Remember and look for the potential for goodness and possibility to become skillful
"There’s a slogan that sometimes you hear floating around Buddhist
circles: that if you want to see a person’s past actions, you look at
their current condition; if you want to see their future condition, you
look at their current actions. But that’s not true. There’s a lot more
to a person than you can see in the present moment. That slogan seems to
think that we have a single karma account and what you see right now is
the running balance.
But in the Buddha’s image, karma’s more
like a field full of seeds. What you see right now are the seeds that
are sprouting. But there can be lots of other seeds in the field that
you don’t see at all. They’re ready to sprout or they’re just lying
dormant. Which means that when you see somebody suffering, or see
somebody doing something that could lead to suffering, you don’t just
say, “Well, that’s their past karma,” and leave it at that. The same when you look at yourself: You don’t say, “All I’ve got is the karma I see right now.”
If we’re born as human beings, we have good and bad seeds in our field.
We’re creating new seeds all the time. So we want to create as many
good seeds as we can, but at the same time we also want to encourage the
good seeds from the past. Because it is possible for them to crowd out
the bad seeds, just as it is possible for the bad seeds to crowd out the
good. Which means that when we look at ourselves, we’re going to look
at our potential for goodness.
As Ajaan Lee points out, if you
focus on your potential for being bad or focusing simply on your bad
points, it pulls you down. And once you pull yourself down this way,
it’s all too easy to spread out and focus on other people’s bad points
as well, which means you don’t see their potential for good. That
discourages your potential for good, and so those potentials just get wasted.
So
which seeds do you want to water? You want to water the good ones.
Which means you have to believe firmly in your potential to do good —
and to believe firmly in other people’s potential as well.
When
Ajaan Lee made those comments, he was talking about one of the forms of
right resolve, which is to be resolved on harmlessness. You don’t focus
on your bad points; you don’t focus on other people’s bad points. You
try to focus on the good points. When you see somebody suffering, you
focus on the potentials they have to become skillful, so that they don’t
have to suffer from their bad karma.
Then you learn how to look
the same way at yourself. Of course, the more you look at yourself this
way, the easier it is to look at other people in this way. So karma’s
not simply teaching us that we get what we deserve. It’s more teaching
us that there is a way out. Because the Buddha’s teaching an end to
suffering, whether it’s “deserved” or not.
Think of the story of
Angulimala. He’d killed all those people but then had a huge change of
heart. The Buddha saw that potential. Nobody else saw the potential, but
the Buddha saw it and was able to bring it out. Angulimala became an
arahant. And as you can imagine, there were some people who were not
happy with this. There were people whose relatives he’d killed. They
wanted to see him get what he “deserved.” But the Buddha’s compassion
was different. He saw that this person had the potential. There was some
hidden goodness in him, and the Buddha was able to bring it out.
So
Angulimala was able to avoid a lot of suffering. The worst that
happened to him was that when he was on his almsround, people would
throw things at him. He came back one day, blood running down his head
from something somebody had thrown at his head, and the Buddha said, “Bear up with it! It could have been a lot worse.”
So
when you look at yourself and look at other people, remember, there’s a
potential for goodness there. And compassion is a matter of looking for
that potential for goodness and saying to yourself, “If there’s something I can do to help, I’d be happy to help.” If there’s nothing you can do, at least you don’t get in the way.
This
doesn’t mean that we don’t see that other people have their bad side as
well. We take that into account, for our own safety, but we focus on
the potential for good. Because that allows us to focus on our potential for good as well.
Like
we’re sitting here right now: You could focus on parts of the body that
are in pain and you could focus on them in a way that’s really going to
exacerbate the pain, make it worse. Or you could focus on your
potentials for pleasure. You’ve got the choice.
That’s what the
teaching of karma’s all about: There are choices here. And the
complexity of karma is what gives us our hope, that even though some bad
things may be coming up in the mind right now, there’s also a potential
for goodness in their someplace. There are the seeds that have been
planted someplace. So you want to look for those."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "Potentials for Good"
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