about how to independently verify the unwholesome and wholesome mental qualities.

"Come now, Sāḷha, do not [adhere merely] by tradition, by lineage, by rumor, by scripture, by logical reasoning, by inferential reasoning, by speculative reasoning, by acceptance of a view after thorough investigation, by the seeming competence [of a speaker], or because 'the ascetic is our revered teacher.' When you know for yourselves: 'These |mental qualities::characteristics, traits, and tendencies of the mind, shaped by repeated actions and sustained attention, guided by particular ways of understanding; they may be wholesome or unwholesome, bright or dark [dhammā]| are |unwholesome::unhealthy, unskillful, unbeneficial, or karmically unprofitable [akusala]|; these mental qualities are blameworthy; these mental qualities are criticized by the wise; these mental qualities, when adopted and carried out, lead to harm and to |suffering::discomfort, unpleasantness, discontentment, dissatisfaction, stress, pain, disease, i.e. mild or intense suffering [dukkha]|,' then you should abandon them.

The Buddha explains the three unwholesome roots and the three wholesome roots.

And why, bhikkhus, is such a person referred to as one who speaks at the wrong time, speaks falsely, speaks what is not beneficial, speaks against the Dhamma, and speaks against the Vinaya? Because, bhikkhus, this person causes suffering to another through killing or binding, confiscation or blame, banishing or various forms of oppression with the mindset of power and dominance. Moreover, when presented with what is in accordance with facts, they reject it and do not acknowledge it; when presented with falsehood, they do not make an effort to address or correct it, failing to acknowledge: 'This is untrue; this is false.' Therefore, such a person is called one who speaks at the wrong time, speaks falsely, speaks what is not beneficial, speaks against the Dhamma, and speaks against the Vinaya.

The Buddha explains how the notion of a personal existence emerges from the process of perception. A wide range of phenomena are considered, embracing naturalistic, cosmological and sense experiences. An uninstructed ordinary person interprets experience in terms of a self, while those who have understood the Dhamma have the same experiences without attachment.

He perceives the |base of boundless space::cosmological counterpart of the field of boundless expanse, sometimes translated as dimension of infinite space [ākāsānañcāyatana]| as the base of boundless space. Having perceived the base of boundless space as the base of boundless space, he conceives [himself as] the base of boundless space, he conceives [himself] in the base of boundless space, he conceives [himself apart] from the base of boundless space, he conceives the base of boundless space to be 'mine,' he delights in the base of boundless space. Why is that? Because he has not fully understood it, I say.

The Buddha teaches in detail how to develop mindfulness while breathing in and out through sixteen naturally unfolding steps, showing how their cultivation fulfills the four establishments of mindfulness, which in turn fulfill the seven factors of awakening, culminating in true knowledge and liberation.

Here, bhikkhus, a bhikkhu cultivates the awakening factor of mindfulness, which is |supported by seclusion::dependent on detachment, by means of disengagement [vivekanissita]|, |supported by dispassion::based on fading of desire [virāganissita]|, |based on ending::supported by cessation [nirodhanissita]|, and |culminates in complete relinquishment::ripens in release, culminating in letting go [vossaggapariṇāmī]|. He cultivates the awakening factor of investigation of states ... awakening factor of energy ... awakening factor of joy ... awakening factor of tranquility ... awakening factor of collectedness ... awakening factor of equanimity, which is supported by seclusion, supported by dispassion, based on ending, and culminates in complete relinquishment.

The Buddha describes the three divine messengers that appear among human beings and what happens to those who do not heed their message.

"Here, bhikkhus, a certain person engages in |bodily misconduct::killing living beings, harming others, theft, or sexual misconduct [kāyaduccarita]|, |verbal misconduct::false speech, harsh speech, divisive speech, idle chatter [vacīduccarita]|, and |mental misconduct::yearning with strong eagerness and desire, having ill will or hatred, delighting in harm [manoduccarita]|. Having engaged in misconduct by way of body, speech, and mind, after the breaking up of the body at death, they are |reborn in a state of loss::in a state of misery [apāya]|, in a bad destination, in the |realms of downfall::in realms of misery [vinipāta]|, in |hell::a place of intense suffering, lit. no good fortune [niraya]|. Bhikkhus, then the hell wardens seize that person by both arms and present them to |King Yama::lord of the underworld, who acts as a moral examiner and questions the recently deceased about their failure to heed the divine messengers—aging, illness, and death. He reminds beings that they alone are responsible for their past deeds [yama]|, saying: 'This man, your majesty, did not respect their mother, did not respect their father, did not respect ascetics, did not respect the |Brahmans::a title used by the Buddha for an Arahant, an awakened being [brahmañña]|, and did not respect the elders in their family. May your majesty impose due punishment on him.'

The Buddha explains the six kinds of persons found existing in the world based on their mental qualities and understanding of the teachings.

3 Here, Ānanda, there is a certain person who has |anger and pride::temper and superiority [kodhamāna]| ingrained within, and from time to time, |greed::a grasping mental quality of craving, possessiveness, or lustful wanting that clings to objects or experiences; it fuels attachment and obstructs renunciation and contentment [lobha]| arises within them. They have not heard the teachings, nor become learned in them, nor have they penetrated them by view, and they do not attain even temporary liberation. After the breakup of the body, after death, they go towards a state of decline, not towards distinction; they are indeed on a path of decline, not on a path of distinction.

The Buddha explains how even small attachments can be strong fetters if not relinquished, using similes of a quail and an elephant, and contrasts between the poor and wealthy. He describes four types of practitioners based on their response to attachment and mindfulness. The discourse also presents gradual refinement of meditative attainments from the first jhāna to the cessation of perception and feeling.

1) Here, Udāyī, a certain person practices for the |abandoning of attachment::giving up of identification [upadhipahāna]|, for the relinquishing of attachment. But while that person is practicing for the abandoning of attachment, for the relinquishing of attachment, |memories and thoughts::memories and plans [sarasaṅkappā]| associated with |acquisitions::attachment, taking as mine, appropriation, sense of ownership, identification [upadhi]| |overwhelm::assail, frequent [samudācarati]| him. He |agrees to::consents, accepts [adhivāseti]| them, he does not abandon them, he does not dispel them, he does not put an end to them, he does not eradicate them. Such a person I call fettered, not unfettered. Why is that? Because I have known the particular |difference of faculties::diversity of capabilities [indriyavemattatā]| in this person.

Short teachings on the impossibility of certain events, actions, or outcomes.

"It is impossible, bhikkhus, it is inconceivable that a person having right view, with a |corrupted mind::corrupted state of mind, such as having anger, being upset, or being resentful [paduṭṭhacitta]|, could cause the |Tathāgata::one who has arrived at the truth, an epithet of a perfectly Awakened One [tathāgata]| to bleed. Such a possibility does not exist. But it is possible, bhikkhus, that an ordinary person with a corrupted mind might cause the Tathāgata to bleed. Such a possibility does exist."

The Buddha illustrates that his true inheritance is the Dhamma, not material possessions. Venerable Sāriputta clarifies the practice of seclusion by listing numerous harmful qualities to abandon and the Middle Way that leads to abandoning of them, to clear vision, wisdom, tranquility, to full awakening.

In this case, friends, |anger::rage, wrath, fury, indignation [kodha]| is harmful, |resentment::bearing a grudge, harboring enmity [upanāha]| is harmful ... |contempt::ungratefulness, depreciation, denigration, disrespect, belittlement, disparagement [makkha]| is harmful, |feuding::quarreling, rivalry, opposition, struggle, conflict [paḷāsa]| is harmful, |jealousy::envy [issā]| is harmful, |stinginess::selfishness, meanness, tight-fistedness [macchera]| is harmful, |deceit::trick, illusion, hypocrisy [māya]| is harmful, |treachery::conning, deviousness, scamming [sāṭheyya]| is harmful, |stubbornness::bullheadedness, inflexibility [thambha]| is harmful, |aggressiveness::hostile or violent behavior towards living beings [sārambha]| is harmful, |conceit::self-view expressed as comparison—seeing oneself as superior, inferior, or equal; the persistent “I am” conceit (asmimāna) that underlies identification and fuels rebirth [māna]| is harmful, |arrogance::haughtiness, self-importance [atimāna]| is harmful, |vanity::indulgence, excess, pleasure, intoxication [mada]| is harmful, |negligence::carelessness, heedlessness [pamāda]| is harmful. There is a Middle Way for the abandoning of these harmful qualities, which produces clarity in vision, which produces wisdom, which leads to tranquility, to directly knowing, to full awakening, to Nibbāna. What, friends, is the Middle Way that produces clarity in vision, wisdom, and that leads to tranquility, directly knowing, full awakening, and Nibbāna? It is just this Noble Eightfold Path; that is, right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right collectedness. This, friends, is the Middle Way that produces clarity in vision, wisdom, and that leads to tranquility, directly knowing, full awakening, and Nibbāna.”

Venerable Sāriputta gives a detailed explanation of right view, the first factor of the noble eightfold path. At the prompting of the other bhikkhus, he approaches the topic from a wide range of perspectives.

"There might be, friends. When, friends, a noble disciple understands suffering, the origin of suffering, the ending of suffering, and the way of practice leading to the ending of suffering — to this extent, friends, a noble disciple possesses right view, his view straight, equipped with experiential confidence in the Dhamma, having arrived at this true Dhamma. What, friends, is suffering, what is the origin of suffering, what is the ending of suffering, what is the way of practice leading to the ending of suffering? Birth is suffering, aging is suffering, death is suffering; sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair are suffering; association with the disliked is suffering, separation from the liked is suffering, not getting what one wants is also suffering; in brief, the five aggregates subject to |clinging::grasping/holding on| are suffering — this, friends, is called suffering. And what, friends, is the arising of suffering? It is this craving that leads to renewed |existence::continued conditional existence, the karmically conditioned mode of being that leads to future rebirth [bhava]|, accompanied by |delight::pleasure, enjoyment, relish [nandi]| and |passion::intense desire, strong emotion, infatuation, obsession, lust [rāga]|, i.e. |seeking delight here and there::thoroughly enjoying this and that [tatratatrābhinandī]|—namely, craving for sensual pleasure, |craving for becoming::craving for existence, craving for something to be [bhavataṇhā]|, and |craving for non-becoming::A craving to end suffering through erasure of current experience or identity, e.g. “This self is unbearable; I want out.” [vibhavataṇhā]| — this, friends, is called the arising of suffering. And what, friends, is the ending of suffering? It is the |complete fading away and ending::remainderless dispassion and cessation [asesavirāganirodha]| of that very craving, giving up of it, |relinquishing of it::abandoning of it, complete giving up of it [paṭinissagga]|, freedom from it, and |non-reliance on::non-attachment to [anālaya]| it — this, friends, is called the ending of suffering. And what, friends, is the |way of practice leading to the ending of suffering::i.e. the Noble Eightfold Path consisting of right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right collectedness [dukkhanirodhagāmī]|? It is this very Noble Eightfold Path, namely: right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and |right collectedness::stability of mind, stillness of mind, mental composure [samādhi]| — this, friends, is called the way of practice leading to the ending of suffering.

The Buddha teaches the bhikkhus how to reflect on a dependence that one is taking using the example of a suitable place to live - a forest retreat, a village, a market town, a city, a country. He concludes with an example of depending on a certain person.

Bhikkhus, here a bhikkhu dwells in dependence on a forest retreat. However, while dwelling there, his unestablished mindfulness does not become established, his distracted mind does not become collected, the taints that are not exhausted do not come to exhaustion, and he does not attain the unattained supreme security from bondage. Yet, the requisites of life that should be obtained by one gone forth — robes, alms-food, resting place, and medicinal requisites, are easily obtained. On account of that, bhikkhus, that bhikkhu should reflect thus: 'I am dwelling in dependence on this forest retreat. However, my unestablished mindfulness does not become established, my distracted mind does not become collected, the taints that are not exhausted do not come to exhaustion, and I do not attain the unattained supreme security from bondage. Yet, the requisites of life that should be obtained by one gone forth — robes, alms-food, resting place, and medicinal requisites, are easily obtained. However, it was not for the sake of robes that I went forth from the household life into homelessness, nor for the sake of alms-food, nor for the sake of a resting place, nor for the sake of medicinal requisites for the sick. Moreover, while I dwell in dependence on this forest retreat, my unestablished mindfulness does not become established, my distracted mind does not become collected, the taints that are not exhausted do not come to exhaustion, and I do not attain the unattained supreme security from bondage.' Having reflected thus, that bhikkhu should with a sense of urgency, depart from that forest retreat, and should not remain there."

The wanderer Māgaṇḍiya holds the view that sensual indulgence is spiritual growth and harshly criticizes the Buddha for teaching sense restraint, calling him a destroyer of spiritual growth. The Buddha skilfully reveals the true nature of sensual pleasures through vivid similes such as a leper finding relief by scorching himself over burning coals and a blind man mistaking a filthy rag for a spotless white cloth.

In the same way, Māgaṇḍiya, if I were to teach you the Dhamma, saying, ‘This is that health, this is that Nibbāna,’ and you were to truly know that health and see that Nibbāna, then together with the arising of that vision, your desire and lust for the |five aggregates that are subject to clinging::the physical and mental heaps that are appropriated, grasped at, or taken as self; the fivefold collection of form, feeling, perception, formations, and consciousness bound up with attachment [pañca + upādānakkhandha]| would be abandoned. And you might reflect thus: ‘For such a long time, I have been tricked, deceived, and misled by this mind. For I clung only to |form::a visible object such as a beautiful sight, a face, an expression, art, ornament, possession, status symbol, admired appearance, or enticing scenery—anything seen that can produce desire, attachment, or self-view [rūpa]|, clung only to |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling, second of the five aggregates [vedanā]|, clung only to |perception::The mental process of recognizing and giving meaning to experience. It marks things by signs, labels, or associations drawn from memory and the field of contact. Perception shapes how one experiences the world; third of the five aggregates [sañña]|, clung only to |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, and choices expressed as mental, verbal, and bodily activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); processes that produce kamma [saṅkhāra]|, and clung only to |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object [viññāṇa]|. Dependent on my |clinging::grasping, acquiring, appropriating, taking possession, identifying [upādāna]|, |existence::continued conditional existence, the karmically conditioned mode of being that leads to future rebirth [bhava]| arose; dependent on existence, birth arose; dependent on birth, aging and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair came to be. Thus this entire mass of suffering came into being.”

The Buddha answers the questions of the reputed brahmin Caṅkī's learned student, who asks the Buddha on how there is preservation of truth, awakening to the truth, final arrival at the truth, and what is most helpful for the final arrival at the truth.

“But what, sir Gotama, is most helpful for giving ear? We ask sir Gotama about the thing most helpful for giving ear.” “Paying respect is most helpful for giving ear, Bhāradvāja. If one does not pay respect, one will not give ear; but because one pays respect, one gives ear. That is why paying respect is most helpful for giving ear.”

Venerable Ānanda recollects the wonderful and marvelous qualities of the Tathāgata, the Buddha, relating to his conception and birth. The Buddha then caps it off by sharing what he considers the most wonderful and marvelous quality of all.

I heard and learned this, venerable sir, from the Blessed One’s own lips: ‘When, Ānanda, the Bodhisatta, having passed away from the Tusita heaven, enters his mother’s womb, then in this world with its deities, |Māras::demons, tempters, beings of delusion|, |Brahmas::Gods; celestial beings residing in the Brahmā realms, often considered to be highly refined and long-lived deities. [brahmā]|, with its generation of ascetics and brahmins, kings and commoners, an immeasurable and glorious light appears in the world, surpassing the splendor of the deities. Even in those spaces between the worlds—abysmal, gloomy, and shrouded in utter darkness—where the sun and moon, though so powerful and mighty, do not cast their light, there too an immeasurable and glorious light appears in the world, surpassing the splendor of the deities. And the beings reborn there recognize one another by that light, thinking: “There are other beings reborn here too.” And this ten-thousandfold world system shudders, quakes, and trembles, and an immeasurable and glorious light appears in the world, surpassing the splendor of the deities.’ That when the Bodhisatta, having passed away from the Tusita heaven, enters his mother’s womb, such a light appears—this too I remember as a wonderful and marvelous quality of the Blessed One.

The Buddha uses the simile of a defiled cloth to explain how the mind can be similarly defiled by various impurities, and how it can be purified by abandoning them. And it is through this very practice that one arrives at unshakeable faith in the Buddha, the Dhamma, and the Saṅgha. The Buddha also addresses a brahmin in verses who believes in purification by bathing in river.

When he has given up, |cast off::purged [vanta]|, released, abandoned, and forsaken [the impurities that defile the mind] |to whatever degree::as much as, according to the limit [yathodhi]|, he considers thus: ‘I have unshakeable confidence in the Buddha,’ he gains inspiration from the meaning, gains inspiration from the Dhamma, gains |joy::happiness, gladness [pāmojja]| connected with the Dhamma. When he is joyful, |joyful pleasure::heartfelt or intense joy, feeling of love, rapture lit. lovely feeling [pīti]| is born in him. When his mind is uplifted by joyful pleasure, the body relaxes. When the body is relaxed, he feels |at ease::comfort, contentedness, happiness, pleasure [sukha]|. In one who feels at ease, the mind becomes |collected::composed, stable [samādhiyati]|. Likewise, when he considers thus: ‘I have unshakeable confidence in the Dhamma’ and ‘I have unshakeable confidence in the Saṅgha,’ he gains inspiration from the meaning, gains inspiration from the Dhamma, gains joy connected with the Dhamma. When he is joyful, joyful pleasure is born in him. When his mind is uplifted by joyful pleasure, the body relaxes. When the body is relaxed, he feels at ease. In one who feels at ease, the mind becomes collected.

The Buddha shares the gradual training guidelines in the Dhamma and discipline with the Brahmin Moggallāna. It is through a gradual practice and gradual progression per these guidelines that one attains the ultimate goal of Nibbāna.

When, Brahmin, a bhikkhu is virtuous, restrained with the restraint of the Pātimokkha, endowed with conduct and resort, seeing danger in the slightest faults, and undertakes the training in the precepts, then the Tathāgata further trains him: 'Come, bhikkhu, guard the doors of your sense faculties. Upon seeing a form with the eye, do not grasp at its signs or features. If the eye faculty remains unguarded, detrimental unwholesome mental states such as |covetousness::craving/desire/attachment with strong yearning and eagerness| and grief could overwhelm you. Practice restraint, guard the eye faculty, achieve mastery over it. In the same way, when hearing a sound with the ear, do not grasp at its signs or features. If the ear faculty remains unguarded, detrimental unwholesome mental states such as covetousness and grief could overwhelm you. Practice restraint, guard the ear faculty, achieve mastery over it. Similarly, when smelling an odor with the nose, do not grasp at its signs or features. If the nose faculty remains unguarded, detrimental unwholesome mental states such as covetousness and grief could overwhelm you. Practice restraint, guard the nose faculty, achieve mastery over it. Likewise, when tasting a flavor with the tongue, do not grasp at its signs or features. If the tongue faculty remains unguarded, detrimental unwholesome mental states such as covetousness and grief could overwhelm you. Practice restraint, guard the tongue faculty, achieve mastery over it. In the same manner, when feeling a tactile sensation with the body, do not grasp at its signs or features. If the body faculty remains unguarded, detrimental unwholesome mental states such as covetousness and grief could overwhelm you. Practice restraint, guard the body faculty, achieve mastery over it. Finally, when cognizing a mental object with the mind, do not grasp at its signs or features. If the mind faculty remains unguarded, detrimental unwholesome mental states such as covetousness and grief could overwhelm you. Practice restraint, guard the mind faculty, achieve mastery over it.'

The Buddha describes the four establishments of mindfulness to be cultivated in detail, namely - mindfulness of the body, mindfulness of the felt experience, mindfulness of the mind, and mindfulness of the mental qualities.

Again, bhikkhus, a bhikkhu dwells observing the mental qualities in and of themselves with regard to the |five aggregates that are subject to clinging::the physical and mental heaps that are appropriated, grasped at, or taken as self; the fivefold collection of form, feeling, perception, formations, and consciousness bound up with attachment [pañca + upādānakkhandha]|. And how, bhikkhus, does a bhikkhu dwell observing the mental qualities in and of themselves with regard to the five aggregates that are subject to being held onto as a self? Here, bhikkhus, a bhikkhu understands: 'Such is |form::materiality, material existence, experience of the material world, i.e. encompassing both one's body and external objects, whether near or far, gross or subtle, deficient or refined; first of the five aggregates [rūpa]|, such is the arising of form, such is the |passing away::disappearance, vanishing, subsiding [atthaṅgama]| of form; such is |felt experience::pleasant, neutral, or painful sensation, feeling felt on contact through eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, mind; second of the five aggregates [vedanā]|, such is the arising of felt experience, such is the passing away of felt experience; such is |perception::The mental process of recognizing and giving meaning to experience. It marks things by signs, labels, or associations drawn from memory and the field of contact. Perception shapes how one experiences the world; third of the five aggregates [sañña]|, such is the arising of perception, such is the passing away of perception; such are |intentional constructs::intentions, volitions, choices; mental and bodily volitional activities; thought formations and constructed experiences (including proliferative tendencies); kamma-producing processes; fourth of the five aggregates [saṅkhāra]|, such is the arising of intentional constructs, such is the passing away of intentional constructs; such is |consciousness::quality of awareness — distinctive knowing that arises in dependence on the meeting of eye and form, ear and sound, nose and odor, tongue and taste, body and tangible object, mind and mind object; fifth of the five aggregates [viññāṇa]|, such is the arising of consciousness, such is the passing away of consciousness';

The Buddha explains the difference between cultivation and lack of cultivation with regard to body and mind, and recounts his own journey to full awakening.

Then, Aggivessana, it occurred to me: ‘Suppose I were to take food little by little, just a small handful each time, such as mung bean soup or |lentil soup::horse gram broth [kulatthayūsa]| or |vetch soup::chickpea broth [kaḷāyayūsa]| or perhaps green pea soup.’ So, Aggivessana, I began to took food little by little, only a modest handful each time, such as mung bean soup or lentil soup or vetch soup or even green pea soup, to sustain myself. While, Aggivessana, I took food little by little, a mere handful each time, such as mung bean soup or lentil soup or vetch soup or green pea soup, my body became |extremely emaciated::severe thinness [adhimattakasima]|. Just as the joints of a vine or bamboo are knotted, so too were my |limbs::arms and legs [aṅgapaccaṅgāni]| owing to that |lack of nutriment::insufficiency of food [tāyevappāhāratāya]|. Just a |camel’s hoof::camel's foot [oṭṭhapada]| is worn and [flattened by travel], so too was my |bottom::buttocks, rear end [ānisada]| shrunken and wasted owing to that lack of nutriment. Just as a string of beads is connected, so too was my |backbone::spinal column [piṭṭhikaṇṭaka]| protruding and bent owing to that lack of nutriment. Just as the rafters of a dilapidated hall are collapsed and fallen inward [from neglect], so too were my ribs sunken owing to that lack of nutriment. Just as in a deep well, just the |shimmer of the water::sparkle of the water [udakatārakā]| is seen, so too were the pupils in my eye sockets seen sunken deep down owing to that lack of nutriment. Just as a bitter gourd, cut unripe, is shriveled and withered by the harsh wind and sun, so too was the skin of my head shriveled and withered owing to that lack of nutriment.

The Buddha teaches about integrity, gratitude, how one can repay one's parents, action and non-action, who to make offerings to, persons who are internally or externally fettered, and the importance of right practice and well grasp of the Dhamma. The chapter gets its name from the [AN 2.36](/an2.36) discourse.

"I have heard it said, good Kaccāna, that 'Kaccāna the recluse does not show respect to aged, elderly, senior, long-standing brahmins by rising up, offering a seat, or greeting them.' Is this true, good Kaccāna? Is it correct that you, Kaccāna, do not show respect to aged, elderly, senior, long-standing brahmins by rising up, offering a seat, or greeting them? This is not proper, good Kaccāna."

The Buddha explains the three bases of sectarian views that when closely examined, culminate in inaction. He then shares the Dhamma that is irrefutable, undefiled, blameless, and not disapproved of by the wise.

1 Bhikkhus, I approached those ascetics and brahmins who hold such a doctrine and view as this: ‘Whatever this person experiences—whether pleasure, pain, or neither-pleasure-nor-pain—all that is due to what was done in the past,’ and I said to them: "Is it true, venerable sirs, that you hold such a doctrine and view as this: "Whatever this person experiences—whether pleasure, pain, or neither-pleasure-nor-pain—all that is due to what was done in the past?" And when questioned in this way, they acknowledge it, saying: 'Yes.' Then I say to them: 'In that case, venerable sirs, you must also say that those |who kill living beings::who destroy life [pāṇātipātī]| do so due to what was done in the past, those |who take what is not given::who steal [adinnādāyī]| do so due to what was done in the past, those |who engage in sexual misconduct::who harm others through sexual activity [kāmesumicchācārī]| do so due to what was done in the past, those |who speak falsely::who lie [musāvādī]| do so due to what was done in the past, those who speak divisively do so due to what was done in the past, those |who speak harshly::who speak using rough words, rudely, or in an unkind manner [pharusavācā]| do so due to what was done in the past, those |who chatter frivolously::who talk rubbish, who gossip [samphappalāpī]| do so due to what was done in the past, those who |have intense craving::be greedy, covetous, with yearning, desiring, mentally obsessed [abhijjhālu]| have it due to what was done in the past, those |with a malicious mind::evil-minded, hateful [byāpannacitta]| are so due to what was done in the past, and those |with wrong views::with false beliefs, false concepts, incorrect opinions [micchādiṭṭhika]| are so due to what was done in the past.'

The Buddha describes the wholesome and unwholesome states to the wanderer Vacchagotta, and then answers Vacchagotta's questions about the accomplishments of his disciples.

If, Venerable Gotama, only you and the bhikkhus had accomplished this Dhamma, and not the bhikkhunīs, then this spiritual life would not be complete in that aspect. But since, Venerable Gotama, you have accomplished this Dhamma, the bhikkhus have also accomplished it, and the bhikkhunīs have accomplished it, thus this spiritual life is complete in that aspect. If, Venerable Gotama, only you, the bhikkhus, and the bhikkhunīs had accomplished this Dhamma, and not the male lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, practicing celibacy, then this spiritual life would not be complete in that aspect. But since, Venerable Gotama, you, the bhikkhus, the bhikkhunīs, and the male lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, practicing celibacy, have accomplished this Dhamma, thus this spiritual life is complete in that aspect. If, Venerable Gotama, only you, the bhikkhus, the bhikkhunīs, and the male lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, practicing celibacy, had accomplished this Dhamma, and not the male lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, enjoying sensual pleasures, then this spiritual life would not be complete in that aspect. But since, Venerable Gotama, you, the bhikkhus, the bhikkhunīs, the male lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, practicing celibacy, and the male lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, enjoying sensual pleasures, have accomplished this Dhamma, thus this spiritual life is complete in that aspect. If, Venerable Gotama, only you, the bhikkhus, the bhikkhunīs, the male lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, practicing celibacy, and the male lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, enjoying sensual pleasures, had accomplished this Dhamma, and not the female lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, practicing celibacy, then this spiritual life would not be complete in that aspect. But since, Venerable Gotama, you, the bhikkhus, the bhikkhunīs, the male lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, practicing celibacy, the male lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, enjoying sensual pleasures, and the female lay disciples, householders wearing white clothes, practicing celibacy, have accomplished this Dhamma, thus this spiritual life is complete in that aspect.

The Buddha explains how to completely comprehend the gratification, drawback, and escape in the case of sensual pleasures, form, and felt experience.

Then, having wandered for alms in Sāvatthi, those bhikkhus, after their meal and having returned from their alms round, approached the Blessed One. Having drawn near, they paid homage to him and sat down to one side. As they were seated thus, they said to the Blessed One: “Venerable sir, today in the early morning, after donning our robes and taking our bowls and robes, we entered Sāvatthi for alms. But it occurred to us: ‘It is too early to go for alms in Sāvatthi. Suppose we went to the park of the wanderers of other sects.’ So we went to the park of the wanderers of other sects. Upon arrival, we exchanged polite greetings with them, and after engaging in a friendly and courteous conversation, we sat down to one side. While we were seated, they said to us: ‘Friends, the ascetic Gotama describes the full understanding of sensual pleasures; we too describe the full understanding of sensual pleasures. The ascetic Gotama describes the full understanding of form; we too describe the full understanding of form. The ascetic Gotama describes the full understanding of felt experience; we too describe the full understanding of felt experience. What then is the distinction here, friends, what is the disparity, what is the difference between the ascetic Gotama’s Dhamma teaching and ours, between his instruction and ours? ’Venerable sir, we neither approved nor rejected what they said. Without doing either, we got up from our seats and left, thinking: ‘We shall understand the meaning of these words in the Blessed One’s presence.’”

The Buddha starts out by advising the bhikkhus to eat only during the day, without having a meal at night, explaining the interplay of how pleasant, painful and neither-pleasant-nor-painful feelings can lead to furthering of unwholesome or wholesome states. He then shares on the seven kinds of persons and which kinds must act with diligence. The Buddha concludes by describing how final knowledge is attained gradually.

And how, bhikkhus, is final knowledge attained through gradual training, gradual practice, and gradual progress? Here, bhikkhus, someone who has faith approaches [a teacher]; having approached, he attends on [the teacher]; attending on him, he lends ear; having lent ear, he hears the Dhamma; having heard the Dhamma, he |remembers::memorizes| it; he examines the meaning of the teachings he has remembered; when he examines their meaning, he gains a reflective acceptance of those teachings; when he has gained reflective acceptance of those teachings, |aspiration::interest/desire/zeal| springs up in him; when aspiration has sprung up, he applies his will; having applied his will, he scrutinizes; having scrutinized, he strives; resolutely striving, he realizes with the body the ultimate truth and sees it by penetrating it with wisdom.

Shortly after the Buddha's final Nibbāna, Venerable Ānanda addresses the brahmins Gopaka Moggallāna and chief minister Vassakāra, clarifying that the Buddha appointed no successor, establishing the Dhamma itself as the refuge for the Saṅgha. He outlines ten qualities that make a bhikkhu worthy of veneration and distinguishes the meditations praised by the Buddha from those based on hindrances.

“Surely, when these venerable ones honor, respect, revere, and venerate someone, it is indeed someone who should be honored, respected, revered, and venerated. For if these venerable ones did not honor, respect, revere, and venerate that person, then who would they honor, respect, revere, and venerate—and dwell relying upon?”

Prompted by a misquotation of the Buddha regarding mental versus physical and verbal actions, the Buddha clarifies the nature of kamma and its results. He explains, through a framework of four paradoxical cases, how actions may lead to unexpected outcomes based on prior deeds or conditions at death.

Here, Ānanda, a certain ascetic or brahmin, through application, exertion, inquiry, |diligence::quality of wishing to do one's work or duty well, with alertness, carefulness and care [appamāda]|, and right attention, attains such a |stability of mind::stillness of mind, mental composure [cetosamādhi]| that, when his mind is thus collected, with the |divine eye::the faculty of clairvoyance, the ability to see beyond the ordinary human range [dibbacakkhu]|, purified and surpassing the human, he sees that person—one who kills living beings, takes what is not given, engages in sexual misconduct, speaks falsely, speaks divisively, speaks harshly, chatters frivolously, has intense craving, is with a malicious mind, and holds wrong view—with the breakup of the body, after death, he sees him reborn in a state of loss, in a bad destination, in the realms of downfall, in hell. He says thus: ‘Inaction, sir, there are |harmful::injurious, destructive, bad, or evil [pāpaka]| actions; there is the result of misconduct. I have seen that person—one who kills living beings, takes what is not given… holds wrong view—and I see him, with the breakup of the body, after death, reborn in a state of loss, in a bad destination, in the realms of downfall, in hell.’ And he says thus: ‘Whoever, sir, kills living beings, takes what is not given… holds wrong view—every one of them, with the breakup of the body, after death, is reborn in a state of loss, in a bad destination, in realms of downfall, in hell. Those who know thus, know rightly; those who think otherwise, their knowledge is false.’ Thus, whatever he has personally known, personally seen, personally understood—this alone he clings to stubbornly, doubling down, and insisting: ‘Only this is true, anything else is wrong.’

Venerable Sāriputta explains the four kinds of persons based on their understanding of blemishes and blemish-free qualities. He uses the simile of a bronze bowl to illustrate the importance of understanding one's blemishes and blemish-free qualities.

It is possible that in a certain bhikkhu here, this wish might arise: ‘Oh that the bhikkhus act with honor, respect, reverence, and veneration towards me, and not act with honor, respect, reverence, and veneration towards another bhikkhu!’ And it is possible that the bhikkhus act with honor, respect, reverence, and veneration towards some other bhikkhu, and do not act with honor, respect, reverence, and veneration towards that bhikkhu. Thinking thus, ‘The bhikkhus act with honor, respect, reverence, and veneration towards some other bhikkhu, and do not act with honor, respect, reverence, and veneration towards me,’ he becomes angry and displeased. Both that anger and displeasure, friend, are a blemish.

Using the simile of an elephant’s footprint, the Buddha illustrates how confidence in him develops gradually through practice. A noble disciple trains in conduct, sense restraint, contentment, and mindfulness, progressing through the jhānas. Unshakable confidence in the Buddha, Dhamma, and Saṅgha arises through direct knowledge and liberation.

Upon seeing a form with the eye, he does not |grasp at its prominent features::focusing on its external characteristics [nimittaggāhī]| nor is |enticed by the details::focusing on the secondary characteristics [anubyañjanaggāhī]|. Since if he were to dwell with the eye faculty unguarded, |unwholesome::unhealthy, unskillful, unbeneficial, or karmically unprofitable [akusala]| states of |craving and distress::greediness and dissatisfaction, wanting and unhappiness, craving and aversion [abhijjhā + domanassa]| might invade him. Therefore, he undertakes the restraint of the eye faculty, he guards the eye faculty, and he achieves restraint over the eye faculty. Upon hearing a sound with the ear ... upon smelling an odor with the nose ... upon tasting a flavor with the tongue ... upon touching a tangible object with the body ... upon cognizing a |mental object::a mind object such as a thought, idea, memory, intention, emotion, image, or concept arising within the mind that becomes the object of awareness, reflection, craving, or aversion [dhamma]| with the mind, he does not grasp at its prominent features nor is enticed by the details. Since if he were to dwell with the mind faculty unguarded, unwholesome states of craving and distress might invade him. Therefore, he undertakes the restraint of the mind faculty, he guards the mind faculty, and he achieves restraint over the mind faculty. Endowed with this noble aggregate of restraint of the senses, he personally experiences blameless happiness within.

When a bhikkhu who has left the Dhamma and training is disparaging the Buddha's states as merely human and his teaching as merely leading to the ending of suffering, the Buddha counters that this is in fact praise and goes on to enumerate his various attainments.

I know hell, Sāriputta, and the path to hell, and the practice that leads to hell; and how someone who practices that way, with the breaking up of the body, after death, arises in a state of loss, a bad destination, a plane of misery, in hell — I know that too. I know the animal realm, Sāriputta, and the path to the animal realm, and the practice that leads to the animal realm; and how someone who practices that way, with the breaking up of the body, after death, arises in the animal realm — I know that too. I know the realm of ghosts, Sāriputta, and the path to the realm of ghosts, and the practice that leads to the realm of ghosts; and how someone who practices that way, with the breaking up of the body, after death, arises in the realm of ghosts — I know that too. I know human beings, Sāriputta, and the path to the human world, and the practice that leads to the human world; and how someone who practices that way, with the breaking up of the body, after death, arises among humans — I know that too. I know the gods, Sāriputta, and the path to the world of gods, and the practice that leads to the world of gods; and how someone who practices that way, with the breaking up of the body, after death, arises in a good destination, a heavenly world — I know that too. I know Nibbāna, Sāriputta, and the path to Nibbāna, and the practice that leads to Nibbāna; and how someone who practices that way, with the wearing away of the mental defilements, attains in this very life the taintless liberation of mind and liberation by wisdom, having realized it with direct knowledge — I know that too.

The Buddha shares his own journey of seeking the path to awakening, from leaving the household life, to studying under two meditation teachers, to attaining full awakening and an account of teaching the Dhamma to his first five disciples.

Then, bhikkhus, wandering gradually, I arrived at Varanasi, in the Deer Park at Isipatana, where the group of five bhikkhus were staying. The group of five bhikkhus saw me approaching from a distance, and they spoke to one another: 'Friends, here comes the ascetic Gotama, who has given up his striving and turned back to a life of ease. We should not pay respects to him, nor rise to greet him, nor receive his alms bowl and outer robe. However, a seat should be prepared, and if he wishes, he may sit.' But, bhikkhus, as I approached, the group of five bhikkhus could not maintain their agreement. Some came forward to receive my alms bowl and outer robe, some prepared a seat, and some set out water for washing my feet. However, they addressed me by name and as 'friend.'

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