The
regular course lasts 10 days and is very demanding and strenuous.
The wakeup call is at 4AM, last meal is at 11AM (tea and fruit
at 5PM though) and the daily routine includes 10 hours of meditation.
On top of such basic requirements as observing complete silence,
abstaining from immoral acts and intoxicants and adhering to a
strict daily schedule, the hardest thing you encounter in the
course will be facing yourself.
There
are no charges for the courses, donations are only accepted from
those who have completed at least one course.
Truth
be told, they do feed you a bare minimum of Buddhian ideology,
but that is used to explain to you what is going on with your
mind during the course. They make a sincere attempt at it and
also it is told on a few occasions that the whole point is learning
the technique while accepting their point of view is entirely
up to you.
I
did my 2 first courses back in 1999 at the Dhamma
Kamala Center located in the rural province of Prachinburi,
Thailand. Now, after a long lapse, I went for my refreshment course
at Dhamma
Pajjota in Northern Belgium.
A
short video
(5.7 MB) about the observation of breath and bodily sensations
in this technique can be viewed with the free
Quicktime movie player.
On
benefits of meditation practice:
Personally,
I use Vipassana as a tool for cleansing my mind of the so called
"reactive patterns of behavior", the stock of accumulated
emotional and physiological memories. They are recorded throughout
our body and only our subconscious is aware of them. However,
they have a profound infuence on how we behave and feel in our
daily lives. Just think of anger bouts for no good reason, inexplicable
"blues" spells or Freudian slips that we all experience
from time to time.
Various
approaches have been developed to deal with those, from Christian
confession to classical psychoanalysis to dynamic psychotherapy
to Dianetics coaching. They all have their merits and drawbacks,
however, Vipassana is my choice one because:
- it's
highly efficient;
- the
results are immediate and obvious;
- you
do not have to rely on a practioner/shrink/coach;
- it
costs nothing;
- the
methodology is clear and simple, sans psychobabble
or New Age gobbledygook.
The
benefit of such cleansing is the ability to stay in a calmly
aware and emotionally balanced state of mind during your waking
hours and beyond. By 'beyond' I mean the ability to fall asleep
at the drop of a hat and enjoy deep, sound sleep until the alarm
clock brings you back to the mundane reality. One more welcome
change is that you also need less hours of sleep to feel rested
and refreshed.
Having
your mind well balanced, unperturbed by emotions has a four-fold
merit:
- the
overall feeling of serene and mindful happiness - not
quite a rush of adrenaline, nor victorious eation and nothing
like abandon of intoxication or substance-induced bliss. This
one you have to experience to know what it is like.
-
rational, thought-through reaction to daily events and situations
- you do not fall into your usual routine patterns of
behavior nor do you get so easily swayed by a rash of emotions,
in other words, you manage to"keep cool" throughout
the day, increasingly so without having to remind yourself
to do as much;
- more
tolerance towards minor and even major annoyances and discomforts
that previously would have spoilt your day, week, even life,
but now do not even amount to the scenery outside your train
window;
- improved
decision-making ability - it is amazing when you start
noticing how quickly and coldly your brain starts performing,
taking very adult, Solomonic
choices when before you would have gotten bogged by emotional
biases, indecisiveness and unsorted-out priorities.
Another
additional benefit is an increased attention span. By nature,
we are monkeys and our attention never stays on one object for
longer than 3-5 seconds at a stretch, constantly swinging from
one branch onto another.
To
illustrate this on a practical example: sit down, close your eyes
and see how long you can keep your mind observing your breath
without switching to think of something else.
You
are lucky if you will just remember to come back to observing
your breath in 5-10 minutes. Most likely, you will get bored in
a couple minutes and get up to go and do something else, thus
effectively failing the test.
The
increased concentration, the ability to keep your mind
focused on existing in the present moment, brings about 2 major
changes:
- "Cleared
up" sensations: that applies to our sensory, visual
or taste facilities or even aesthetical apprecitation. While
the untrained mind neary constanty stays "dimmed",
"hazed", even without us noticing that,
- The
fact that your mind does not travel any more between regurgitating
on the past events and anticipating future ones results in
the boosted enjoyment of "living here and now",
the ability that we, more often than not, never miss since
we neither have it nor know what it is.
This
state of being "plugged in into the actual reality",
mentally focused and emotionally poised, goes hand in hand with
an almost mystical experience when you start having what I would
call "epiphanies of wisdom". In other words,
you begin internalizing
a lot of life truths that you possibly have heard before, even
accepted them on the intelectual level, but they have never had
any bearing on your life.
A
bit of theory.
In
Buddhist philosophy wisdom, knowledge is classified into 3 types:
- preached
wisdom (sutamaya panya) - something that you have heard
and read and you know about it;
- acquired
widsom (jintamaya panya) - something that you accepted
on the intellectual level beause it apppears sensible or logical
to you;
- empirical
wisdom (bhavanamaya panya) - knowledge that has become
a part of our value system.
To
use a real life example: remember all the wise words your parents
had told you when you were a teenager but you only realized how
true they were when you grew up (and in some cases it was already
too late).
This
sort of experiential wisening up happens at a rapid progression
when you start practising Vipassana.
Among
very welcome side effects of Vipassana are such things like ridding
of various psychosomatic conditions like insomnia, irritabillity,
inexplicable pains here and there, even gastratis, ulcer, migraine,
hypertension and many more . For example, during my first course
I kissed goodbye my recurring knee ache that had been bugging
my existence ever since I was 6 and no doctor could explain, let
alone, treat it.
To
summarize, the benefits of practicing Vipassana are numerous and
substantial, while the only "drawback"I see is that
it takes a lot of effort and motivation. It is not something you
can relegate to your shrink or a Supreme Deity, acquire from a
textbook or an audio course.
One
more important point: all those benefits are not mysteriously
vouchsafed unto you upon the completion fo a 10-day course. They
come about as the result of a long mindful and persistent meditation
effort, gradually increasing in quality and quantity in commesuration
with how much you invest into the practice.
Also,
Vipassana is not the be and begin of all. While it is a great
tool for self-development, it won't add much Like my Mom says:
"You can only pour out of the jug what you put in there."
If
you are interested to find out more on practical and theoretical
aspects explained in plain English you can check more information
about what Vipassana
meditation is like and about.
Last
updated 07 Nov 2006
©
1996-2006 A. Mitski