Friday, December 31, 2021

“The right thing to do.” : A 6th Grader Saves the Lives of Two People on the Same Day

 4šŸ‘‘☸ → EBpediašŸ“š → 4bv☮️ 


4bv☮️: brahma-vihāra: 4 divine-dwellings.


This story, takes a few minutes to read, should really inspire your mudita practice.



 

excerpt from new york times 

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/26/us/davyon-johnson-student-saves-classmate-fire.html?searchResultPosition=1




A 6th Grader Saves the Lives of Two People on the Same Day

Davyon Johnson, 11, has been honored for his Dec. 9 interventions but says he doesn’t understand the attention he’s drawn. It was “the right thing to do,” he said.


 


 


 

By Eduardo Medina 


Dec. 26, 2021


Davyon Johnson, 11, couldn’t quite understand it: the pizza party, the accolades from the mayor of Muskogee, Okla., his picture in the newspaper and on television — and the word that had been linked to his name: hero. 


Why, the sixth grader asked his mother, was he being rewarded for doing the right thing?


“I told him, ‘You saved two people’s lives,’” said LaToya Johnson, Davyon’s mother. “‘That is special.’”


And so began a whirlwind December for Davyon, who lives in Muskogee, Okla., who loves wrestling, basketball, remote-controlled cars and Fortnite, and who was honored by his community this month for saving the life of a fellow student who was choking and an older woman who was escaping a house fire, both on the same day, Dec. 9.


The Muskogee Police Department and Muskogee County Sheriff’s Office presented Davyon with a certificate on Dec. 15, naming him an honorary member of their forces.


“Always willing to help, always just a friend to everyone,” Latricia Dawkins, the principal at his school in the Muskogee public school district, said on Sunday.


“He said to me: ‘I don’t want everyone to pay attention to me. I kind of did what I was supposed to do,’” Ms. Dawkins said, adding, “I don’t think he actually internalized how important the feat was that he did.”


 

All Davyon knows is that on the morning of Dec. 9 he was by the water fountain at school when he heard a seventh-grade boy whisper through gasps: “I’m choking. I’m choking.”


The boy had opened a water bottle with his mouth and its cap slipped into his throat, Ms. Dawkins said.


 

Davyon wrapped his arms around the student’s abdomen and performed the Heimlich maneuver, a technique he had learned on YouTube after being inspired by his uncle, Wendell Johnson, an emergency medical technician. Davyon said he had wanted to be an emergency medical worker since he was 6. Now, watching the boy choke, he had a sense of what the job would require.


He squeezed the boy’s abdomen once.


Nothing.


Another squeeze. The boy was still gasping for air.


Finally on the third squeeze, the cap flew out.


When emergency medical workers arrived, Ms. Dawkins said, Davyon kept asking the boy if he was OK. The boy recovered and was fine the next day, she said.


“He acts like he’s about 80,” she said of Davyon. “He’s definitely an old soul.”


Ms. Johnson picked up her son, who she said was a bit shaken up. They had church service later that evening, so they went home, rested and then got back on the road.


That’s when life No. 2 was saved.


It was about 5 p.m. when Ms. Johnson spotted smoke coming from a house.


“I didn’t think nothing of it, but he was like, ‘No, Momma, this is a house on fire,’” Ms. Johnson recalled her son saying.


She turned the car around, and there it was: a small fire near the back of the house.


There were cars outside. The screen door was shut. It faintly smelled like burned wood. If people were inside, Ms. Johnson said, they appeared to be unaware of the growing fire. She honked her horn and called 911 as Davyon got out of the car, walked to the front door and knocked.


 


Five people in the house stepped outside, saw what was happening and ran, Ms. Johnson said. A sixth person, however, was having trouble. She was older and was using a walker.


“She wasn’t moving fast enough,” Davyon said. “So I’ve got to kind of help her get to her truck because everybody was leaving.”


They arrived at the woman’s truck. The sun was setting, and church services would begin soon, so Davyon said goodbye to the woman, whom he didn’t know, and got into his mother’s car. As they prepared to pull away, he looked out the window and could see the red and white flashing lights of a fire truck.


He had seen this before. When he was 8 years old, he watched his father enter a burning apartment complex in Muskogee to make sure everyone was safe. His father, Willie James Logan, was not a firefighter, but he had done the right thing that day, Davyon said.


“I look up to my dad,” he said.



 “I look up to my dad,” Davyon said of his father, who died in August from Covid-19 at the age of 52.


Unless asked by others, Davyon does not tell people what he did on Dec. 9. And when he is asked, he describes it all briefly, without fuss.


“The right thing to do.” That’s how he puts it.


But there was one person he did want to tell. One morning this month, he put on his sneakers and gray hoodie and went to the cemetery to see his father.


 

He squatted, picked at the dirt and started to tell the stories, beginning with the scene at the water fountain.


 

Thursday, December 30, 2021

šŸ”—šŸ“peta (dead, departed, the departed spirit. )

 Collection of notes on 'peta'

Internal

4šŸ‘‘☸EBpediašŸ“š → peta  



External


divine eye, ajahn chah, monks seeing decapitated ghost 8m (dhamma talk)




divine eye, ajahn chah, monks seeing decapitated ghost 8m (dhamma talk)

 

Re: non-hungry gosts

Unread post by Kusala » 

devaloka wrote: Thu Jul 29, 2021 5:18 pmOften people with (real) paranormal abilities can speak to the death and see ghosts roaming on earth

Are all ghosts on earth hungry ghosts? What about normal ghosts of deceased individuals?
Skip to 42:13 - 50:00 ... another interesting ghost story at @50:33 - 54:40


Sunday, December 26, 2021

šŸ”—šŸ“defn.: attha, aį¹­į¹­ha ( sense, meaning, import (of a word), denotation, signification )

 

(note difference between  attha, aį¹­į¹­ha) and connection to the Dhamma.


: Attha1 (also aį¹­į¹­ha, especially in combinations mentioned under 3) (masculine and neuter) [Vedic artha from r̥, arti and r̥į¹‡oti to reach, attain or to proceed (to or from), thus originally result (or cause), profit, attainment. Cf. semantically French chose, Latin causa
1. interest, advantage, gain; (moral) good, blessings welfare; profit, prosperity, well-being M I 111 (atthassa ninnetar, of the Buddha, bringer of good); S IV 94 (the same); S I 34 (attano a. one's own welfare), 55 (the same) 86, 102, 126 = A II 46 (atthassa patti); S I 162 (attano ca parassa ca); II 222 (the same); IV 347 (°į¹ƒ bhaƱjati destroy the good or welfare, always with musāvādena by lying, cf. attha-bhaƱjanaka); A I 61 (°į¹ƒ anubhoti to fare well, to have a (good) result); III 364 (samparāyika a. profit in the future life); V 223f. (anattho ca attho ca detriment and profit); It 44 (v.l. attā better); Snp {21} 37, 58 (= Nidd II 26, where the six kinds of advantages are enumerated as att° par° ubhay°, i.e. advantage, resulting for oneself, for others, for both; diį¹­į¹­ha-dhammik° samparāyik° param° gain for this life, for a future life, and highest gain of all, i.e. Arahantship); Snp 331 (ko attho supitena what good is it to sleep = na hi sakkā supantena koci attho papuį¹‡ituį¹ƒ Pj II 338; cf. ko attho supinena te Pv II 61); Pv-a 30 (atthaį¹ƒ sādheti does good, results in good, 69 (samparāyikena atthena). — dative atthāya for the good, for the benefit of (genitive); to advantage, often combined with hitāya sukhāya, e.g. D III 211f.; It 79. — Khp VIII 1 (to my benefit); Pv I 43 (= upakārāya Pv-a 18), II 129 (to great advantage). See also below 6.
Sometimes in a more concrete meaning = riches, wealth, e.g. Ja I 256 (= vaįøįøhiį¹ƒ commentary); III 394 (the same); Pv IV 14 (= dhanaį¹ƒ Pv-a 219). — Often as °°: att°, one's own wellfare, usually combined with par° and ubhay° (see above) S II 29; V 121; A I 158, 216; III 63f.; IV 134; Snp 75 (att-aį¹­į¹­ha, v.l. attha Nidd II), 284 (atta-d-attha); uttam° the highest gain, the very best thing Dhp 386 (= Arahatta Dhp-a IV 142); Snp 324 (= Arahatta Pj II 332); param° the same Nidd II §26; sad° one's own weal D II 141; M I 4; S II 29; V 145; A I 144; sāttha (adjective) connected with advantage, beneficial, profitable (of the Dhamma; or should we take it as "with the meaning, in spirit"? see sāttha) D I 62; S V 352; A II 147; III 152; Nidd II §316.


2. need, want (with instrumental), use (for = instrumental) S I 37 (°jāta when need has arisen, in need); Ja I 254; III 126, 281; IV 1; Dhp-a I 398 (n'atthi eteh'attho I have no use for them); Vv-a 250; Pv-a 24 (yāvadattha, adjective as much as is needed, sufficient = anappaka).


3. sense, meaning, import (of a word), denotation, signification. In this application attha is always spelt aį¹­į¹­ha in compounds aį¹­į¹­h'uppatti and aį¹­į¹­ha-kathā (see below). On term see also Cpd. 4. — S III 93 (atthaį¹ƒ vibhajati explain the sense); A I 23 (the same), 60 (nÄ«t° primary meaning, literal meaning; neyy° secondary or inferred meaning); II 189 (°į¹ƒ ācikkhati to interpret); Snp 126 (°į¹ƒ pucchita asked the (correct) sense, the literal meaning), 251 (°į¹ƒ akkhāti); Thag 374; attho paramo the highest sense, the ultimate sense or intrinsic meaning It 98, cf. Cpd. 6, 81, 223; Miln 28 (paramatthato in the absolute sense); Miln 18 (atthato according to its meaning, opposite vyaƱjanato by letter, orthographically); Dhp-a II 82; III 175; Pj I 81 (pad° meaning of a word); Pj II 91 (the same); Pv-a 15 (°į¹ƒ vadati to explain, interpret), 16, 19 (hitattha-dhammatā "fitness of the best sense", i.e. practical application), 71. Very frequent in commentary style at the conclusion of an explained passage as ti attho "this is the meaning", thus it is meant, this is the sense, e.g. Sv I 65; Dhp-a IV 140, 141; Pv-a 33, etc.

4. Contrasted with dhamma in the combination attho ca dhammo ca it (attha) refers to the (primary, natural) meaning of the word, while dhamma relates to the (interpreted) meaning of the text, to its bearing on the norm and conduct; or one might say they represent the theoretical and practical side of the text (pāįø·i) to be discussed, the "letter" and the "spirit". Thus at A I 69; V 222, 254; Snp 326 (= bhāsitatthaƱ ca pāįø·i-dhammaƱ ca Pj II 333); It 84 (duį¹­į¹­ho atthaį¹ƒ na jānāti dhammaį¹ƒ na passati: he realizes neither the meaning nor the importance); Dhp 363 (= bhāsitatthaƱ c'eva desanā-dhammaƱ ca); Ja II 353; VI 368; Nidd II §386 (meaning and proper nature); Pv III 96 (but explained by Pv-a 211 as hita = benefit, good, thus referring it to above 1). For the same use see compounds °dhamma, °paį¹­isambhidā, especially in adverbal use (see under 6) Snp 430 (yen'atthena for which purpose), 508 (kena atthena v.l. for Text attanā), Ja I 411 (atthaį¹ƒ vā kāraį¹‡aį¹ƒ vā reason and cause); Dhp-a II 95 (+ kāraį¹‡a (; Pv-a 11 (ayaį¹ƒ h'ettha attho this is the reason why).

5. (in very wide application, covering the same ground as Latin res and French chose): (a) matter, affair, thing, often untranslatable and simply to be given as "this" or "that" S II 36 (ekena-padena sabbo attho vutto the whole matter is said with one word); Ja I 151 (taį¹ƒ atthaį¹ƒ the matter); II 160 (imaį¹ƒ a. this); VI 289 (taį¹ƒ atthaį¹ƒ pakāsento); Pv-a 6 (taį¹ƒ atthaį¹ƒ pucchi asked it), 11 (visajjeti explains it), 29 (vuttaį¹ƒ atthaį¹ƒ what had been said), 82 (the same). — (b) affair, cause, case (cf. aį¹­į¹­a2 and Latin causa) Dhp 256, 331; Miln 47 (kassa atthaį¹ƒ dhāresi whose cause do you support, with whom do you agree?). See also alamattha.

6. Adversative use of oblique cases in the sense of a preposition:
(a) dative atthāya for the {24} sake of, in order to, for Ja I 254 dhan'atthāya for wealth, kim° what for, why?), 279; II 133; III 54; Dhp-a II 82; Pv-a 55, 75, 78.
(b) accusative atthaį¹ƒ on account of, in order to, often instead of an infinitive or with another infinitive substitute Ja I 279 (kim°); III 53 (the same); I 253; II 128; DÄ«p VI 79; Dhp-a I 397; Pv-a 32 (dassan° in order to see), 78, 167, etc.
(c) ablative atthā Ja III 518 (pitu atthā = atthāya commentary).
(d) locative atthe instead of, for Vv-a 10; Pv-a 33; etc.
anattha (masculine and neuter)
1. unprofitable situation or condition, mischief, harm, misery, misfortune S I 103; II 196 (anatthāya saį¹ƒvattati); A IV 96 (°į¹ƒ adhipajjati) It 84 (°janano doso ill-will brings discomfort); Ja I 63, 196; Pp 37; Dhs 1060, 1231; Saddh 87; Sv I 52 (anattha-janano kodho, cf. It 83 and Nidd II §420 Q2); Dhp-a II 73; Pv-a 13, 61, 114, 199.
2. (= attha 3) incorrect sense, false meaning, as adjective senseless (and therefore unprofitable, no good, irrelevant) A V 222, 254 (adhammo ca); Dhp 100 (= aniyyānadÄ«paka Dhp-a II 209); Snp 126 (explained at Pj II 180 as ahitaį¹ƒ).

-akkhāyin showing what is profitable D III 187;
-attha riches Ja VI 290 (= attha-bhÅ«taį¹ƒ atthaį¹ƒ commentary);
-antara difference between the (two) meanings Miln 158. At Thag 374, Oldenberg's reading, but the v.l. (also commentary reading) atthandhara is much better = he who knows the (correct) meaning, especially as it corresponds with dhamma-dhara (q.v.);
-abhisamaya grasp of the proficient S I 87 (see abhisamaya);
-uddhāra synopsis or abstract of contents ("matter") of the Vinaya Dīp V 37;
-upaparikkhā investigation of meaning, (+ dhamma-savanna) M II 175; A III 381f.; IV 221; V 126;
-uppatti (aį¹­į¹­h°) sense, meaning, explanation, interpretation Ja I 89; Sv I 242; Pj I 216; Vv-a 197, 203 (cf. pāįø·ito) Pv-a 2, 6, 78; etc;
-kāma (adjective) (a) well-wishing, a well-wisher, friend, one who is interested in the welfare of others (cf. Sanskrit artha-kāma, e.g. BhagavadgÄ«tā II 5: gurÅ«n artha-kāman) S I 140, 197, 201f.; A III 143; D III 164 (bahuno janassa a., + hitakāmo); Ja I 241; Pv IV 351; Pv A 25; Pj II 287 (an°). — (b) one who is interested in his own gain or good, either in good or bad sense (= greedy) S I 44; Pv-a 112;
-kathā (aį¹­į¹­ha°) exposition of the sense, explanation, commentary Ja V 38, 170; Pv-a 1, 71, etc. frequent in name of commentary
-kara beneficial, useful Vin III 149; Miln 321;
-karaį¹‡a the business of trying a case, holding court, giving judgment (v.l. aį¹­į¹­a°) D II 20; S I 74 (judgment hall?);
-kavi a didactic poet (see kavi) A II 230;
-kāmin = °kāma, well-wishing Snp 986 (devatā attha-kāminÄ«);
-kāraį¹‡Ä (ablative) for the sake of gain D III 186;
-kusala clever in finding out what is good or profitable Snp 143 (= atthacheka Pj I 236);
-cara doing good, busy in the interest of others, obliging S I 23 (narānaį¹ƒ = "working out man's salvation");
-caraka (adjective) one who devotes himself to being useful to others, doing good, one who renders service to others, e.g. an attendant, messenger, agent etc. D I 107 (= hitakāraka Sv I 276); Ja II 87; III 326; IV 230; VI 369;
-cariyā useful conduct or behaviour D III 152, 190, 232; A II 32, 248; IV 219, 364;
-ƱƱu one who knows what is useful or who knows the (plain or correct) meaning of something (+ dhammaĆ±Ć±Å«) D III 252; A III 148; IV 113f.
-dassin intent upon the (moral) good Snp 385 (= hitānupassīn Pj II 373);
-dassimant one who examines a cause (cf. Sanskrit arthadarśika) Ja VI 286 (but explained by commentary as "saį¹‡ha-sukhuma-paƱƱa" of deep insight, one who has a fine and minute knowledge);
-desanā interpretation, exegesis Miln 21 (dhamm°);
-dhamma "reason and morality", see above no. 3. °anusāsaka one who advises regarding the meaning and application of the Law, a professor of moral philosophy Ja II 105; Dhp-a II 71;
-pada a profitable saying, a word of good sense, text, motto A II 189; III {22} 356; Dhp 100;
-paį¹­isambhidā knowledge of the meaning (of words) combined with dhamma° of the text or spirit (see above no. 3) Paį¹­is I 132; II 150; Vibh 293f.
-paį¹­isaį¹ƒvedin experiencing good D III 241 (+ dhamma°); A I 151; III 21;
-baddha expecting some good from (with locative) Snp 382;
-bhaƱjanaka breaking the welfare of, hurting Dhp-a III 356 (paresaį¹ƒ of others, by means of telling lies, musāvādena);
-majjha of beautiful waist Ja V 170 (= sumajjhā commentary; reading must be faulty, there is hardly any connection with attha; v.l. atta);
-rasa sweetness (or substance, essence) of meaning (+ dhamma°, vimutti°) Nidd II §466; Paį¹­is II 88, 89;
-vasa "dependence on the sense", reasonableness, reason, consequence, cause D II 285; M I 464; II 120; III 150; S II 202; III 93; IV 303; V 224; A I 61, 77, 98; II 240; III 72, 169, 237; Dhp 289 (= kāraį¹‡a Dhp-a III 435); It 89; Snp 297; Ud 14;
-vasika sensible It 89; Miln 406;
-vasin bent on (one's) aim or purpose Thag 539;
-vādin one who speaks good, i.e. whose words are doing good or who speaks only useful speech, always in combination with kāla° bhÅ«ta° dhamma° D I 4; III 175; A I 204; II 22, 209; Pp 58; Sv I 76 (explained as "one who speaks for the sake of reaping blessings here and hereafter");
-saį¹ƒvaį¹‡į¹‡anā explanation, exegesis Pv-a 1;
-saį¹ƒhita connected with good, bringing good, profitable, useful, salutary D I 189; S II 223; IV 330; V 417; A III 196f., 244; Snp 722 (= hitena saį¹ƒhitaį¹ƒ Pj II 500); Pp 58;
-sandassana determination of meaning, definition Paį¹­is I 105;
-siddhi profit, advantage, benefit Ja I 402; Pv-a 63.

: Attha2 (neuter) [Vedic asta, of uncertain etymology] home, primarily as place of rest and shelter, but in Pāli phraseology abstracted from the "going home", i.e. setting of the sun, as disappearance, going out of existence, annihilation, extinction. Only in accusative and as °- in following phrases: atthaį¹…gacchati to disappear, to go out of existence, to vanish Dhp 226 (= vināsaį¹ƒ n'atthi-bhāvaį¹ƒ gacchati Dhp-a III 324), 384 (= parikkhayaį¹ƒ gacchati); past participle atthaį¹…gata gone home, gone to rest, gone, disappeared; of the sun (= set): Ja I 175 (atthaį¹…gate suriye at sunset); Pv-a 55 (the same) 216 (anatthaį¹…gate s. before sunset) figurative Snp 472 (atthagata). 475 (the same); 1075 (= niruddha ucchinį¹‡a vinaį¹­į¹­ha anupādi-sesāya Nibbāna-dhātuyā nibbuta); It 58; Dhs 1038; Vibh 195.

-atthagatatta (neuter abstract) disappearance Pj II 409.

-atthaį¹…gama (atthagama passim) annihilation, disappearance; opposed to samudaya (coming into existence) and synonymous with nirodha (destruction) D I 34, 37, 183; S IV 327; A III 326; Paį¹­is II 4, 6, 39; Pp 52; Dhs 165, 265, 501, 579; Vibh 105;
-atthagamana (neuter) setting (of the sun) Ja I 101 (suriyass'atthagamanā at sunset) Sv I 95 (= ogamana). — attha-gāmin, in phrase uday'atthagāmin leading to birth and death (of paƱƱā): see udaya;
-atthaį¹ƒ paleti = atthaį¹…gacchati (figurative) Snp 1074 (= atthaį¹…gameti nirujjhati Nidd II §28). — Also atthamita (past participal of i) set (of the sun) in phrase anatthamite suriye before sunset (with anatthaį¹…gamite as v.l. at both passages) Dhp-a I 86; III 127. — Cf. also abbhattha.

: Attha3 present 2nd plural of atthi (q.v.).

: Atthata [past participle of attharati] spread, covered, spread over with (—°) Vin I 265; IV 287; V 172 (also an°); A III 50; Pv-a 141.

: Atthatta (neuter) [abstract from attha1] reason, cause; only in ablative atthattā according to the sense, by reason of, on account of Pv-a 189 (—°).

: Atthara [from attharati] a rug (for horses, elephants etc.) D I 7.

: Attharaka [= atthara] a covering Ja I 9; Sv I 87. — feminine °ikā a layer Ja I 9; V 280.

: Attharaį¹‡a (neuter) [from attharati] a covering, carpet, cover, rug Vin II 291; A II 56; III 53; Mhv 3, 20; 15, 40; 25, 102; Thig-a 22.

: Attharati [ā + str̥] to spread, to cover, to spread out; stretch, lay out Vin I 254; V 172; Ja I 199; V 113; VI 428; Dhp I 272. — past participle atthata (q.v.). — causative attharāpeti to cause to be spread Ja V 110; Mhv 3, 20; 29, 7; 34, 69.

{25}

: Atthavant (adjective) [cf. Sanskrit arthavant] full of benefit S I 30; Thag 740; Miln 172.

: Atthāra [cf. Sanskrit āstāra, from attharati] spreading out Vin V 172 (see kaį¹­hina). atthāraka same ibid.; Vin II 87 (covering).

: Atthi [Sanskrit asti, 1st singular asmi; Greek Īµį¼°Ī¼į½·-į¼ĻƒĻ„į½·; Latin sum-est; Gothic im-ist; Anglo-Saxon eom-is English am-is] to be, to exist. Present Indicative 1st singular asmi Snp 1120, 1143; Ja I 151; III 55, and amhi M I 429; Snp 694; Ja II 153; Pv I 102; II 82. 2nd singular asi Snp 420; Ja II 160 ('si); III 278; Vv 324; Pv-a 4. — 3rd singular atthi Snp 377, 672, 884; Ja I 278. Often used for 3rd plural (= santi), e.g. Ja I 280; II 2; III 55. — 1st plural asma [Sanskrit smaįø„] Snp 594, 595; asmase Snp 595, and amha Snp 570; Ja II 128. 2nd plural attha Ja II 128; Pv-a 39, 74 (āgat'attha you have come). 3rd plural santi Snp 1077; Nidd II §637 (= saį¹ƒvijjanti atthi upalabbhanti); Ja II 353; Pv-a 7, 22 — Imperative atthu Snp 340; Ja I 59; III 26. — potential 1st singular siyā [Sanskrit syām] Pv II 88, and assaį¹ƒ [conditional used as potential] Snp 1120; Pv I 125 (= bhaveyyaį¹ƒ Pv-a 64). — 2nd singular siyā [Sanskrit syāįø„] Pv II 87. — 3rd singular siyā [Sanskrit syāt] D II 154; Snp 325, 1092; Nidd II §105 (= jāneyya, nibbatteyya); Ja I 262; Pv-a 13, and assa D I 135, 196; II 154; A V 194; Snp 49, 143; Dhp 124, 260; Pv II 324; 924. — 1st plural assu Pv-a 27. 3rd plural assu [cf. Sanskrit syuįø„] Snp 532; Dhp 74; Pv IV 136 (= bhaveyyuį¹ƒ Pv-a 231). — preterit 1st singular āsiį¹ƒ [Sanskrit āsaį¹ƒ] Snp 284; Pv I 21 (= ahosiį¹ƒ Pv-a 83); II 34 (= ahosiį¹ƒ Pv-a 83). — 3rd singular āsi [Sanskrit āsÄ«t] Snp 994. — 3rd āsuį¹ƒ [cf. Sanskrit Perfect āsuįø„] Pv II 321, 133 (ti pi pāį¹­ho for su). Present participle sat only in locative sati (as locative absolute) Dhp 146; Ja I 150, 263, santa Snp 105; Nidd II §635; Ja I 150 (locative evaį¹ƒ sante in this case); III 26, and samāna (q.v.) Ja I 266; IV 138.

-bhāva state of being, existence, being Ja I 222, 290; II 415; Dhp-a II 5; IV 217 (atthibhāva vā n'atthibhāva vā whether there is or not).

: Atthika (adjective) [cf. Sanskrit arthika 1. (to attha1) profitable, good, proper. In this meaning the mss show a variance of spelling either atthika or aį¹­į¹­hika or aį¹­į¹­hita; in all cases atthika should be preferred D I 55 (°vāda); M II 212 (aį¹­į¹­hita); A III 219f. (idaį¹ƒ atthikaį¹ƒ this is suitable, of good avail; Text aį¹­į¹­hitaį¹ƒ, vv.ll. as above); Snp 1058 (aį¹­į¹­hita; Nidd II §20 also aį¹­į¹­hita, which at this passage shows a confusion between aį¹­į¹­ha and a-į¹­hita); Ja V 151 (in definition of aį¹­į¹­hikatvā q.v.); Pp 69, 70 (Text aį¹­į¹­hika, v.l. aį¹­į¹­hita; explained by Pp-a 250, 24 by kalyāį¹‡Äya).
2. (to attha1 2) desirous of (—°), wanting, seeking for, in need of (with instrumental) A II 199 (uday° desirous of increase); Snp 333, 460, 487 (puƱƱ°), 987 (dhan° greedy for wealth); Ja I 263 (rajj° coveting a kingdom); V 19; Pv II 228 (bhojan° in need of food); IV 11 (kāraį¹‡°), 121 (khiįøįø° for play), 163 (puƱƱ°); Pv-a 95 (sasena a. wanting a rabbit), 120; Sv I 70 (atthikā those who like to).

-anatthika one who does not care for, or is not satisfied with (with instrumental) Ja V 460; Pv-a 20; of no good Thag 956 ("of little zeal" Mrs. Rh.D.);
-bhāva (a) usefullness, profitableness Pp-a 250, 25 (b) state of need, distress Pv-a 120.

: Atthikavant (adjective) [atthika + vant] one who wants something, one who is on a certain errand D I 90 (atthikaį¹ƒ assa atthÄ« ti Sv I 255).

: Atthitā (feminine) [feminine abstract from atthi cf. atthi-bhāva] state of being, existence, being, reality M I 486; S II 17 (°aƱ c'eva n'atthitaƱ ca to be and not to be); III 135; Ja V 110 (kassaci atthitaį¹ƒ vā n'atthitaį¹ƒ vā jānāhi see if there is anybody or not); As 394. — Often in ablative atthitāya by reason of, on account of, this being so Dhp-a III 344 (idam-atthitāya under this condition) Pv-a 94, 97, 143.

: Atthin (adjective) (—°) [Vedic arthin] desirous, wanting anything; see mant°, vād°.

: Atthiya (adjective) (—°) [= atthika] having a purpose or end S III 189 (kim° for what purpose?); A V 1f. (the same), 311f.; Thag 1097 (att° having one's purpose in oneself), 1274; Snp 354 (yad atthiyaį¹ƒ on account of which).



B. Thanissaro wrote an essay about aį¹­į¹­ha  and Dhamma:


Dhamma Is What Dhamma Does

The Buddha as Strategist

by Thanissaro Bhikkhu

You may know the story. The Buddha was once staying in a simsapa forest with a group of monks. He picked up a few simsapa leaves—which are like miniature aspen leaves—and asked the monks which was greater: the number of leaves in his hand or the number of leaves in the forest. The monks replied that, of course, there were far more leaves in the forest than in his hand.

The Buddha went on to say that, in the same way, the things he had known through direct knowledge but had not taught were like the leaves in the forest. The things he had taught based on his direct knowledge were like the leaves in his hand. Why had he taught so little? Because, in his words, the things he had not taught “were not connected with the goal, do not relate to the rudiments of the holy life, and do not lead to disenchantment, to dispassion, to cessation, to stilling, to direct knowledge, to self-awakening, to unbinding.”

And what had he taught? The four noble truths: “This is stress … This is the origination of stress … This is the cessation of stress … This is the path of practice leading to the cessation of stress.” And why had he taught that? Because these truths were connected with the goal, did relate to the rudiments of the holy life, and did lead to disenchantment, to dispassion, to cessation, to stilling, to direct knowledge, to self-awakening, to unbinding (SN 56:31).

This incident makes an important statement about how to read and understand the Buddha’s Dhamma. He wasn’t interested in stating truths simply because they were true. He taught truths that served a purpose: When his listeners acted on those truths, those actions would have a desired impact on their minds.

It’s good to take a close look at how he expresses the nature of that impact. He starts by using the word “goal.” In Pali, the word is attha, which means not only goal, but also “meaning,” “benefit,” “purpose,” “profit.” This word rarely appears in Western discussions of the Dhamma, but it’s frequently paired with the word “Dhamma” in Asia: Useful truths are said to be both attha and Dhamma. In fact, the whole point of the Dhamma is that it has an attha. The four noble truths are a special kind of Dhamma in that they cover everything needed to serve that attha, beginning with the “rudiments of the holy life”—this is a short-hand reference to the virtues of the five precepts—as well as the attha itself: the attainment of total unbinding, an unconditioned dimension that’s the highest possible happiness (SN 43Dhp 203).

In some cases, the attha of a Dhamma teaching is its meaning as expressed in words that are easier to understand. But in the Buddha’s remarks in the simsapa forest, the word attha obviously means something more than words: a direct experience of the goal, the reality of the freedom and liberation that the teaching is supposed to lead to. These two aspects of attha are closely related. We could even say that you don’t fully know the meaning of the words of the Dhamma until you’ve directly experienced the goal to which they point and which is their whole purpose for being.

The Buddha was wise in emphasizing this purposeful aspect of the Dhamma, because the mind—as he accurately saw—is purposeful as well. It doesn’t simply gaze at views about the truth in rapt admiration. In its quest to eliminate pain or suffering, it constructs views about the truth and acts on them to serve its aims. To evaluate the worth of a truth, you have to look into the mind-state that inspires you to assemble it, the purposes it inspires you to aim at, and the actions it inspires you to take.

This was precisely the Buddha’s approach. He saw that if you adopt a particular view or line of questioning, it would bend the mind in the direction of the mind-state that created it. If you acted on the view, those actions would have a further impact on the mind, leading to experiences of pleasure or pain, depending on whether those actions were skillful or not.

This is why the Buddha regarded views about truth as a type of kamma, or action. In turn, he viewed those actions as part of a causal process, judging them by where that process ultimately led. If they led to an inferior goal, he would reject them (DN 1). As for the views he himself taught, he chose them because they would inspire the kind of actions that would lead to total freedom from suffering.

This active role of the Dhamma is explicitly clear in the case of the four noble truths: Each truth carries a duty. It’s a guide to action. You should comprehend stress, abandon its origination or cause within the mind, realize its cessation, all by developing the path to its cessation. The Buddha didn’t impose these four duties on anyone. He simply pointed out that if you want to put an end to suffering and stress, this is what you have to do.

At the same time, it’s worth noting not only that the four noble truths contain the fourth noble truth—which is a guide to action—but also that they themselves are contained in the fourth truth: the factor of right view in the noble eightfold path. As a container for that path, the four truths explain why the path is a beneficial one to follow. As a factor in the path, they show that views are actions, to be adopted both because they’re true and because they act as a guide to beneficial action, in the form of the other factors of the path, leading to a goal that lies beyond them. This is why, when the Buddha gave metaphors for the path—including right view—he chose modes of transport, like rafts and chariots: means to a destination. When you reach the destination, the mode of transport can be put aside (MN 22MN 24SN 45:4).

In fact, he made it a general rule: For him to say something, it had to be not only true but also beneficial in leading to skillful action. Further, he had to be sensitive to his audience, knowing when to say beneficial truths that were pleasing and when to say beneficial truths that were not. He gave the analogy of a baby child with a sharp object in its mouth: Sometimes you have to be willing to draw blood if that’s what’s required to get the object out before the child swallows it and suffers greater harm (MN 58).

So the Buddha had to be strategic in how he taught the Dhamma. Unlike other teachers of his time, he didn’t have a canned Dhamma that he rattled off to all his listeners (DN 2). This may be why his followers presented their memory of his teachings in the form of dialogues, to show how the Buddha presented different aspects of the Dhamma to different listeners, in line with the situation and their specific needs: sometimes truths that pleased them, sometimes truths that didn’t, but always truths that were beneficial.

It’s important to note, though, that in the Buddha’s analysis of the possible varieties of speech, the idea that a falsehood could be beneficial was never even entertained as a possibility. The concept of “useful fictions” was, as far as he was concerned, out of the question.

A Strategic Distinction

The Buddha’s strategic approach to teaching is also shown by the distinction he made between teachings whose attha had to be drawn out into further explanations, and those whose attha was already drawn out and should not be drawn out any further (AN 2:24). This distinction was so important that he said you were slandering him if you got it mixed up: trying to infer a further meaning of a teaching whose meaning was already drawn out, or claiming that there was no need for any further interpretation of a teaching that actually needed it.

Unfortunately, he didn’t give examples for these two categories of teachings, but when we remember that the Dhamma is meant as a guide to action, one way of interpreting the distinction seems clear—and it’s supported by watching the Buddha in action as he teaches.

Some teachings don’t give clear instructions for action. Instead, they describe the reality of a situation. In this case, the meaning has to be drawn out: What are the practical implications of that situation? An example would be the Buddha’s descriptions of how the universe evolves, which portray events in far-distant reaches of the past and the future, without giving explicit instructions as to how you should act. At the very end of the descriptions, though, the Buddha himself draws out the meaning: The changes in the universe come from the actions of living beings, so if you want to avoid the miseries that can be found in the universe, take care to act skillfully (DN 26–27).

As for teachings whose meaning shouldn’t be drawn out any further, two prime examples are the Buddha’s teachings on self and not-self. Nowhere in the Canon does the Buddha say either that there is a self or that there is no self. Questions of “Who am I?” “Do I exist?” “Do I not exist?” he says, are not worthy of attention. In fact, he goes on to say that views that attempt to answer these questions—such as “I have a self” or “I have no self”—are a fetter bound by which you’re not freed from suffering and stress (MN 2). So, to stay on the path, you should try to avoid paying attention to such questions. And it’s not the case that they’ll get answered at awakening. As SN 12:20 points out, once you’ve attained even the first level of awakening, these questions no longer hold any meaning or interest for you.

Still, for the purpose of arriving at awakening, the Buddha does analyze how the assumption of “self” comes about, pointing out how some assumptions of self are not skillful, while other assumptions of self, in certain circumstances, are. You can make use of the things that you identify as you or yours—such as perceptions and thought fabrications—as means to the goal (AN 9:36). In addition, assumptions that you have to depend on yourself, that you’re capable of the practice, and that you will benefit from it all play a necessary role in pursuing the path (Dhp 160AN 4:159AN 3:40). The Buddha calls this approach “using the self as a governing principle.” So even though he refuses to say that there is a self, he makes use of “self” as a strategy on the path.

At the same time, he points out how “not-self” is a useful perception at many stages in the path, and particularly in the last ones, as a tool for comprehending stress and abandoning its cause. Because ideas of self contain an element of clinging, which the first noble truth equates with suffering (SN 56:11), the perception of not-self is a useful tool for bringing that clinging to an end. This perception is even useful, at a very high level of the practice, for overcoming any attachment to the path or the goal, so that the mind—freed from all attachments, including any attachments to the perception “not-self”—can reach total liberation (AN 10:93). So here again, even though the Buddha refuses to say that there is no self, he uses “not-self” as a Dhamma teaching leading to a higher attha.

This point is illustrated most clearly in MN 109. There, a monk—listening to the Buddha teaching that the five aggregates of form, feeling, perception, fabrications, and consciousness are not-self—draws out what he thinks is a logical implication of the teaching:

“So—form is not-self, feeling is not-self, perception is not-self, fabrications are not-self, consciousness is not-self. Then what self will be touched by the actions done by what is not-self?”

In other words, the monk reasons that because the aggregates are all not-self, there must be no self, so no actions will be able to touch—i.e., give karmic results to—what is not-self. This line of reasoning would serve a very unskillful attha, giving license to all kinds of unskillful behavior. That’s why the Buddha, on reading the monk’s mind, rebukes him sharply, saying that he’s senseless, immersed in ignorance, and overcome with craving. The Buddha then goes on to show the proper strategic use of the teaching on not-self, questioning the other monks listening to the talk about their assumptions of self around the aggregates so that they’ll perceive the aggregates as not-self, to develop dispassion for them and to gain release: the attha both of the perception of not-self and of the Dhamma as a whole.

So even though the Buddha found useful roles at certain stages in the path both for the assumption of a self and for the perception of not-self, those teaching strategies have their meaning fully drawn out. In neither case should you infer from them that there is or is not a self, for those views, as the Buddha pointed out, would induce actions leading away from the goal.

Tests for the True Dhamma

The relationship between the Dhamma and its attha is so direct that the Buddha made it a criterion for testing what was true Dhamma and what was not: If you followed a Dhamma teaching and it led you to the attha he taught, an experience of unbinding, then you knew that it was the genuine article. He framed this test in different terms, from the most basic to the most refined, depending on his audience.

For the Kālāmas, a group of skeptical laypeople, he outlined a very basic test. If, when you act on a teaching, it leads to long-term welfare and happiness, then you should keep following that teaching (AN 3:66).

For his stepmother, Mahāpajāpati Gotamī, he framed a more extensive test. True Dhamma can be recognized by what it leads to in three areas: In terms of the ultimate goal, it should lead to dispassion and being unfettered; in terms of the means to that goal, to shedding, contentment, and aroused persistence; in terms of the relationships it fosters toward others, it should lead to modesty, reclusiveness, and being unburdensome (AN 8:53).

For Ven. Upāli, one of his foremost monk students, the Buddha formulated a test echoing his comments to the monks in the simsapa forest: True Dhamma, when put into practice, leads to utter disenchantment, to dispassion, to cessation, to stilling, to direct knowledge, to self-awakening, to unbinding (AN 7:80).

The Buddha saw the need for this sort of test in his own lifetime, as there are reported instances of monks distorting the teachings even to his face (MN 22MN 38). He dealt with them severely, to show how seriously he meant for his Dhamma not to be changed. He also stated that those who attributed sayings to him that he didn’t say, or denied his saying things that he actually did say, were slandering him (AN 2:23).

He also foresaw that the tendency to distort the Dhamma would increase after his passing, saying that the true Dhamma would disappear in 500 years (AN 8:51). For those of us living more than 2,500 years after his passing, it’s a forecast that brings us up short—Is there no true Dhamma left anymore?—but SN 16:13 gives an analogy to explain what he meant: The true Dhamma “disappears” when counterfeit Dhamma appears, in the same way that genuine money disappears when counterfeit money begins to circulate in the market. In other words, genuine money is still there, but people begin to lose their confidence as to what’s genuine and what’s not. In the same way, true Dhamma can still exist, but it’s surrounded by so much counterfeit Dhamma that even the concept of true Dhamma, as opposed to false, gets called into question.

When counterfeit Dhamma actually came into circulation, and what it taught, is a matter of historical conjecture. A prime candidate is the teaching on the non-arising of phenomena, which appeared about 500 years after the Buddha’s passing and claims that nothing really arises or passes away, and that everything is a timeless oneness. If this were true, then the four noble truths would not be true, for they speak of suffering arising and passing away. But again, whether this is the teaching that the Buddha had in mind when he foresaw counterfeit Dhamma is just a matter of conjecture.

What’s undeniable, though, is that the Buddha’s definition of the disappearance of the true Dhamma describes the situation that prevails now, with so many contradictory versions of the Dhamma at large in the world. Some people even laugh at the idea that any version of the Dhamma has any right to claim to be right and others wrong. They make a comparison with maps: Just as every map distorts reality, so that no single map can claim to be a totally accurate description of the truth, in the same way, every version of the Dhamma distorts reality, and so no version can qualify as exclusively right.

But this is a misreading of the map analogy. Neither maps nor the Dhamma are meant to be contemplated in and of themselves. They serve a purpose, an attha, and their accuracy can be tested by seeing if they actually serve the purpose intended for them. The fact that a map distorts some aspects of reality is no problem as long as it provides accurate directions for arriving at the goal for which it was drawn. If you’re drawing a treasure map, for instance, you’ll have to leave out some information. In fact, if you clutter the map with too many extraneous details, it becomes confusing and counterproductive. All that matters is that the route to the treasure is portrayed clearly enough to be followed, and that the route actually leads to the treasure.

In the same way, the Dhamma is expressed in words, and the nature of words is that they provide only a sketch of the reality they describe. But even then, they can still serve a good attha if the lines of the sketch act as a reliable guide to take you to that attha. Just as a map shouldn’t be cluttered with extraneous information, the Buddha found it advisable to avoid most of the philosophical debates about the nature of the world and the self extant in his day so that his Dhamma could focus on being accurate in the basics: what’s needed to get to the treasure of unbinding.

We like to think that the contradictions among available Dhamma maps are immaterial, that they simply point out alternative routes to the same goal. But the fact of the matter is that they describe not only different routes, but also different locations for the treasure. They even describe the treasure in different terms. So they can’t all be right—as we noted in the case of the four noble truths and the teaching of the non-arising of phenomena—which means that we have to choose among them.

Given that the Dhamma is not always pleasing, we can’t let our likes and dislikes determine our choice. In fact, even when a Dhamma seems reasonable and fits in with what we already believe, that doesn’t mean that it’s true (AN 3:66). Our only hope of finding the true Dhamma is to test it: to choose a Dhamma that seems promising and put it into practice, to see where it leads.

This test entails more than reading and reasoning about texts. It requires high levels of commitment and honesty, and keen powers of observation of your own actions and their results: character traits that the Buddha looked for in all his students (MN 80; SN 3:24). It’s only through being true yourself that you can know if the Dhamma is true.

But then, the Dhamma promises a lot of truth in return: not just a theory about happiness, but a direct, unchanging experience of the highest happiness possible. This is its attha. The potential reality of that attha is what keeps the Dhamma a living tradition. Without that attha, it would be nothing more than an historical curiosity—some theories about the mind and the world that far-away people believed in the far-distant past. It’s because the four noble truths are designed to be strategic, leading to a living experience that lies beyond the words, that even now, after all these centuries, we still care about the Buddha’s handful of leaves.





Cemetery Contemplation, by Venerable Bhikkhu Sona (warning: graphic images)

 4šŸ‘‘☸ → EBpediašŸ“š → a-subha šŸ§Ÿ 

also see: šŸ”—šŸ¦ Bank of Asubha: collection of helpful materials

(warning: graphic images)

click away from this article if you're squeamish and not ready to experience some full on visual asubha.




Why did I reformat his excellent booklet when you can get the original PDF source here?

https://birken.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Ajahn-Sona-Cemetary-Contemplations.pdf


1. I wanted to line up the 14 photos with the descriptions of each stage next to them, instead of flipping back and forth.

2. To PDF book makers, please read:

free Dhamma book makers, please make EPUB versions: PDF's are a horrendous nuisance to read

(this blog post is plain html, easily converts into epub)


Cemetery Contemplations Venerable Bhikkhu Sona Cemetery Contemplations, 

Venerable Bhikkhu Sona Written at the Pemberton Forest Monastery, 1996.


 Photos on pages 22 & 23 by Brian Calkins Layout by Andrea Schmidt.

 Printed in Canada, 2010  Cemetery Contemplations 3 

 

 The following photo series was taken at Wat Keun in North East Thailand over a three-week period in April 1992.

 It is intended as an aid to the meditation subject “nine charnel ground contemplations” as found in the “Foundations of Mindfulness” teachings of the Buddha (see Endnote, page 8, excerpt from the Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha).

 The ‘meditations on a corpse’ is one of several subjects found in the category of ‘right mindfulness’ in the Noble Eightfold Path.

 The body is the first of four subjects for the practice of mindfulness, the others being feelings, mental states and Dhamma.

 The Buddha recommends this object in order that the tendency to cherish and identify with the body or to deny the reality of death and the fragility of the body, can be counteracted.

 The Buddha says: “Again, bhikkhus, as though he were to see a corpse thrown aside in a charnel ground, one, two, or three days dead, bloated, livid, and oozing matter, a bhikkhu compares this same body with it thus: ‘This body too is of the same nature, it will be like that, it is not exempt from that fate’.

” I would like to point out an observation: “The phrase ‘as though’ (seyyathapi) suggests that this meditation… need not be based upon an actual encounter with a corpse in the state of decay described, but can be performed as an imaginative exercise.

 ‘This same body’ is, of course, the meditator’s own body.

” [Bhikkhu Bodhi] Most humans find death a fearful mystery, and the dead body repulsive, puzzling and frightening.

 However, the human tendency is to deny, at some level, that death and decay will occur, both to themselves and to those dear to them.

 “Anyone’s death always releases something like an aura of stupefaction, so difficult is it to grasp this irruption of nothingness and to believe that it has actually taken place” [G.

 Flaubert].

 Flaubert has captured the feeling of loss of another.

 But what of our own death?

 Let us hear from Tolstoi on this matter: “Ivan Ilych saw that he was dying, and he was in continuous despair.

 In the depth of his heart he knew he was dying, but  4 not only was he not accustomed to the thought, he simply did not and could not grasp it.

  “The syllogism he had learned from Kiezawetter’s Logic: ‘Caius is a man, men are mortal, therefore Caius is mortal’ had always seemed to him correct as applied to Caius, but certainly not as applied to himself.

 That Caius – man in the abstract – was mortal, was perfectly correct, but he was not Caius, not an abstract man, but a creature quite, quite separate from all others.

” [from the Death of Ivan Ilych] Consider once again the Buddha’s exhortation: “… This body too is of the same nature, it will be like that, it is not exempt from that fate.

” The body shown in the photos is that of a 42-year old Thai man.

 He lived about five kilometers from the monastery in a small village of about 100 people.

 He was the head-man of the village and was married with three children.

 He was in good health and was well liked by the people of his village.

 He was, by all accounts, a good man.

 At about 7pm one evening in early April, just as the light was fading, as he was standing in his yard, a man pulled up on a motorcycle and without warning, shot the victim in the chest from close range, with a sawed-off shotgun.

 The unknown assailant then escaped.

 Family and neighbours came running at the startlingly loud blast and found the victim already dead.

 The next morning, anxious to remove the body from the village, as death by violence is considered very inauspicious because of possible trouble from the victim’s ghost, the villagers brought the corpse to Wat Keun.

 At the monastery the monks perceived the event in a somewhat different light than did the villagers.

 For the monks, this sudden death and the appearance of the body was an opportunity for spiritual practice.

 The situation was a startling reminder not only of death, but of the unpredictable nature of life.

 It was so abrupt.

 Could it not have been any one of us?

 He did not die of old age, nor was he ill, nor in an obviously dangerous situation, but in the full bloom of life he had suddenly disappeared.

  Cemetery Contemplations 5 The villagers obligingly laid the corpse in a shallow grave in a homemade coffin with an easily removable lid.

 The spot chosen was about half a kilometer into the large forest surrounding the monastery – quiet, remote and secluded – an ideal location in which to practise corpse meditation.

 A meditation walking path was hacked out of the forest next to the grave, and a bare, level spot for sitting meditation was constructed immediately beside the corpse.

 The monks were to take turns in lonely vigils over the corpse.

 We could visit throughout the day and each of us had an opportunity to spend one or more nights alone with the body as it progressed through the stages of decomposition.

 On the afternoon of the first day, the monks realized they had to remove the clothing from the corpse in order to witness the process of decomposition.

 Since April is the height of the hot season, with temperatures of over 100 deg F, the body had already begun to bloat.

 The clothing was skin-tight and a terrible stench had begun to permeate the air 15 meters in every direction.

 With a razor knife we managed to peel away the clothing while trying not to slice open the skin, at the same time fighting the urge to gag as a result of the penetrating odour (you may note that we did not succeed in entirely removing his shirt).

 

 photo 1



 The first photo was taken within 24 hours of death.

 One can see red blood still oozing from the chest wound and blood on the face as well.

 The facial blood was probably caused by falling since the seven pellet wounds all centered around the heart.

 The mouth has already opened in the characteristic ‘death grin’.

 The hair is still in reasonably good condition while the body is beginning to deform.

 The healthy, shiny and clean look of the hair made a dissonant impression on me because the hair is something we judge to be a mark of style and beauty – but is here, so strangely, on this stinking corpse.

 Flies had begun to collect, primarily on the face, probably because of the fluids on the skin’s surface.

 The eyes, nose, mouth and ears ooze and attract the flies.

  6 Another feature one may notice is that the blackening process begins with the face and upper chest and it is quite some time until the body from the chest down turns blue.

  

  photo 2:


photo 3:



 In photos 2 and 3 one can see that the legs as well as bloating and bending have also formed pockets of fluid.

 This fluid also increases the reek – which is just short of overwhelming.

 In fact once one is familiar with the characteristic odour one can catch it, on a still day, 50 meters from the gravesite.

 

 photo 4:


 

 By photo 4 the swelling has reached its peak and as one sits near the corpse in the quiet of the night, gases under pressure occasionally hiss out of the pellet wounds.

 The sound is disturbingly close to a rasping exhalation of breath, and again, the already ghastly stink is given a temporary boost.

 The corpse has now begun to lose fluid through evaporation.

 The bubbles of fluid on the legs have disappeared leaving reddish, wrinkled skin flaps.

 The upper body and face are now completely covered by flies, – a moving ocean of insects.

 

 photo 5:

 


 Photo 5.

 The mouth is completely covered by maggots and one can only guess that it is still open.

 In the photos one does not get the disturbing effect of the intense motion of these insects.

{ here's video to show that: video maggots on moose corpse --  3 days later }

 They are in continuous activity in their feeding.

 It was difficult to take my eyes off the fountain-like effect they produce in and around the mouth.

 As well, these photos were taken in bright daylight.

 The effect of candle illumination in the still midnight was nearly hallucinogenic.

 These maggots fed 24 hours a day.

 

 photos 6, 7, 8, 9: 



 








 Photos 7 to 12 show the body becoming blue/black, and the maggots have spread across its surface.

 The mouth outline is becoming apparent and it seems that the body must be full of them, having entered through the mouth and made their way to the stomach.

   

   photo 10:



Photo 10.

 The insect activity is subsiding and so is the stench.

 This is the effect of the low humidity and high heat of April in Thailand.

 

 photo 11:



 Photo 11.

 The fact that the skin has become dried and leathery, and has collapsed in the left leg, shows the surprising fact that the body is practically hollow.

 The skin is now merely a leathery covering for the bones.

 The photos show the face and teeth emerging from beneath the fountain of maggots.

 The incredible expression of the gaping mouth and white teeth were difficult to ignore by flickering candlelight.

 

 

 The remaining photos show the emerging holes in the skin.

photo 12:



 That the skin is a mere shell over the hollow body is obvious.

 

 In the last two photos, a flap of skin and hair has fallen away to expose the skull bone.






 The body is seen to be merging with the earth, which an unexpected rain had washed into the shallow grave.

 The coffin was closed at this stage at the request of the relatives.

 Because of the drying effect, it would probably have been quite some time before any further significant decomposition would take place.

 In the description of the charnel ground contemplations as found in the discourse on the Foundations of Mindfulness there are phases where the bones are scattered by jackals and dogs, etc.

 Here we were careful to close the coffin when we were not there, to avoid just this happening.

 Local dogs and other animals were attracted by the odour and were eager to follow the letter of the teaching.

 We’ve added two final photos to suggest the presence of animals and the scattering of bleached bones.

 These were taken by Brian Calkins in 2004 at Birken Monastery.

 They are not from the original corpse.

 

 

 ==========================================================================================================

 (Footnotes)

  8 Endnote The Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha Translation: Bhikkhu Ƒanamoli & Bhikkhu Bodhi Wisdom Publications.

 148–149 (The Nine Charnel Ground Contemplations) 14.

 “Again, bhikkhus, as though he were to see a corpse thrown aside in a charnel ground, one, two, or three days dead, bloated, livid, and oozing matter, a bhikkhu compares this same body with it thus: ‘This body too is of the same nature, it will be like that, it is not exempt from that fate.

’ 15.

 “In this way he abides contemplating the body as a body internally, externally, and both internally and externally… And he abides independent, not clinging to anything in the world.

 That too is how a bhikkhu abides contemplating the body as a body.

 16.

 “Again, as though he were to see a corpse thrown aside in a charnel ground, being devoured by crows, hawks, vultures, dogs, jackals, or various kinds of worms, a bhikkhu compares this same body with it thus: ‘This body too is of the same nature, it will be like that, it is not exempt from that fate.

’ 17.

 “…That too is how a bhikkhu abides contemplating the body as a body.

 18–24.

 “Again, as though he were to see a corpse thrown aside in a charnel ground, a skeleton with flesh and blood, held together with sinews… a fleshless skeleton smeared with blood, held together with sinews… a skeleton without flesh and blood,   Cemetery Contemplations 9 held together with sinews… disconnected bones scattered in all directions – here a hand-bone, there a foot-bone, here a shin-bone, there a thigh-bone, here a hip-bone, there a back-bone, here a rib-bone, there a breast-bone, here an arm-bone, there a shoulder-bone, here a neck-bone, there a jaw-bone, here a tooth, there the skull – a bhikkhu compares this same body with it thus: ‘This body too is of the same nature, it will be like that, it is not exempt from that fate.

’ 25.

 “…That too is how a bhikkhu abides contemplating the body as a body.

 26–30.

 “Again, as though he were to see a corpse thrown aside in a charnel ground, bones bleached white, the colour of shells… bones heaped up, more than a year old… bones rotted and crumbled to dust, a bhikkhu compares this same body with it thus: ‘This body too is of the same nature, it will be like that, it is not exempt from that fate.

’ (INSIGHT) 31.

 “In this way he abides contemplating the body as a body internally, or he abides contemplating the body as a body externally, or he abides contemplating the body as a body both internally and externally.

 Or else he abides contemplating in the body its arising factors, or he abides contemplating in the body its vanishing factors, or he abides contemplating in the body both its arising and vanishing factors.

 Or else mindfulness that ‘there is a body’ is simply established in him to the extent necessary for bare knowledge and mindfulness.

 And he abides independent, not clinging to anything in the world.

 That too is how a bhikkhu abides contemplating the body as a body.

”  10 photo 1  Cemetery Contemplations 11 photo 2 12 photo 3  Cemetery Contemplations 13 photo 4 14 photo 5  Cemetery Contemplations 15 photo 6 16 photo 7  Cemetery Contemplations 17 photo 8 18 photo 9  Cemetery Contemplations 19 photo 10 20 photo 11  Cemetery Contemplations 21 photo 12 22 Ven.

 Bhikkhu Sona Born in Canada, Ven.

 Sona’s background as a layperson is in classical guitar performance.

 His encounter with Buddhist wisdom as a young man initiated a spiritual journey that led him to become a lay hermit for several years.

 He subsequently ordained as a Theravada monk under Ven.

 Gunaratana, at the Bhavana Society in West Virginia, where his first years of training took place.

 Ven.

 Sona further trained for over   Cemetery Contemplations 23 three years at monasteries following Ajahn Chah in northeast Thailand, especially Wat Pah Nanachat.

 Upon his return to Canada in 1994 he helped found a Forest Monastery near Pemberton, BC.

 As its spiritual guide, Ajahn (“teacher”) Sona has led the monastery through each stage of its growth.

 He established Birken (or, Sitavana, ‘cool forest’) in its final location south of Kamloops BC in 2001.

  24


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