Ajahn Chah was admired for the way he demystified the Buddhist teachings, presenting them in a remarkably simple and down-to-earth style for people of any background. This book offers powerful remedies for overcoming our deep-seated fear of change, including guidance on letting go of attachments, living in the present, and taking up the practice of meditation. Translator Paul Breiter has also included anecdotes about Ajahn Chah's life and his interactions with students, from his youth as a struggling monk to his last years, when American students were coming to study with him in numbers. These stories convey Ajahn Chah's unique spirit and teaching style, bringing him alive for us both through his words and through the way he lived his life.
Everything Arises, Everything Falls Away: Teachings on Impermanence and the End of Suffering, Ajahn Chah, Shambhala Publications, Paperback, 2005, 163 pages, $21.95.
Ajahn Chah was born in 1918 in a village located in the north-eastern part of Thailand. He became a novice at a young age and recieved higher ordination at the age of twenty. He followed the austere Forest Tradition for years, living in forests and begging for almsfood as he wandered about on mendicant pilgrimage.
He practised meditation under a number of masters, among whom was Ajahn Mun, a highly respected and accomplished meditation teacher of the time. Ajahn Mun had an indelible influence on Ajahn Chah, giving his meditation practice the direction and clarity that it lacked. Ajahn Chah later became an accomplished meditation teacher in his own right, sharing his realization of the Dhamma with those who sought it. The essence of his teaching was rather simple: be mindful, don't hang on to anything, let go and surrender to the way things are.
Ajahn Chah passed away in peace after a long bout of illness on January 16, 1992, at his home monastery, Wat Pah Pong, in Ubon Ratchatani.
Translator's Preface ix
Part One: Right View
1. Understanding Mind 3
2. Understanding Phenomena 6
3. That's About Right 9
4. Seeing Things Through: Ajahn Chah's Practice 11
5. Buddhas and Bodhisattvas 13
6. Seeing Things as They Really Are 15
7. That's Good Too: Ajahn Chah's View 22
8. The Buddha's Inspiration 24
9. Keep Some Perspective 26
10. The Buddha's Search 27
Part Two: Annica: Impermanence
11. Bringing the Mind under Our Control 33
12. A Lot of Defilements: Ajahn Chah at Play 35
13. It's Not Permanent, It's Not Sure 37
14. A Fish Story 43
15. A Perplexed Meditator Meets the Buddha 49
Part Three: Dukkha: Unsatisfactoriness
16. Understanding Dukkha 55
17. Shaking Up the Students: Ajahn Chah's Methods 64
18. Birth and Becoming 65
19. Evanescence 68
20. Cold Comfort: Ajahn Chah's Monks Face Illness and Death 72
21. The Buddha Didn't Die 74
22. Birth, Death, and Enlightenment: Ajahn Chah and the Bodhi Tree 76
Part Four: Anatta: Not-Self
23. Practice Like the Four Elements 81
24. Ignorance: Ajahn Chah Holds Up a Mirror 85
25. Not Us, Not Ours 86
26. Don't Be a Buddha 92
27. My Tooth, My Pillow, My Coconut 97
Part Five: Points in Meditation
28. Tranquility and Insight 101
29. Sill Water Flows, Flowing Water is Still 104
30. Making It Real 106
31. Serious Students: Ajahn Chah on Intensive Meditation 108
32. Meditation Instructions: Questions and Answers 110
33. What Is It: Ajahn Chah's Meditation 120
34. Don't Get Drunk on Tranquility 121
35. Keep At It 124
36. High Ideals and Daily Frustrations: A Young Monk with Ajahn Chah 126
Part Six: Completing the Path
37. Making an End of Problems 131
38. Seeking a Teacher: Ajahn Chah and a Would-Be Student 141
39. A Wise Crab 142
40. Some Final Advice 144
Translator's Acknowledgments 151
Glossary 153
Resources 159
About the Translator 163
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