We come, then, to the final parts of the eightfold path. There are two concluding steps which are calledâI explained the word samadhi, but Iâll write it here againâsmáčti; samyak-smáčti and samyak-samadhi. Smáčti means recollection, memory, present-mindedness. Seems rather funny that the same word can mean ârecollection,â or âmemoryâ and âpresent-mindedness.â But smáčti is exactly what that wonderful old rascal Gurdjieff meant by âself-awareness,â or âself-remembering.â Smáčti is to have complete presence of mind.
There is a wonderful meditation called The House that Jack Built meditationâat least thatâs what I call itâthat the Southern Buddhists practice. He walks, and he says to himself, âThere is the lifting of the foot. There is the lifting of the foot.â The next thing he says is, âThere is a perception of the lifting of the foot.â And the next, he says, âThere is a tendency towards the perception of the feeling of the lifting of the foot.â Then, finally, he says, âThere is a consciousness of the tendency of the perception of the feeling of the lifting of the foot.â And so, with everything that he does, he knows that he does it. He is self-aware.
This is tricky. Of course, itâs not easy to do. But as you practice thisâIâm going to let the cat out of the bag, which I suppose I shouldnât doâbut you will find that there are so many things to be aware of, at any given moment in what youâre doing, that, at best, you only ever pick out one or two of them. Thatâs the first thing youâll find out. Ordinary conscious awareness is seeing the world with blinkers on. As we say, you can think only of one thing at a time. Thatâs because ordinary consciousness is narrowed consciousness. Thatâs being narrow-minded in the true sense of the word; looking at things that way. Then you find out thatâas, in the course of going around, being aware of what youâre doing all of the timeâwhat are you doing when you remember? Or when you think about the future? I am aware that I am remembering? I am aware that I am thinking about the future?
But, you see, what eventually happens is that you discover that there isnât any way of being absent-minded. All thoughts are in the present and of the present. And when you discover that, you approach samadhi. Samadhi is the complete state; the fulfilled state of mind. And you will find many, many different ideas among the sects of Buddhists and Hindus as to what samadhi is. Some people call it a trance, some people call it a state of consciousness without anything in it; knowing with no object of knowledge. Some people say that it is the unification of the knower and the known. All these are varying opinions.
I had a friend who was a Zen master, and he used to talk about samadhi, and he said a very fine example of samadhi is a fine horserider. When you watch a good cowboy, he is one being with the horse. So an excellent driver in a car makes the car his own body, and he absolutely is with it. So also a fine pair of dancers. They donât have to shove each other to get one to do what the other wants him or her to do. They have a way of understanding each other, of moving together, as if they were Siamese twins. Thatâs samadhi on the physical, ordinary, everyday level. The samadhi of which Buddha speaks is the state which is, as it were, the gateway to nirvÄáča, the state in which the illusion of the ego as a separate thing disintegrates.
Now, when we get to that point in Buddhism, Buddhists do a funny thing, which is going to occupy our attention for a good deal of this seminar. They donât fall down and worship. They donât really have any name for what it is that is, really and basically. The idea of anÄtman, of non-self, is applied in Buddhism not only to the individual ego, but also to the notion that there is a Self of the universe, a kind of impersonal or personal god, and so it is generally supposed that Buddhism is atheistic. Itâs true, depending on what you mean by atheism. Common or garden atheism is a form of belief, namely that I believe there is no god. The atheist positively denies the existence of any god. All right. Now, there is such an atheistâif you put dash between the âaâ and âtheist,â or speak about something called âatheosââtheos, in Greek, means âgodââbut what is a non-god? A non-god is an inconceivable something or other.
I love the story about a debate in the Houses of Parliament in Englandâwhere, as you know, the Church of England is established and, therefore, under the control of the governmentâand the high ecclesiastics had petitioned Parliament to let them have a new prayerbook. And somebody got up and said, âItâs perfectly ridiculous that Parliament should decide upon this, because, as we well know, there are quite a number of atheists in these benches.â And somebody got up and said âOh, I donât think there are really any atheists here. We all believe in some sort of a something somewhere.â Now again, of course, it isnât that Buddhism believes in some sort of a something, somewhereâand that is to say, in vagueness.