No craving means no suffering
Lanka Jayaratne
The Buddha’s preachings repeatedly
describe man as
being bound and fettered to
suffering. According to the
Buddha, it is the desire for
pleasure with which man is bound to the external world
that forms the fetter. Desire is a very strong fetter
which chains man to the external world and
thereby to the ever recurring cycle of births and
deaths. People world over seek peace and happiness. This is the
reason why people go in search of the truth that leads
to the cessation of suffering. As the Buddha explains
the unhappiness comes from cravings. That is pleasure
that money can buy, power over others and most important
of all, the thought that you would live forever. The
desire for these makes people selfish, and think of
themselves and not worried about others whatever happens
to them.
The only way to avoid this restlessness is to get rid of
the desires that cause it. This is something very
difficult to achieve, but when a man achieves it, he
reaches a state of perfection and calmness. However, by
endless anxiety in seeking pleasure, all the energies
get sapped and as a result man suffer more than he
enjoys in seeking pleasure in this phenomenal world.
The Buddha’s preachings repeatedly describe man as being
bound and fettered to suffering. According to the
Buddha, it is the desire for pleasure with which man is
bound to the external world that forms the fetter.
Desire is a very strong fetter which chains man to the
external world and thereby to the ever recurring cycle
of births and deaths.
This strong fetter has six strands emerging from six
sense faculties, the eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and
the mental faculty. The last mentioned faculty is
regarded as the sense that unifies all the other
faculties.
These sense faculties are called ‘indriya’ in Pali.
Indra means king, since these Indriyas (senses) act as
lords or masters and dominates, we obey them. These
senses are aroused by way of greed.
The enjoyment of pleasure that comes through the five
sense-organs are called ‘Sensual bliss’. The ignorant
man (pruthajjana), the one who does not know the evils
of sensual pleasure spends a great deal of time, energy
and money in the endeavour to obtain as many pleasant
objects as possible. Sometimes this chase after pleasant
experiences leads one to negative forms of behaviour
such as alcoholism and drug addiction. All these
cravings are to satisfy one’s desire for pleasant
experiences. It is like drinking salt water when one is
thirsty. If one drinks salt water to quench the thirst,
it only increases the thirst. We not only crave for
pleasant experiences but also crave for material things.
It is said the desire for acquiring wealth or keeping in
possession is involved with three major sufferings. The
first is the problem of getting them. Second is the
suffering of protecting it. Finally, the suffering of
losing them.
The Buddhism also speaks of another human tendency with
regard to sense pleasure, i.e. dwelling on past sensual
pleasure while neglecting the present. The past sense
objects have already passed and changed, but we become
attached to the memories and thus experience anguish.
Enjoyment of sense objects generates conceit of ‘Seyyamana’,
‘Sadisamana’ and ‘Heenamana’. When we think that we have
a greater share of sensual pleasures than others, we
develop a superiority complex i.e. Seyyamana. We develop
equality complex i.e. Sadisamana by considering
ourselves equal to others. By thinking of ourselves as
being less fortunate than others in the enjoyment of
sense pleasure, we develop the inferiority complex i.e.
heenamana. Therefore, by using the measuring rod of
sense pleasures to quantify status, we become more and
more self centred and suffer the consequences of all
possible complexes.
As a whole one may ask the question whether craving
alone is sufficient to explain suffering. The answer is
no. There is more to it that goes deeper than craving.
There is something which in a sense is the foundation of
craving. That is ‘avidya’ or ignorance.
The ignorance is not seeing things as they really are,
or failing to understand the reality of experience or
the reality of life. All those who are well educated may
feel uneasy by being told that they are ignorant. In
this context it would be of much importance to
understand what ‘ignorance’ means according to Buddhism.
Without the right conditions, without the right training
and without the right instruments we are unable to see
things as they really are. All these facts about the
world in which we live in are known and observed only
because of these special condition. When we say that
ignorance is a failure to see things as they really are,
which means as long as one has not developed one’s
ability to concentrate one’s mind and insight so one is
ignorant of the true nature of things. We fear when we
see a shape of a snake in the darkness by the side of
the road in the night. It could be a tree trunk. Yet the
ignorance makes us to quicken our steps and reach home
perspiring in panic. If there was light, there would be
no fear and no suffering as you would know what was
there. It’s your ignorance that makes you panic.
In Buddhism we speak about ignorance regarding the
fundamental cause of suffering. We take our body or
ideas or feelings as a self, as a real independent ego.
Once we have this idea of self we have an idea of
something that is apart from or different from
ourselves. Once we have this idea of something that is
apart or different from ourselves, then it is either
helpful or hostile. It is either pleasant or unpleasant
to ourselves. From this notion of self we start to
crave. Once we believe in the real existence of
ourselves, that ‘we’ exist in reality, independently,
apart from all others, apart from all the physical
objects that surrounds us, we crave and develop desire
and want those to benefit us and we are averse towards
those which do not benefit us, which cause damage to us
or are unhelpful to us. Because of this failure to see
that there’s no permanent self, desire and ill-will
inevitably thrive. Branches of craving/desire, greed,
ill-will, anger, hatred grow bearing the fruits of
suffering.
How can we eliminate suffering? One can put an end to
suffering by defeating the cause of suffering, i.e. by
eliminating craving, ill-will and ignorance. In dealing
with the truth of the end of suffering, the first
obstacle that we have to overcome is the doubt that
exists in one’s mind whether an end of suffering is
really possible. Whether one can really end suffering or
whether one can really be cured. It is in this context
that confidence or faith plays an important role in
Buddhism. When we speak of confidence or faith we do not
accept it blindly. We speak of faith in the sense of
recognising the possibility of achieving the goal to end
the suffering. The belief in the possibility of being
cured is an indispensable prerequisite. Here too people
may say, ‘how can I believe that the end of suffering is
really possible when I have never experienced it?” As we
all know none of us would have experienced radio waves
were if not for the development of radio receivers, and
none of us would not have experienced microscopic life
if not for the invention of the microscope. So here too,
as regards the possibility of the end of suffering and
the possibility of attaining Nirvana, we ought not to
reject the possibility of attaining Nirvana outright
simply because we have not experienced it, simply
because we have not seen it for ourselves. We ought to
be on guard against dismissing the possibility of the
complete end of suffering or the possibility of
attaining Nirvana simply because we have not experienced
it ourselves. Once we accept that the end of suffering
is possible, then we could follow the steps to achieve
it.
The Buddha described Nirvana as the supreme happiness.
To understand Nirvana one has to experience it through
meditation. |