“This, monks, is the only way for the purification of beings,
for the transcendence of grief and lamentation,
for the extinction of pain and sorrow,
for attaining the right method,
for the realisation of nibb?na;
namely, the four foundations of mindfulness.”
What are the four?
1. The Body;
2. Feelings;
3. Thoughts;
4. Mental states.
1. The BodyMindfulness of the Body is the foundation of Insight Meditation. It includes several different meditation objects — mindfulness of the breath, 32 body parts, four elements, clear comprehension of daily activities, and comparing the body with corpses.
The Mah?si meditation method uses mindfulness of the four elements as the primary object, stressing clear comprehension of all intentions when making bodily movements.
Note incessantly2. FeelingsThis includes both physical and emotional feelings. A meditator must be patient with pain, and equanimous towards pleasure and joy.
Pain is the key that opens the door to nibb?na. Do not change your position as soon as pain arises — change your mental attitude.
Resolve to understand the true nature of painful sensations. Insight will soon arise if you investigate painful sensations patiently.
No pain, no gain3. ThoughtsThe wandering mind is difficult to restrain. Insight cannot arise from thinking. One must transcend it to realise the truth.
Focus on mindfulness of bodily movements and sensations to gain discipline. The restless mind will gradually settle down.
Strict moral purity is vital. Avoid all sexual activity, eat little, sleep little, move very slowly, and refrain from all talking.
Talking is the greatest hindrance4. Mental statesWhen you prevent the mind from following its usual habits, it will resist and complain with restlessness, laziness, or doubts.
Like a spoiled child who is made to sit still, the fickle mind will struggle to escape from the confines of continuous mindfulness
Meditators must face these tantrums calmly, resolutely observing each mental or physical phenomenon, as and when it occurs.
Patience opens the door to nirv?na