The Everything Essential Buddhism Book: A Guide to the Fundamental Beliefs and Traditions of Buddhism, Past and Present
By Arnie Kozak
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About this ebook
The Everything Essential Buddhism Book is your beginner's guide to the Buddhist principles of nonviolence, mindfulness, and self-awareness. Learn about the deceptively simple truths of this enigmatic religion, including:
- The life of Buddha and his continuing influence throughout the world
- Buddha's teachings and the Four Noble Truths of Buddhism
- The Noble Eightfold Path and how it should guide you
- What the Sutras say about education, marriage, sex, and death
- The proven physiological effects of meditation
- The growing impact of Buddhism on modern American culture
Arnie Kozak
Arnie Kozak, PhD, is a psychotherapist, clinical assistant professor in psychiatry at the University of Vermont College of Medicine, and workshop leader at the Barre Center for Buddhist Studies, The Copper Beech Institute, and the Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health. He is author of Wild Chickens and Petty Tyrants: 108 Metaphors for Mindfulness, The Everything Guide to the Introvert Edge, The Awakened Introvert: Practical Mindfulness Skills for Maximizing Your Strengths and Thriving in a Loud and Crazy World, The Everything Essentials Buddhism Book, and Mindfulness A-Z: 108 Insights for Awakening Now. Arnie has been practicing yoga and meditation for over thirty years and is dedicated to translating the Buddha’s teachings into readily accessible forms. In the long winters of northern Vermont when he’s not working, he rides the frozen slopes on his snowboard. During the short summers, he golfs. During all seasons, you can find him trail running with his dogs in the foothills of the Green Mountains.
Read more from Arnie Kozak
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The Everything Essential Buddhism Book - Arnie Kozak
Dear Reader,
A worker at my house asked me about the statue that lives on my front porch. His curiosity made me think of why I displayed a representation of the Buddha, an ancient philosopher from a culture very different from my own. I told this young man, He was a wise teacher from 2,500 years ago and his teachings helped to move humanity from a superstitious view of the world that required priests, rituals, and beliefs in order to find salvation to a self-empowered view of human development based on reason, intelligence, and goodness.
The essential teachings of the Buddha are the topic of this book and include the value of living in the present moment, understanding how wanting, clinging, and grasping influences every experience, and how insight into the power of desire can free us from much of the frustration, disappointment, and stupidity that beset human beings.
In other words, I value the Buddha because he symbolizes liberation from an ordinary and limited way of being. By aspiring to work, love, and play with these insights, I can be freer, happier, and more peaceful. I wish the same for you, Dear Reader.
Arnie Kozak, PhD
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The Everything® Essential Buddhism Book
A guide to the fundamental beliefs and traditions of Buddhism, past and present
Arnie Kozak, PhD
Adams Media logoAvon, Massachusetts
Copyright © 2015 Simon and Schuster
All rights reserved.
This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher; exceptions are made for brief excerpts used in published reviews.
An Everything® Series Book.
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Published by
Adams Media, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
57 Littlefield Street, Avon, MA 02322. U.S.A.
www.adamsmedia.com
Contains material adapted from The Everything® Buddhism Book, 2nd Edition by Arnie Kozak, PhD, copyright © 2011 Simon and Schuster, ISBN 10: 1-4405-1028-8, ISBN 13: 978-1-4405-1028-1.
ISBN 10: 1-4405-8982-8
ISBN 13: 978-1-4405-8982-9
eISBN 10: 1-4405-8983-6
eISBN 13: 978-1-4405-8983-6
Cover image © iStockphoto.com/Nisangha.
Contents
Letter to the Reader
Welcome to the Everything Series!
Title Page
Copyright Page
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Buddha, the Teachings, and the Community of Practitioners
Religion or Philosophy?
Buddha versus Buddhism
One Dharma or Many?
Metaphor As Skillful Means
The Axial Age
Terminology
Chapter 2: The Buddha: History and Legend
Siddhartha Gautama
Youth of Luxury and Pleasure
The Four Signs
Going Forth
The Middle Way
Awakening Through Mindfulness
Enlightenment
Chapter 3: The Buddha’s Teachings: The Four Noble Truths
The First Sermon: The Dharma Wheel Turns
The First Noble Truth: The Truth of Suffering
The Second Noble Truth: The Cause of Suffering Is Desire
The Third Noble Truth: Suffering Can End!
The Fourth Noble Truth: The Way
The Basics
Chapter 4: The Noble Eightfold Path
The Noble Eightfold Path
Right View
Right Resolve
Right Speech
Right Action
Right Livelihood
Right Effort
Right Mindfulness
Right Concentration
A Noble Process
Chapter 5: The Buddha’s Ethics
The Five Precepts and Ten Unwholesome Actions
Do Not Destroy Life
Do Not Steal
Do Not Commit Sexual Misconduct
Do Not Lie
Do Not Become Intoxicated
The Five Hindrances
The Four Immeasurables
More Precepts
Chapter 6: The Buddhist Community
The Three Jewels
Monks and Nuns
The First Jewel: The Buddha
The Second Jewel: The Dharma
The Third Jewel: The Sangha
Generosity
Chapter 7: Karma and Worldview
Popular Misconceptions of Karma
Karma As the Ethical Center
Karma and Rebirth
The Three Realms
The Realm of Desire
Dependent Origination
Chapter 8: The Three Vehicles
The Diversification of Buddhism
The Buddhist Councils
King Ashoka and the Third Council: The Council at Pataliputra
Theravada versus Mahayana
Theravada
Mahayana
Bodhisattvas
Differences Between the Two Main Schools
Vajrayana
The East Today
Chapter 9: Tibetan Buddhism
Exile and Diaspora
Buddhist Origins
A Unique Form of Buddhism
The Six Traditions of Tibetan Spirituality
Common Threads
The Quest for the Dalai Lama
Contemporary Tibet
Chapter 10: The Origins and Practice of Zen
Buddhism Moves North and East
Zen History
The Eight Gates of Zen
Zazen
Group Practice
Sesshin
Oryoki
Chapter 11: Buddhist Practice
Why Meditate?
Meditation Gear
Posture
The Breath
Shamatha Meditation
Vipassana Meditation
Other Forms of Meditation
Mantra Meditation
Chanting
Visualization
Walking Meditation
Chapter 12: Life and Death and Other Practical Matters
Children and Practice
Rites of Passage
Education
Visiting Monasteries and Retreat Centers
Marriage
Buddhism and Sex
Women in Buddhism
Death
Chapter 13: Buddhism and the West
Westward Bound
Zig Zag Zen
Thich Nhat Hanh and Jesus
Thomas Merton
The Western Face of Buddhism
The Zen of Everything
Buddhism and Psychotherapy
Buddhism and Technology
Chapter 14: Brain of a Buddha
Brain Basics
The Monk Who Loves Science
Nine Benefits of Mindfulness Meditation
Two Modes of Being
Social Brain
Self-Attunement
Mindfulness Benefits
Chapter 15: Can Buddhism Save the Planet?
Individual Contributions, Collective Problems
Be a BodhisattvaNow: Engaged Buddhism
Mindful Environment
Mindful Politics
Engaged Buddhism in Action
Mindful Leadership
Buddha in Jail
Mindfulness in Health Care
Spiritual Revolution
Chapter 16: Buddha in Daily Life
Mindfulness
Diving In
Contemplative Education
Gardening
Mindfulness in Sport and Exercise
Mindful Yoga
Awake at Work
Spiritual Materialism
Moving Forward
Appendix A: Glossary
Appendix B: Additional Resources
Periodicals and Websites
Book Resources
Introduction
Buddhism traces its roots back to the historical Buddha, a yogi who lived more than 2,500 years ago in northern India. The Buddha discovered a way to live that radically transformed people’s lives, starting with his own. His revolutionary insights have withstood the test of time, and his methods can still transform lives as they did in ancient India. The Buddha taught mindfulness, kindness, and compassion. Buddhism, the family of religions that evolved from the Buddha’s teachings, is one of the great ethical systems that benefit humanity.
While Buddhism may be considered a nontheistic religion, it transcends religious belief into practical experience. You don’t believe in Buddhism; you practice Buddhism. In fact, you don’t even need to be a Buddhist
to practice Buddhism.
In one sense, all you have to do is sit down and meditate with openness, curiosity, and dedication.
At a time when yoga enjoyed widespread popularity, the Buddha was a prodigious yogi. He mastered the yogas of his day and then founded a way that could go beyond all suffering. This way also goes beyond words and needs to be experienced for yourself. The good news is that is available right here, right now.
Jane Hirshfield, in the PBS documentary The Buddha, offers an explanation of the Buddha’s teachings in seven words: Everything changes; everything is connected; pay attention.
This is a nice condensation of millions of words attributed to the Buddha in the Pali Canon. Everything changes; everything is connected; pay attention.
This is the essence of the Buddha’s teachings and these themes and more will be explored in this book.
Buddhism is flourishing in the West. It seems to offer a much-needed antidote to the stresses of modern life. It helps you to renovate your relationship to the uncertainty that arises because everything is changing. It offers a way to revisit your dependence on want so that you are not so beholden to things and circumstances. It facilitates feeling the connection amongst all things. And the Buddhist approach accomplishes all these things through the capacity for attention. Christians, Jews, and Muslims alike can practice aspects of Buddhism while retaining their own traditions and marking their own holidays. From celebrities to the clerk at the gas station convenience store, these vibrant traditions are capturing the hearts and minds of many. Buddhism carries within its belly the power to transform individuals, societies, and the world. It is a practice of interior and exterior revolution.
Western culture is changing the face of Buddhism, as did China, Japan, and Tibet in earlier centuries. Buddhism is not a fixed doctrine but a fluid set of ideas and practices. Wherever you are reading this book right now, chances are there is a Buddhist practice center nearby. After getting acquainted with the essentials of Buddhism in this book, you might want to visit one of these centers and try it out for yourself.
Once exotic and Eastern, Buddhism is now a common section at your local bookstore. Hundreds of titles are published each year. Buddhism is also in the news: the Dalai Lama’s struggle for Tibet, political unrest in Sri Lanka, Nepal, and Myanmar, gross national happiness in Bhutan.
If you are hounded by a sense of lack, dissatisfaction, or are caught up in a web of suffering, Buddhism has something to offer you. If you are concerned about the state of the world and want to engage in conscious social action, Buddhism can give you a path. Buddhism has much to offer, and it may be just what the world needs now to save it from itself.
The Buddha embarked on an adventure to discover his true nature and the true nature of the world. He relied on nothing but his own experiences and invited everyone else to do the same. And now you, too, are invited to have an encounter with these truths and see what Buddhism is all about. It just might surprise you.
Chapter 1
The Buddha, the Teachings, and the Community of Practitioners
Buddhism is one of the world’s great religions. Behind Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism, it is the fourth most populous religion in the world. And the question might be raised: Is Buddhism a religion at all? What is Buddhism, who was the Buddha, and why is he as relevant today as he was 2,500 years ago? Buddhism promises a path to happiness through the eradication of suffering. Can it do this? This chapter will address these questions.
Religion or Philosophy?
Can you have a religion without god, a supreme being that created the world and intervenes in the lives of his (or her) creatures? Does Buddhism qualify as a religion? Or is Buddhism a philosophical and ethical system for living? It appears that Buddhism can be considered a nontheistic religion, according to Buddhist scholar Damien Keown, when considered along seven dimensions common to religion. These seven dimensions include:
Practical and Ritual
Experiential and Emotional
Narrative and Mythic
Doctrinal and Philosophical
Ethical and Legal
Social and Institutional
Material
Practical and Ritual
While the ritual elements of Buddhism may seem bare bones compared to the Catholic Church, for example, Buddhism certainly has rites and rituals that are public and private, many of which are associated with monastic life. Different Buddhist traditions place different emphases on ritual. For instance, Zen is almost entirely ritual compared to other systems like the Theravada.
Experiential and Emotional
The experiential dimension is the most important dimension of Buddhism. The Buddha was the exemplar. He transformed his life not through belief but through experiential practice. And Buddhists follow a similar path. The truth of Buddhism must be experienced personally. Karen Armstrong notes that the Buddha "confined his researches to his own human nature and always insisted that his experiences—even the supreme truth of Nibbana [Nirvana] were entirely natural to humanity." In other words, there is nothing supernatural about the experiences found in Buddhist practice.
Narrative and Mythic
Buddhism is not without its myths and legends, including those surrounding the life of the Buddha, which can be read as a parable as well as a biographical account of the historical figure known as Siddhartha Gautama. There are many narrative elements in Buddhism, including the Jataka tales.
Doctrinal and Philosophical
The Buddha chafed at doctrine
and idle philosophical speculation and sought to teach through direct experience. However, Professor Keown says of doctrine, if by ‘doctrine’ we understand the systematic formulation of religious teachings in an intellectually coherent form,
then Buddhism qualifies as having doctrine in this sense. For example, there are the Four Noble Truths that are the foundation of the Buddha’s teachings.
Ethical and Legal
Buddhism is widely regarded as one of the world’s most ethical religions, having incorporated ethics into the foundation of the experiential practices. The central ethic is to do no harm.
Buddhism is predominately a path of peace. For example, the Dalai Lama has consistently advocated peaceful resistance to the Chinese occupation of his country, an occupation that has, by some estimates, claimed a million lives and destroyed 6,000 monasteries.
Social and Institutional
The sangha is the community of Buddhist practitioners and it is one of humanity’s oldest continuous institutions. Yet the sangha is not an institution in the sense that it has a central authority such as the Vatican. It is a diverse collection of people across nations and cultures that practice the Buddha’s teachings in diverse ways. Buddhism is also a socially engaged religion seeking to make positive changes in society.
Material
The material dimensions of Buddhism are vast, majestic, and colorful. Buddhists have built breathtaking monasteries, caves, and carvings of the Buddha. King Ashoka left a legacy of iconic structures called stupas across India. Buddhist art is colorful and narrative. Buddhists make pilgrimages to holy sites such as the birth and death place of the Buddha and the places where he became enlightened and gave his first sermon.
As you can see, while Buddhism does not have a god and the Buddha is not regarded as a god, it fulfills the other criteria for a religion. You can consider it what you like. You can adopt Buddhism as your religion or you can regard it as a set of experiential practices, such as meditation, that you can integrate with your own religious beliefs. Or, as many do, Buddhism can be approached in an entirely secular manner, as a philosophical system for living, eschewing all rituals, beliefs, and doctrine, just as the Buddha did 2,500 years ago in his search for a way to end suffering. You, just like the Buddha, have the same potential for awakening.
Buddha versus Buddhism
Throughout this book a distinction will be made between Buddha (the life and teachings of Siddhartha Gautama) and Buddhism (the religious institutions that have developed over the past 2,500 years in many different parts of the world). Buddhism often goes beyond Buddha as these social organizations have migrated, proliferated, and developed over the centuries.
The first written evidence of the existence of Buddhism is found 400 years after the life of Buddha. King Ashoka of the Maurya Empire in northern India made inscriptions containing references to Buddhism that date from about 269 to 232 B.C.E.
In the West, both Buddha and Buddhism have been an attractive and ever-growing force for both personal growth and social change. You can embrace Buddha without embracing Buddhism. Buddha requires no beliefs, no affiliations, and, therefore, no conflict with your own belief system, whether you are devoutly religious or an atheist. Buddha’s teachings are universal, transcending time and culture. If you have a mind, then Buddha is relevant to you. Many of the presentations of Buddhism in the West are more Buddha than Buddhism. For example, you will find mindfulness meditation being taught at major medical centers with no Buddhist context or affiliation.
Are You a Buddhist?
How do you become a Buddhist? What does it mean to be a card-carrying Buddhist? Buddhism represents a great diversity of traditions, so there is no single way to become a Buddhist and perhaps, ironically, no need to become a Buddhist.
There is a curious situation in America where many teachers teaching Buddhist meditation would not consider themselves Buddhist,
although they lead lives entirely consistent with the principles and practices of this religion. Buddhism in America has become quite popular, and many people might identify themselves as Buddhists.
According to the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life, as of 2010, 488 million or 7.1 percent of the world’s population are Buddhists. Nearly 99 percent reside in the Asia-Pacific region, where Buddhism started. It’s estimated that there are 3.9 million in North America (1.1 percent of the population) and 1.3 million in Europe (0.2 percent of the population).
One prerequisite to identification as a Buddhist would be to take refuge in the Triple Jewels: buddha, the dharma, and the sangha. Buddha is not just the historical person of the Buddha; it is what the Buddha represents—the potential for awakening (buddha-nature) that you have. Taking refuge in Buddha is not idolatry. Buddhists look to the Buddha as a role model, especially in America (although in Asian contexts it can appear that people are really praying to the Buddha as a god by requesting intercessory prayers). Dharma is the body of teachings that the Buddha taught and also the truths that these teachings point to. Sometimes dharma is translated as the Way
—the way to live to get beyond suffering.
Sangha is the community of like-minded practitioners on the same path. It is the people you might practice with at a local meditation gathering in your community, such as a Zen temple, and all the people all over the world stretching back in time 2,500 years. Taking refuge is an initiation into an awakened life. It is like getting on a raft that will carry you across the river of samsara (endless suffering).
You can also join a sangha by becoming a monk. Monastic initiation is more involved than lay initiation. Many Americans choose to become a monk or a nun in one of the Asian traditions such as Zen or Tibetan Buddhism. To do this, you would have to renounce aspects of your life and take on the monastic vows. In the Zen tradition, you would shave your head and devote yourself to a life of service to your Zen master and your zendo (Zen temple). There is also lay ordination. Initiation into the Triple Jewels is, perhaps, the closest these diverse traditions have to a universal initiation.
For most religions, becoming a member of that religion requires adopting a particular set of beliefs and a corresponding faith in those beliefs. Buddhism is different in this way. There are some core principles that reflect the teachings of the Buddha, and you must be on board with these to be considered a Buddhist,
but these are not articles of faith, like believing in a virgin birth, a creator god, or even an enlightened prophet. They are more practical. Stephen Batchelor, a Buddhist teacher and author, suggests there can be Buddhism without beliefs
and this is also the name of his bestselling book. However, as Batchelor has also pointed out in his spiritual memoir Confession of a Buddhist Atheist, Tibetan Buddhism, for example, does require belief in rebirth. He ultimately rejected that belief for a less doctrinal form of Zen practice.
What Makes You Not a Buddhist
Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche, author of What Makes You Not a Buddhist, provides four criteria to consider. To be a Buddhist, one must accept all four of these tenets or seals:
All compounded things are impermanent.
All emotions are pain.
All things have no inherent existence.
Nirvana is beyond all concepts.
While these might be considered beliefs,
each is based on direct experience, the kind of experience that can arise from your practice of meditation. If you meditate, you will notice that things are constantly changing or impermanent—the quality of your breathing, the energy in your body, and the ceaseless flow of thoughts in your mind. All emotions are pain seems harder to accept; after all, joy is not painful.
But this joy won’t last (since everything is impermanent), and somewhere in the back of your mind there is the recognition and fear that this experience won’t last. There is anxiety lurking behind the joy. Emotions, in this case, might be distinguished from feelings, with emotions being a complex of intense feelings, suffused with thoughts and embedded in a story that eventually