The Beginner's Guide to Walking the Buddha's Eightfold Path

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2002-07-16
Publisher(s): Harmony
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Summary

"Writing a 'nuts and bolts' guide that is genuinely wise, charmingly conversational, and a pleasure to read requires a particular talent, and Jean Smith has proved once again that she has it."Sylvia Boorstein, author ofDon't Just Do Something, Sit There The third of Jean Smith's Beginner's Guides focuses on the Buddha's Eightfold Paththe concepts central to practicing the Buddha's teachings in daily life. The eight steps on the path are: right understanding, thought, speech, action, livelihood, effort, mindfulness, and concentration. Smith explains exactly what the Buddha had in mind, using translations of his own words and then elucidating them for us. Throughout the book are wonderful quotes from a broad range of Buddhist teachers, giving a taste of the very best each of them has to offer.The Beginner's Guide to Walking the Buddha's Eightfold Pathis a prescription for happiness, not just for overcoming suffering, which is how many people think of Buddhism. Here is a book for Buddhists of every tradition.

Author Biography

Jean Smith is the author of The Beginner’s Guide to Zen Buddhism, the coauthor of The Beginner’s Guide to Insight Meditation, and the editor of four much-admired collections of Buddhist teachings: Breath Sweeps Mind, Everyday Mind, Radiant Mind, and 365 Zen. She lives in Keene, New York, and Taos, New Mexico.

Table of Contents

Preface xiii
Introduction to the Eightfold Path 1(7)
Wisdom Teachings
Right Understanding
8(34)
Teachings
8(12)
The Four Noble Truths
10(7)
Impermanence, Emptiness, and Nonself
17(2)
Karma
19(1)
In Practice
20(22)
Dukkha: Pain Is Inevitable, but Suffering Is Optional
21(6)
Impermanence: Aging, Illness, and Death
27(9)
Karma: Living Between Generations
36(6)
Right Thought
42(20)
Teachings
43(1)
In Practice
44(18)
Renunciation or Sacrifice?
45(1)
Thoughts Are Not Facts
46(5)
Feelings Are Not Facts Either
51(11)
Morality Teachings
Right Speech
62(17)
Teachings
63(1)
In Practice
64(15)
Dishonesty Is the Worst Policy
65(2)
Slander: Building Ourselves Up by Putting Others Down
67(2)
Gossip: The Less Said, the Better
69(2)
Harsh Language: Whom Does It Hurt?
71(3)
Listening as Right Speech
74(1)
Silence May Be Golden---or Silence May Be Yellow
75(2)
Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is
77(1)
Walking the Walk by Talking the Talk
78(1)
Right Action
79(32)
Teachings
80(4)
In Practice
84(27)
To Refrain from Killing or Harming Living Beings
86(9)
To Refrain from Taking What Is Not Given Freely
95(9)
To Refrain from Sexual Misconduct
104(5)
To Refrain from Misusing Intoxicants That Dull Mindfulness
109(2)
Right Livelihood
111(21)
Teachings
112(1)
In Practice
113(19)
Work: ``I Am What I Do'' vs. ``I Do What I Do''
113(2)
Work: ``What Do I Do?''
115(7)
Wealth: ``I Am Not What I Have Either''
122(3)
``Spending'' Time
125(2)
Giving Time
127(5)
Mental Discipline Teachings
Right Effort
132(19)
Teachings
134(2)
In Practice
136(15)
Restraint and Abandoning of the Unwholesome
140(4)
Development and Preservation of the Wholesome
144(1)
You Don't Have to Do It Alone
145(6)
Right Mindfulness
151(27)
Teachings
152(9)
Contemplation of the Body
154(4)
Contemplation of Feelings
158(1)
Contemplation of Mind
158(1)
Contemplation of Mind-Objects
159(2)
In Practice
161(17)
Contemplation of the Body
163(9)
Contemplation of Feelings
172(1)
Contemplation of Mind
173(1)
Contemplation of Mind-Objects
174(4)
Right Concentration
178(35)
Teachings
179(4)
In Practice
183(30)
Insight Meditation Techniques
184(6)
Zen Buddhist Meditation Techniques
190(5)
Tibetan Buddhist Meditation Techniques
195(6)
Meditation on the Brahma-viharas
201(7)
Hindrances to Meditation
208(5)
THE WHOLE PICTURE 213(2)
Works Cited and Suggested Readings 215(6)
Glossary of Selected Terms in Buddhism 221(10)
Index 231

Excerpts

Right Understanding

During the late 1980s visitors to New York City's Times Square were surprised and puzzled to observe, among all the flashing neon lights, the enormous words protect me from what I want, center stage on the Spectacolor marquee above them. When artist Jenny Holzer installed this slogan-one of her personal "truisms," about how advertising elicits desire for things we do not need and may not even want-intentionally or not she was making a compelling comment on the Buddha's Four Noble Truths and the barrier to happiness that each of us encounters.

Teachings

The first step of the Eightfold Path--right understanding, also called right view--like many spiritual conditions, emerged from the personal experiences of one individual, in this case the man we know as the Buddha ("Awakened One"). The historical Buddha was born Siddhartha Gautama, a prince of the Sakya clan (Shakyamuni Buddha), in the Himalayan foothills of Nepal in the sixth century b.c.e. Before his birth, a seer had foretold that the child would grow up to be either a great ruler or a great holy man, and his father did everything possible to ensure that Siddhartha would actualize the first possibility rather than the second and succeed him as the chief of the clan. Siddhartha was exposed to continuous sense pleasures while being shielded from anything unpleasant that might divert him from the course his father had set for him. Nevertheless, as an adult, on each of four outings from the palace, Siddhartha had an experience that stunned him. He encountered, for the first time in his life, a very sick person, a very old person, mourners around a person who had died, and an ascetic holy man, a sadhu. Each time, Siddhartha asked his charioteer what he was seeing, and he was shocked to learn that illness, old age, and death are inescapably part of the human condition-including his own-and that there are spiritual seekers questioning just what it means to be born into this human body and to have to endure such suffering.

At the age of twenty-nine, Siddhartha renounced his lavish life, left his family, and sought the meaning of human life among the greatest teachers of northern India as an ascetic who sometimes, it is said, ate only one grain of rice a day. His quest and his subsequent teachings were rooted in their yogic traditions, in which individuals renounced life as householders in order to seek spiritual truth. After six years he realized that he could no more Wnd spiritual answers by living a life of stark deprivation than through princely self-indulgence, and he embraced what has come to be known as the Middle Way between such extremes. On the night of the full moon in May on his thirty-fifth birthday, Siddhartha sat beneath a bodhi (fig) tree near Bodhgaya, in northern India, and vowed not to get up until he had achieved full enlightenment. Over the course of that night, he experienced all the temptations to which the mind is vulnerable, saw human suffering over many lifetimes, and came to understand the Four Noble Truths as well as the law of karma (causality), the impermanence of all conditioned things, and the absence of an autonomous and permanent self.

Excerpted from The Beginner's Guide to Walking the Buddha's Eightfold Path by Jean Smith
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