Does the Goenka style lead to Jhana?
It seems very 'busy' in compassion to other styles (?Mahasi maybe).
Does this method lead to the subtle states of mind I have read other styles lead to?
*Note - I am not asking because I am seeking such phenomena, just wondered really?
Thanks,
M...
Body Scanning and Jhana...
Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
One needs to practise samatha to get into jhana. In a typical 10 day Goenka retreat, one practises samatha for the 1st three days. But one would need to be especially talented or fortunate to achieve jhana in 3 days. I would say its possible but uncommon. Perhaps on longer retreats. However, I think it is less likely with Mahasi methods as they typically go into awareness of various objects from the beginning.Myotai wrote:Does the Goenka style lead to Jhana?
It seems very 'busy' in compassion to other styles (?Mahasi maybe).
Does this method lead to the subtle states of mind I have read other styles lead to?
*Note - I am not asking because I am seeking such phenomena, just wondered really?
Thanks,
M...
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Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
I recall there have been some detailed discussions here on "vipassana jhana" which you might want to search for.Myotai wrote:Does the Goenka style lead to Jhana?
Buddha save me from new-agers!
Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
I think you're right, my fault - will dig that thread out!Spiny Norman wrote:I recall there have been some detailed discussions here on "vipassana jhana" which you might want to search for.Myotai wrote:Does the Goenka style lead to Jhana?
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Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
It struck me a while back that concentrating on the breath and concentrating on bodily sensations are actually quite similar activities.Myotai wrote:I think you're right, my fault - will dig that thread out!Spiny Norman wrote:I recall there have been some detailed discussions here on "vipassana jhana" which you might want to search for.Myotai wrote:Does the Goenka style lead to Jhana?
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Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
In that tradition, there are also twenty- and thirty-day retreats. Jhana becomes an item of discussion during the longer retreats. But Mr. Goenka repeatedly emphasizes that one should not chase after a particular attainment, nor should one cling to an attainment once achieved.
"As I am, so are others;
as others are, so am I."
Having thus identified self and others,
harm no one nor have them harmed.
Sutta Nipāta 3.710
as others are, so am I."
Having thus identified self and others,
harm no one nor have them harmed.
Sutta Nipāta 3.710
Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
This is probably why the in and out breath is classed as a body among bodies:Spiny Norman wrote: It struck me a while back that concentrating on the breath and concentrating on bodily sensations are actually quite similar activities.
MN 118
MN 118: Anapanasati Sutta wrote: On whatever occasion a monk breathing in long discerns, 'I am breathing in long'; or breathing out long, discerns, 'I am breathing out long'; or breathing in short, discerns, 'I am breathing in short'; or breathing out short, discerns, 'I am breathing out short'; trains himself, 'I will breathe in...&... out sensitive to the entire body'; trains himself, 'I will breathe in...&...out calming bodily fabrication': On that occasion the monk remains focused on the body in & of itself — ardent, alert, & mindful — putting aside greed & distress with reference to the world. I tell you, monks, that this — the in-&-out breath — is classed as a body among bodies, which is why the monk on that occasion remains focused on the body in & of itself — ardent, alert, & mindful — putting aside greed & distress with reference to the world.
It's noteworthy also that the text says "sensitive to the entire body" as part of the instructions. Body scanning can be a useful tool in learning to be sensitive to the entire body. This practice is the beginning of a discourse that leads all the way to the final goal of clear knowing and release:Myotai wrote: Does this method lead to the subtle states of mind I have read other styles lead to?
It also says in the same discourse that this practice can bring concentration as a factor of awakening to the culmination of its development:MN 118: Anapanasati Sutta wrote: This is how mindfulness of in-&-out breathing is developed & pursued so as to bring the four frames of reference to their culmination.
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This is how the four frames of reference are developed & pursued so as to bring the seven factors for awakening to their culmination.
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This is how the seven factors for awakening are developed & pursued so as to bring clear knowing & release to their culmination.
Bringing release to its culmination as mentioned above means bringing an end to the fermentations:MN 118: Anapanasati Sutta wrote: For one who is at ease — his body calmed — the mind becomes concentrated. When the mind of one who is at ease — his body calmed — becomes concentrated, then concentration as a factor for awakening becomes aroused. He develops it, and for him it goes to the culmination of its development.
AN 9.44
Ending the fermentations depends on Jhana:AN 9.44: Pannavimutti Sutta wrote: And as he sees with discernment, the mental fermentations go to their total end. And he knows it through discernment. It is to this extent that one is described by the Blessed One as released through discernment without a sequel.
AN 9.36
AN 9.36: Jhana Sutta wrote: I tell you, the ending of the mental fermentations depends on the first jhana.
Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
Thanks everyone...
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Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
Yes, that's a good point.culaavuso wrote:It's noteworthy also that the text says "sensitive to the entire body" as part of the instructions. Body scanning can be a useful tool in learning to be sensitive to the entire body. This practice is the beginning of a discourse that leads all the way to the final goal of clear knowing and release:Spiny Norman wrote: It struck me a while back that concentrating on the breath and concentrating on bodily sensations are actually quite similar activities.
Buddha save me from new-agers!
Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
Good posting.culaavuso wrote:This is probably why the in and out breath is classed as a body among bodies:Spiny Norman wrote: It struck me a while back that concentrating on the breath and concentrating on bodily sensations are actually quite similar activities.
MN 118MN 118: Anapanasati Sutta wrote: On whatever occasion a monk breathing in long discerns, 'I am breathing in long'; or breathing out long, discerns, 'I am breathing out long'; or breathing in short, discerns, 'I am breathing in short'; or breathing out short, discerns, 'I am breathing out short'; trains himself, 'I will breathe in...&... out sensitive to the entire body'; trains himself, 'I will breathe in...&...out calming bodily fabrication': On that occasion the monk remains focused on the body in & of itself — ardent, alert, & mindful — putting aside greed & distress with reference to the world. I tell you, monks, that this — the in-&-out breath — is classed as a body among bodies, which is why the monk on that occasion remains focused on the body in & of itself — ardent, alert, & mindful — putting aside greed & distress with reference to the world.It's noteworthy also that the text says "sensitive to the entire body" as part of the instructions. Body scanning can be a useful tool in learning to be sensitive to the entire body. This practice is the beginning of a discourse that leads all the way to the final goal of clear knowing and release:Myotai wrote: Does this method lead to the subtle states of mind I have read other styles lead to?
It also says in the same discourse that this practice can bring concentration as a factor of awakening to the culmination of its development:MN 118: Anapanasati Sutta wrote: This is how mindfulness of in-&-out breathing is developed & pursued so as to bring the four frames of reference to their culmination.
...
This is how the four frames of reference are developed & pursued so as to bring the seven factors for awakening to their culmination.
...
This is how the seven factors for awakening are developed & pursued so as to bring clear knowing & release to their culmination.Bringing release to its culmination as mentioned above means bringing an end to the fermentations:MN 118: Anapanasati Sutta wrote: For one who is at ease — his body calmed — the mind becomes concentrated. When the mind of one who is at ease — his body calmed — becomes concentrated, then concentration as a factor for awakening becomes aroused. He develops it, and for him it goes to the culmination of its development.
AN 9.44Ending the fermentations depends on Jhana:AN 9.44: Pannavimutti Sutta wrote: And as he sees with discernment, the mental fermentations go to their total end. And he knows it through discernment. It is to this extent that one is described by the Blessed One as released through discernment without a sequel.
AN 9.36AN 9.36: Jhana Sutta wrote: I tell you, the ending of the mental fermentations depends on the first jhana.
My view on this is that the Goenka approach is an alternative route to the full body awareness carried on from mindfulness of breathing that Ven. Thanissaro and others (and the anapanasati-sutta, in my view) recommend, but that Goenka's framework and understanding of this is different and more couched in a Burmese Vipassana context and terminology.
I have done a couple of Goenka retreats and asked the assistant teachers if it is permissable to combine the breath with bodily sensations and they answered yes, so the practical basic differences between say Goenka and Thanissaro are actually smaller than first suspected. If you ask me tho, the Goenka tradition ties in a lot of unique interpretations and later commentarial things that I don't find very useful, but hey, to each his/her own.
Take care!
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Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
Interesting comment. Something I don't really understand is why Goenka's approach is usually labelled as just "vipassana" - isn't it really more akin to the 4 tetrads of anapanasati, ie samatha and vipassana?Goob wrote: My view on this is that the Goenka approach is an alternative route to the full body awareness carried on from mindfulness of breathing that Ven. Thanissaro and others (and the anapanasati-sutta, in my view) recommend, but that Goenka's framework and understanding of this is different and more couched in a Burmese Vipassana context and terminology.
Buddha save me from new-agers!
Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
Yeah, I never really got why either. It seems so much more awkward to to make the technique comform to the Satipatthana-sutta and ideas about momentariness than to the anapanasati-sutta, but it probably has to do with being connected to the Burmese lay-meditation movement in the beginning of the 20th century and to the particular interpretations by Burmese scholars. Just a vague non-professional guess
Also, Leigh Brasington teaches the body scan technique (a'la Goenka) as an alternative to his usual ways of getting in to his version of Jhana (i.e by focusing on the nostrils and piti). Do a search for 'body scan' on his talks on http://www.dharmaseed.org and at least one talk should come up.
Also, Leigh Brasington teaches the body scan technique (a'la Goenka) as an alternative to his usual ways of getting in to his version of Jhana (i.e by focusing on the nostrils and piti). Do a search for 'body scan' on his talks on http://www.dharmaseed.org and at least one talk should come up.
Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
Could you please elaborate on these interpretations and commentarial things Goob?Goob wrote:If you ask me tho, the Goenka tradition ties in a lot of unique interpretations and later commentarial things that I don't find very useful, but hey, to each his/her own.
Take care!
Re: Body Scanning and Jhana...
Hiya,sylo wrote:Could you please elaborate on these interpretations and commentarial things Goob?Goob wrote:If you ask me tho, the Goenka tradition ties in a lot of unique interpretations and later commentarial things that I don't find very useful, but hey, to each his/her own.
Take care!
I'm by all means no expert or scholar when it comes to all this, and I certainly don't want to discredit any teacher or tradition, but it seems to me that the Goenka tradition's strong emphasis on the experience of kalapas and their momentariness are later commentarial developments that I find unnecessarily ontologizes things in a realist way. Not necessarily saying that it isn't true or helpful to some people, it's just something I struggled with accepting before I realised one doesn't have to. Here is a long interesting thread on this very issue: http://www.dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=16&t=10653
I also find Goenka's talk about sankharas as physical accretions of kamma to be burned off both rather unique and strange, even tho, again, they might be useful to some.
Like I said tho, one takes what is useful and sets aside what is not. One the whole the Goenka tradition has been very beneficial to my own practice.
Take care!