Samatha
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Samatha (PÄli), (Sanskrit: शमथ, Ĺ›amatha[note 1] is the Buddhist practice (bhÄvanÄ) of the calming of the mind (citta) and its 'formations' (saáą…khÄra). This is done by practicing single-pointed meditation most commonly through mindfulness of breathing. Samatha is common to many Buddhist traditions, especially those that emphasize meditation.
Etymology
The semantic field of shi and shama is "pacification", "the slowing or cooling down", "rest".[1] The semantic field of nĂ© is "to abide or remain" and this is cognate or equivalent with the final syllable of the Sanskrit, thÄ.[2]
The Tibetan term for samatha is shyiné (Wylie: zhi-gnas ). According to Jamgon Kongtrul, the terms refer to "peace" and "pacification" of the mind and the thoughts.[3]
TheravÄda
Function
In the Pali canon, the Noble Eightfold Path can be summarized into three divisions, namely morality (śīla), concentration (samÄdhi) and wisdom (paññÄ). Mindfulness of breathing leads the practitioner into concentration (samÄdhi), the domain of experience wherein the senses are subdued and the mind abides in uninterrupted concentration upon the object (i.e., the breath), if not in meditative absorption (DhyÄna). It is the condition for insight (vipassanÄ) and subsequently the development of liberating wisdom (paññÄ). In Theravada-Buddhism morality (śīla) is understood to be a stable foundation upon which to attain samatha. Samatha and vipassanÄ form an integral part of the Noble Eightfold Path as described by the Buddha in his core teaching, the Four Noble Truths. The Fourth Noble Truth, "The Way to the End of Suffering", encompassing sÄ«la, samÄdhi and paññÄ, is very much a path inviting practitioners to live by sila, samadhi and paññÄ.
Samatha (calm) is considered to be a prerequisite of concentration. In terms of meditative practices samatha refers to techniques which assist in the calming of the mind. One of the principal techniques taught by the Buddha for this purpose is mindfulness of breathing (Pali: ÄnÄpÄnasati). This practice is also used in order to concentrate the mind. As such, samatha meditation and concentration meditation are often considered synonymous. The goal is the establishing of mindfulness as used in conjunction with insight (P: vipassanÄ; S: vipaĹ›yanÄ) practices, inquiry into the nature of the object, such as those encountered in the dzogchen tradition, resulting in wisdom (P: paññÄ, S: prajñÄ).[4] Samatha is commonly practiced as a prelude to and in conjunction with wisdom practices.[4]
Through the meditative development of calm abiding, one is able to suppress the obscuring five hindrances. With the suppression of these hindrances, the meditative development of insight yields liberating wisdom.[5]
Objects of meditation
Some meditation practices such as contemplation of a kasina object favor the development of samatha, others such as contemplation of the aggregates are conducive to the development of vipassana, while others such as mindfulness of breathing are classically used for developing both mental qualities.[6]
In the Theravada tradition there are forty objects of meditation. Mindfulness (sati) of breathing (ÄnÄpÄna: ÄnÄpÄnasati; S. ÄnÄpÄnasmáą›ti[7]) is the most common samatha practice. Samatha can include other samÄdhi practices as well.
Variations
In the Theravada-tradition various understandings of samatha exist.[note 2]
In Sri Lanka samatha includes all the meditations directed at static objects.[9]
In Burma, samatha comprises all concentration practices, aimed at calming the mind. In the last decade samatha in the Burmese tradition has been popularized in the west by Pa Auk Sayadaw. This tradition upholds the emphasis on samatha explicit in the commentarial tradition of the Visuddhimagga. Pa Auk Sayadaw presented this tradition through extensive retreats around the world until his retirement in 2012. In 2005, Tina Rasmussen and Stephen Snyder completed the entire detailed samatha path under Pa Auk Sayadaw's direct supervision. They were subsequently the first Western lay people whom he authorized to teach.
The Thai Forest tradition deriving from Ajahn Mun and popularized by Ajahn Chah stresses the inseparability of samatha and vipassana, and the essential necessity of both practices.
Samatha and vipassana
The Buddha is said to have identified two paramount mental qualities that arise from wholesome meditative practice:
- Samatha, calm abiding, which steadies, composes, unifies and concentrates the mind;
- VipassanÄ, insight, which enables one to see, explore and discern "formations" (conditioned phenomena based on the five aggregates).[10]
The Buddha is said to have extolled serenity and insight as conduits for attaining the unconditioned state of nibbana (PÄli; Skt.: Nirvana). For example, in the Kimsuka Tree Sutta (SN 35.245), the Buddha provides an elaborate metaphor in which serenity and insight are "the swift pair of messengers" who deliver the message of nibbana via the noble eightfold path.[11]
In the Four Ways to Arahantship Sutta (AN 4.170), Ven. Ānanda reports that people attain arahantship using calm abiding and insight in one of three ways:
- They develop calm abiding and then insight (PÄli: samatha-pubbangamam vipassanam)
- They develop insight and then calm abiding (PÄli: vipassana-pubbangamam samatham)[12]
- They develop calm abiding and insight in tandem (PÄli: samatha-vipassanam yuganaddham), for instance, obtaining the first jhÄna and then seeing in the associated aggregates the three marks of existence before proceeding to the second jhÄna.[13]
In the PÄli canon, the Buddha never mentions independent samatha and vipassana meditation practices; instead, samatha and vipassana are two "qualities of mind" to be developed through meditation. As Thanissaro Bhikkhu writes,
When [the PÄli suttas] depict the Buddha telling his disciples to go meditate, they never quote him as saying 'go do vipassana,' but always 'go do jhana.' And they never equate the word "vipassana" with any mindfulness techniques. In the few instances where they do mention vipassana, they almost always pair it with samatha — not as two alternative methods, but as two qualities of mind that a person may 'gain' or 'be endowed with,' and that should be developed together.[14]
Similarly, referencing MN 151, vv. 13-19, and AN IV, 125-27, Ajahn Brahm (who, like Bhikkhu Thanissaro, is of the Thai Forest Tradition) writes that
Some traditions speak of two types of meditation, insight meditation (vipassana) and calm meditation (samatha). In fact the two are indivisible facets of the same process. Calm is the peaceful happiness born of meditation; insight is the clear understanding born of the same meditation. Calm leads to insight and insight leads to calm."[15]
Indo-Tibetan tradition
Mahayana sūtras
A number of MahÄyÄna sĹ«tras address Ĺ›amatha, usually in conjunction with vipaĹ›yanÄ.
One of the most prominent, the Cloud of Jewels Sutra (Ä€rya Ratnamegha Sutra, Tib. 'phags-pa dkon-mchog sprin-gyi mdo) divides all forms of meditation into either Ĺ›amatha or vipaĹ›yanÄ, defining Ĺ›amatha as "single-pointed consciousness" and vipaĹ›yanÄ as "seeing into the nature of things."[16]
The SĹ«tra Unlocking the Mysteries (Samdhinirmocana SĹ«tra), a yogÄcÄra sĹ«tra, is also often used as a source for teachings on Ĺ›amatha. The SamÄdhirÄja SĹ«tra is often cited as an important source for Ĺ›amatha instructions by the Kagyu tradition, particularly via commentary by Gampopa,[17] although scholar Andrew Skilton, who has studied the SamÄdhirÄja SĹ«tra extensively, reports that the sĹ«tra itself "contains no significant exposition of either meditational practices or states of mind."[18]
Dhyana
Ĺšamatha furthers the right concentration aspect of the noble eightfold path. The successful result of Ĺ›amatha is also sometimes characterized as meditative absorption (samÄdhi, ting nge ’dzin) and meditative equipoise (samÄhita, mnyam-bzhag), and freedom from the five obstructions (Ävaraṇa, sgrib-pa). It may also result in the siddhis of clairvoyance (abhijñÄ, mgon shes) and magical emanation (nirmÄna, sprul pa).[19]
Factors in śamatha
According to Culadasa (2015), "Samatha has five characteristics: effortlessly stable attention (samÄdhi), powerful mindfulness (sati), joy (pÄ«ti), tranquility (passaddhi), and equanimity (upekkhÄ). The complete state of samatha results from working with stable attention (samÄdhi) and mindfulness (sati) until joy emerges. Joy then gradually matures into tranquility, and equanimity arises out of that tranquility. A mind in samatha is the ideal instrument for achieving Insight and Awakening" [20]
Nine mental abidings
In a formulation originating with Asaáą…ga (4th CE),[note 3] Ĺ›amatha practice is said to progress through nine "mental abidings" or Nine stages of training the mind (S. navÄkÄrÄ cittasthiti, Tib. sems gnas dgu), leading to Ĺ›amatha proper (the equivalent of "access concentration" in the TheravÄda system), and from there to a state of meditative concentration called the first dhyÄna (PÄli: jhÄna; Tib. bsam gtan) which is often said to be a state of tranquillity or bliss.[22][23] An equivalent succession of stages is described in the Ten oxherding pictures of Zen.[24] The Nine Mental Abidings as described by Kamalaśīla are:[19][22]
- Placement of the mind (S. cittasthÄpana, Tib. འཇོག་པ - sems ’jog-pa) occurs when the practitioner is able to place their attention on the object of meditation, but is unable to maintain that attention for very long. Distractions, dullness of mind and other hindrances are common.
- Continuous attention (S. samsthÄpana, Tib. རྒྱུན་དུ་འཇོག་པ - rgyun-du â€jog-pa) occurs when the practitioner experiences moments of continuous attention on the object before becoming distracted. According to B Alan Wallace, this is when you can maintain your attention on the meditation object for about a minute.[25]
- Repeated attention (S. avasthÄpana, Tib. བླན་ཏེ་འཇོག་པ - slan-te ’jog-pa) is when the practitioner's attention is fixed on the object for most of the practice session and she or he is able to immediately realize when she or he has lost their mental hold on the object and is able to restore that attention quickly. Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche suggests that being able to maintain attention for 108 breaths is a good benchmark for when we have reached this stage.[26]
- Close attention(S. upasthÄpana, Tib. ཉེ་བར་འཇོག་པ - nye-bar ’jog-pa) occurs when the practitioner is able to maintain attention throughout the entire meditation session (an hour or more) without losing their mental hold on the meditation object at all. In this stage the practitioner achieves the power of mindfulness. Nevertheless, this stage still contains subtle forms of excitation and dullness or laxity.[25]
- Tamed attention (S. damana, Tib. དུལ་བར་བྱེད་པ - dul-bar byed-pa), by this stage the practitioner achieves deep tranquility of mind, but must be watchful for subtle forms of laxity or dullness, peaceful states of mind which can be confused for calm abiding. By focusing on the future benefits of gaining Shamatha, the practitioner can uplift (gzengs-bstod) their mind and become more focused and clear.[27]
- Pacified attention (S. śamana,Tib. ཞི་བར་བྱེད་པ་ - zhi-bar byed-pa) is the stage during which subtle mental dullness or laxity is no longer a great difficulty, but now the practitioner is prone to subtle excitements which arise at the periphery of meditative attention. According to B. Alan Wallace this stage is achieved only after thousands of hours of rigorous training.[25]
- Fully pacified attention (S. vyupaĹ›amana,Tib. རྣŕ˝ŕĽ‹ŕ˝”ར་ཞི་བར་བྱེད་པ་ - nye-bar zhi-bar byed-pa), although the practitioner may still experience of subtle excitement or dullness, they are rare and the practitioner can easily recognize and pacify them.
- Single-pointed attention (S. ekotīkarana,Tib. རྩེ་གཅིག་ཏུ་བྱེད་པ་ - rtse-gcig-tu byed-pa) in this stage the practitioner can reach high levels of concentration with only a slight effort and without being interrupted even by subtle laxity or excitement during the entire meditation session.
- Attentional Balance (S. samÄdhÄna,Tib. ŕ˝ŕ˝‰ŕ˝ŕĽ‹ŕ˝”ར་འཇོག་པ་བྱེད་པ་ - mnyam-par ’jog-pa) the meditator now effortlessly reaches absorbed concentration (ting-nge-â€dzin, S. samadhi.) and can maintain it for about four hours without any single interruption.[25]
- Śamatha, Tib. ཞི་གནས་, shyiné - the culmination, is sometimes listed as a tenth stage.
Five faults and eight antidotes
The textual tradition of Tibetan Buddhism identifies five faults and eight antidotes within the practice of Ĺ›amatha meditation. The five faults identify obstacles to meditation practice, and the eight antidotes are applied to overcome the five faults. This formulation originates with MaitreyanÄtha's MadhyÄnta-vibhÄga and is elaborated upon in further texts, such as the Stages of Meditation (BhÄvanÄkrama) by Kamalaśīla.[28]
Five faults
To practice Ĺ›amatha, one must select an object of observation (Älambana, dmigs-pa). Then one must overcome the five faults (ÄdÄ«nava, nyes-dmigs):[19][29]
- 1. laziness (kausīdya, le-lo)
- 2. forgetting the instruction (avavÄdasammosa, gdams-ngag brjed-pa)
- 3. laxity (laya, bying-ba) and excitement (auddhatya, rgod-pa). Laxity may be coarse (audÄrika, rags-pa) or subtle (sĹ«ksma, phra-mo). Lethargy (styÄna, rmugs-pa) is often also present, but is said to be less common.
- 4. non-application (anabhisamskÄra, ’du mi-byed-pa)
- 5. [over]application (abhisamskÄra, ’du byed-pa)
Eight antidotes
The following eight antidodes (pratipakṣa, gnyen-po) or applications (abhisamskÄra, ’du-byed pa) can be applied to overcome the five faults:[19]
- for laziness:
- 1. faith (Ĺ›raddhÄ, dad-pa)
- 2. aspiration (chanda, ’dun-pa)
- 3. exertion (vyayama, rtsol-ba)
- 4. pliancy (praśrabdhi, shin-sbyangs)
- for forgetting the instruction:
- 5. mindfulness (smṛti, dran-pa)
- for laxity and excitement
- 6. awareness (samprajaña, shes-bzhin)
- for non-application
- 7. application (abhisaáąskÄra, ’du byed-pa)
- for overapplication
- 8. non-application (anabhisaáąskÄra, ’du mi-byed-pa)
Six Powers
Six powers (bala, stobs) are also needed for śamatha:[30]
Four modes of mental engagement
Four modes of mental engagement (manaskÄra, yid-la byed-pa) are said to be possible:[19]
- 1. forcible engagement (balavÄhana, sgrim-ste ’jug-pa)
- 2. interrupted engagement (sacchidravÄhana, chad-cing ’jug-pa)
- 3. uninterrupted engagement (niĹ›chidravÄhana, med-par ’jug-pa)
- 4. spontaneous engagement (anÄbhogavÄhana, lhun-grub-tu ’jug-pa)
MahÄmudrÄ and dzogchen
Ĺšamatha is approached somewhat differently in the mahÄmudrÄ tradition as practiced in the Kagyu lineage. As Traleg Kyabgon Rinpoche explains,
In the practice of Mahamudra tranquility meditation ... we treat all thoughts as the same in order to gain sufficient distance and detachment from our current mental state, which will allow us to ease naturally into a state of tranquility without effort or contrivance [...] In order for the mind to settle, we need to suspend the value judgments that we impose on our mental activities [...] it is essential that we not try to create a state of tranquility but allow the mind to enter into tranquility naturally. This is an important notion in the Mahamudra tradition, that of nondoing. We do not do tranquility mediation, we allow tranquility to arise of its own accord, and it will do so only if we stop thinking of the meditative state as a thing that we need to do actively [...] In a manner of speaking, catching yourself in the act of distraction is the true test of tranquility meditation, for what counts is not the ability to prevent thoughts or emotions from arising but the ability to catch ourselves in a particular mental or emotional state. This is the very essence of tranquility meditation [in the context of MahÄmudrÄ] [...] The Mahamudra style of meditation does not encourage us toward the different levels of meditative concentration traditionally described in the exoteric mediation manuals [...] From the Mahamudra point of view, we should not desire meditative equipoise nor have an aversion to discursive thoughts and conflicting emotions but view both of these states with equanimity. Again, the significant point is not whether meditative equipoise is present but whether we are able to maintain awareness of our mental states. If disturbing thoughts do arise, as they certainly will, we should simply recognize these thoughts and emotions as transient phenomena.[31]
For the Kagyupa, in the context of mahÄmudrÄ, Ĺ›amatha by means of mindfulness of breathing is thought to be the ideal way for the meditator to transition into taking the mind itself as the object of meditation and generating vipaĹ›yanÄ on that basis.[32]
Quite similar is the approach to Ĺ›amatha found in dzogchen semde (Sanskrit: mahÄsandhi cittavarga). In the semde system, Ĺ›amatha is the first of the four yogas (Tib. naljor, Wylie: rnal-’byor ),[33] the others being vipaĹ›yanÄ (Wylie: lhag-mthong ), nonduality (advaya, Tib. nyime,Wylie: gnyis-med ),[34] and spontaneous presence (anÄbogha or nirÄbogha, Tib. lhundrub, Wylie: lhun-grub ).[35] These parallel the four yogas of mahÄmudrÄ.
In June 1996 Ajahn Amaro established Abhayagiri Monastery in Redwood Valley, California, where he was co-abbot with Ajahn Pasanno until July, 2010 Ajahn Amaro returned to Amaravati in July, 2010 and as a longtime student in the Thai Forest TheravÄdin tradition of Ajahn Chah, has also trained in the dzogchen semde Ĺ›amatha approach under Tsoknyi Rinpoche. He found similarities in the approaches of the two traditions to Ĺ›amatha.[36]
Relationship with vipaĹ›yanÄ
Dzogchen Pönlop Rinpoche clearly charts the developmental relationship of the practices of Ĺ›amatha and vipaĹ›yanÄ:
The ways these two aspects of meditation are practised is that one begins with the practice of shamatha; on the basis of that, it becomes possible to practice vipashyana or lhagthong. Through one's practice of vipashyana being based on and carried on in the midst of shamatha, one eventually ends up practicing a unification [yuganaddha] of shamatha and vipashyana. The unification leads to a very clear and direct experience of the nature of all things. This brings one very close to what is called the absolute truth.[37]
Similar practices in other religions
Meditations from other religious traditions may also be recognized as samatha meditation, that differ in the focus of concentration. In this sense, samatha is not a strictly Buddhist meditation. Samatha in its single-pointed focus and concentration of mind is cognate with the sixth "limb" of aṣáąanga yoga', rÄja yoga which is concentration (dhÄraṇÄ). For further discussion, see the Yoga SĹ«tras of Patañjali.
See also
Notes
- ↑ Also romanized to shamatha, Tib. ཞི་གནས་, shyiné; Wylie: zhi gnas ; English: "calm" or "tranquility"
- ↑ A 2008 book by Richard Shankman entitled The Experience of Samadhi: An In-depth Exploration of Buddhist Meditation comparatively surveys the treatment of samatha in the suttas, in the commentarial tradition of the Visuddhimagga, and among a number of prominent contemporary TheravÄda teachers of various orientations.[8]
- ↑ Asaáą…ga delineates the nine mental abidings in his Abhidharmasamuccaya[21] and the ĹšrÄvakabhĹ«mi chapter of his YogÄcÄrabhĹ«mi-Ĺ›Ästra. It is also found in the MahÄyÄnasĹ«trÄlaáą…kÄra of MaitreyanÄtha.
References
- ↑ Ray, Reginald A. (Ed.)(2004). In the Presence of Masters: Wisdom from 30 Contemporary Tibetan Buddhist Teachers. Boston, Massachusetts, USA: Shambhala. ISBN 1-57062-849-1 (pbk.: alk. paper) p.69.
- ↑ Ray, Reginald A. (Ed.)(2004). In the Presence of Masters: Wisdom from 30 Contemporary Tibetan Buddhist Teachers. Boston, Massachusetts, USA: Shambhala. ISBN 1-57062-849-1 (pbk.: alk. paper) p.70.
- ↑ Ray, Reginald A. (Ed.)(2004). In the Presence of Masters: Wisdom from 30 Contemporary Tibetan Buddhist Teachers. Boston, Massachusetts, USA: Shambhala Publications. ISBN 1-57062-849-1 (pbk.: alk. paper) p.69.
- 1 2 Wallace, A: 'The Attention Revolution', Wisdom Publications, 1st ed., 2006, p.164
- ↑ See, for instance, AN 2.30 in Bodhi (2005), pp. 267-68, and Thanissaro (1998e).
- ↑ See, for instance, Bodhi (1999) and Nyanaponika (1996), p. 108.
- ↑ although this term is also used for vipassanÄ meditation
- ↑ The Experience of Samadhi: An In-depth Exploration of Buddhist Meditation by Richard Shankman. Shambhala: 2008. ISBN 1-59030-521-3
- ↑ Schumann 1997.
- ↑ These definitions of samatha and vipassana are based on the Four Kinds of Persons Sutta (AN 4.94). This article's text is primarily based on Bodhi (2005), pp. 269-70, 440 n. 13. See also Thanissaro (1998d).
- ↑ Bodhi (2000), pp. 1251-53. See also Thanissaro (1998c) (where this sutta is identified as SN 35.204). See also, for instance, a discourse (PÄli: sutta) entitled "Serenity and Insight" (SN 43.2), where the Buddha states: "And what, bhikkhus, is the path leading to the unconditioned? Serenity and insight...." (Bodhi, 2000, pp. 1372-73).
- ↑ While the Nikayas identify that the pursuit of vipassana can precede the pursuit of samatha, a fruitful vipassana-oriented practice must still be based upon the achievement of stabilizing "access concentration" (PÄli: upacara samÄdhi).
- ↑ Bodhi (2005), pp. 268, 439 nn. 7, 9, 10. See also Thanissaro (1998f).
- ↑ Thanissaro 1997
- ↑ Brahm (2006). Mindfulness, Bliss, and Beyond. Wisdom Publications, Inc. p. 25. ISBN 0-86171-275-7.
- ↑ "How to practice Calm-Abiding Meditation," Dharma Fellowship, ,
- ↑ Collected Works of Chogyam Trungpa, Vol. II Shambhala Publications. pg 19
- ↑ "State or Statement?: SamÄdhi in Some Early MahÄyÄna SĹ«tras." The Eastern Buddhist. 34-2. 2002 pg 57
- 1 2 3 4 5 Meditative States in Tibetan Buddhism By Lati Rinpoche, Denma Locho Rinpoche, Leah Zahler, Jeffrey Hopkins Wisdom Publications: December 25, 1996. ISBN 0-86171-119-X pgs 53-85
- ↑ Yates, Culadasa John; Immergut, Matthew; Graves, Jeremy (2015-10-06). The Mind Illuminated: A Complete Meditation Guide Integrating Buddhist Wisdom and Brain Science. Dharma Treasure Press.
- ↑ See Abhidharmasamuccaya
- 1 2 Wallace, A: 'The Attention Revolution', Wisdom Publications, 1st ed., 2006, p.6
- ↑ The Practice of Tranquility & Insight: A Guide to Tibetan Buddhist Mediation by Thrangu Rinpoche. Snow Lion Publications; 2 edition. 1998 ISBN 1-55939-106-5 pg 19
- ↑ Piya Tan (2004), The Taming of the Bull. Mind-training and the formation of Buddhist traditions
- 1 2 3 4 Wallace, A: 'The Attention Revolution', Wisdom Publications, 1st ed., 2006, p.30
- ↑ Nine Stages of Training the Mind
- ↑ The Buddhist Archives of Dr. Alexander Berzin
- ↑ Study and Practice of Meditation: Tibetan Interpretations of the Concentrations and Formless Absorptions by Leah Zahler. Snow Lion Publications: 2009 pg 23
- ↑ Study and Practice of Meditation: Tibetan Interpretations of the Concentrations and Formless Absorptions by Leah Zahler. Snow Lion Publications: 2009 pg 5)
- ↑ Meditative States in Tibetan Buddhism By Lati Rinpoche, Denma Locho Rinpoche, Leah Zahler, Jeffrey Hopkins Wisdom Publications: December 25, 1996. ISBN 0-86171-119-X pgs 54-58
- ↑ Mind at Ease, by Traleg Kyabgon, Shambhala Publications, pgs 149-152, 157
- ↑ Pointing Out the Great Way: The Stages of Meditation in the Mahamudra tradition by Dan Brown. Wisdom Publications: 2006 pg 221-34
- ↑
- ↑ Unbounded Wholeness by Anne C. Klein, Tenzin Wangyal. ISBN 0-19-517849-1 pg 349)
- ↑ Unbounded Wholeness by Anne C. Klein, Tenzin Wangyal. ISBN 0-19-517849-1 pg 357, 359
- ↑ Ajahn Chah's 'View of the View'", in Broad View, Boundless Heart by Ajahn Amaro.
- ↑ Ray, Reginald A. (Ed.)(2004). In the Presence of Masters: Wisdom from 30 Contemporary Tibetan Buddhist Teachers. Boston, Massachusetts, USA: Shambala. ISBN 1-57062-849-1 (pbk.: alk. paper) p.76.
Sources
- Schumann, Hans Wolfgang (1997), Boeddhisme, Asoka
External links
- How Meditation Works
- Buddhist Meditation at DMOZ
- Samatha meditation by Tina Rasmussen and Stephen Snyder
- The Nine Mental Abidings c.q. Stages of Tranquility
- Dharma Fellowship, Deepening Calm-Abiding - The Nine Stages of Abiding
- Skyflower Dharmacenter, Mahamudra Tranquility and Insight
- The Samatha Association
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