Even-mindedness and the two arrows

100 Days of Lovingkindness
Upekkha, or even-minded love, is the fourth of the series of meditations we're looking at in our 100 Days of Lovingkindness series.
As I discussed in the first post on upekkha, this word has several different meanings, although they're all related.
There's:
  1. Even-mindedness where we are able to accept ups and downs (specifically, pleasant, unpleasant, and neutral feelings) without being thrown off-balance.
  2. Even-mindedness in the deep states of meditative absorption called jhana, where the mind is very stable and focused.
  3. Even-mindedness as one of the four immeasurables (brahmaviharas), where we have even-minded love.
  4. Even-mindedness as a synonym for the awakened state, or enlightenment, where greed, hatred, and delusion have been unrooted, and so the mind is not thrown off-balance by them.
Now I don't think these are entirely separate. I pointed out that upekkha as a synonym for the awakened experience (type 4) could be the same thing as the brahmavihara (type 3), but experienced permanently. Even-mindedness as an experience in jhana (type 2) is just ordinary even-mindedness (type 1) plus concentration. And even-mindedness as a brahmavihara (type 3) is just even-mindedness (type 1) plus love.
Since even-mindedness type 1 is the basis for all the rest, we should take a look at that.
The Buddha talked about there being "two arrows." The first arrow is when we have an experience that is painful in some way. That's an inevitable part of life. But then there follows a second arrow, which consists of our aversive response to pain. So we think "This shouldn't happen to me! It's not fair!" Or we think "It's his fault!" Or we think, "This is horrible, this is how it's going to be for the rest of my life!" Or we think, "This always happens to be. It must show that I'm a bad person, unworthy of being loved. My life sucks!" And all of these responses simply cause us more pain: hence, the second arrow.
And the same kind of dynamic works for pleasant feelings as well, except that the pain usually comes when the pleasant feeling has gone, and we mourn it, or when we find ourselves having been led into unwise actions in pursuit of further pleasure.
So the Buddha's advise is simply to observe feelings as they arise and pass away, and to accept them mindfully without reacting with either craving or aversion. This acceptance of our feelings is equanimity, even-mindedness, or upekkha. We don't ignore any pain or pleasure, and in fact we're more conscious of it than when we're busy reacting to it. We simply notice it as another experience. We lose the judgment. It's not "bad" to experience pain, and it's not "good" to experience pleasure.
And this is important in each of the brahmaviharas. At a very basic level, at the start of a period of lovingkindness, we have to become aware of how we feel, so that we know what we're working with. Now it actually doesn't matter whether we feel good, or feel terrible, or whether we don't know how we feel — it's only important that we're aware of what our experience is. So if you're feeling unhappy, that's OK. To be paradoxical, it's not "bad" to feel bad. You just feel unhappy, you accept the unhappiness, and you start cultivating lovingkindness for yourself. If you're feeling happy, then that's fine to. Same thing: just accept what's there and start cultivating lovingkindness. If you're not sure how you're feeling, this is probably because you're not feeling much. You're experiencing a neutral feeling. And you accept that and start cultivating lovingkindness toward yourself. It's all too common for people to go into a downward spiral when they feel bad or feel neutral. Equanimity prevents this happening. It stabilizes the mind. We neither reject who we are, nor crave to become someone else. We simply accept what's going on, and work patiently with it.
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And, later in each of these practices, we call to mind people who are friends, people you neither like nor dislike, and people you have a conflicted relationship with. Generally when we think of a friend we'll experience pleasant feelings, a neutral person neutral feelings, and a difficult person unpleasant feelings. So these practices give us the opportunity to develop equanimity. We cultivate the ability to sit mindfully with the three basic "flavors" of feeling. This is a very important part of lovingkindness practice. The more we're able to have equanimity for our painful, pleasant, and neutral feelings, the easier it is to cultivate upekkha.
In a more vipassana approach (and by that I means simply meditation that focuses on impermanence, non-self, and the unsatisfactoriness of our experiences, rather than the form of meditation taught by Goenka or other teachers as "Vipassana" or "Insight Meditation") we can train ourselves to observe that our feelings come and go. This is something we know, of course. But in paying particular attention to this fact — by observing it in action — we take our feelings less personally. We're not so prone to reacting when we remember the impermanence of our feelings. Also in a vipassana approach we can learn to recognize that because our feelings pass through, they're not ultimately a part of us: "This is not me; this is not mine; I am not this" was the phrase that the Buddha taught. And lastly, in a vipassana approach to feelings, we can recognize that no feeling is capable, fundamentally, either of permanently destroying our wellbeing or of giving lasting happiness. We recognize the dukkha, or unsatisfactory nature of our experiences, and recognize that it's not the contents of our experience that create happiness or lack of happiness, but the way we relate to the contents of our experience.
And the most powerful thing we can do to transform our relationship with the contents of our experience is to allow it to be, with equanimity.

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