
Nut Job JhÄna
The JhÄna Community
Intro
Vince introduces the episode topic 'nut job jhÄna' and guest Brian Newman, outlining Brian's background in intensive jhÄna training.
Vince Fakhoury Horn speaks with Brian Newman about ânut job jhÄna,â tracing Brianâs journey through intensive Pa-Auk Sayadaw concentration training, his eventual integration of Kenneth Folkâs modern spectrum-based approach, and the balance between deep absorption and daily life practice.
A JhÄna Community Retreat
Come join Vince & Brian on Retreat this coming January in Portugal.
đŹ Transcript
Vince: Welcome everyone to this exciting special event here in the jhÄna community. Weâve invited Brian Newman to join us today to talk about, in quotes, nut job jhÄna. Of course, weâre using this sort of tongue-in-cheek term for really hardcore, deep jhÄna training.
Our mutual teacher, Kenneth Folk, jokingly used that term on a retreat that we were both at. And it stuck, in terms of just, again, tongue-in-cheek. But Brian has that background. Brianâs trained in the Pa-Auk tradition, which is one of the most prestigious and hardcore of the jhÄna traditions in Asia that Iâm familiar with.
And they have some, you could say, really high standards with respect to what constitutes jhÄna. I would love to jump into that with you, Brian, but first, before we get into your nut job jhÄna days, Iâm curious to start with a bit about how you initially got into this stuff.
Did you grow up around it? Did you have a moment where you learned about meditation or dharma? What was your way into this world?
Brian: Thanks for having me, Vince. Itâs a great question. My origin story changes depending on my mood in the moment, so letâs see what Iâve got here.
I didnât start practicing until I think I was 38. Iâm 50 now, guys, so thatâs a 12-year practice history. And the practice was associated with me becoming an executive coach. I was a salesperson, and I switched professions. I was switching to doing one-on-one work with people, and I had the idea that I realized very quickly I needed to be a better listener.
Iâd like to be a better listener. And I had the idea that if I got real still, if I learned how to be really quiet, then I could probably listen to my clients better. And what happened was, I got real still, and I realized how insanely loud my mind was, even if I wasnât talking. That was a real revelation, and my practice quickly changed from becoming a better listener to getting super fucking enlightened.
It became the interest. Is it okay if I say things like that?
Vince: Thanks.
Brian: Oh yeah, for me itâs fine. Yeah, please. Is that okay, guys? Youâre looking for nut job jhÄna, but Iâm gonna give you a true dose if thatâs what youâre into.
And so I, like many of us, I thinkâI donât know what you guys didâI started with a Goenka retreat. Who doesnât? Itâs so accessible. Itâs so free. Itâs so there, right? So you go do your Goenka retreat, and then I went and did Reggie Ray Tibetan stuff. So I have no idea what Iâm doing. Iâm doing Goenka, and then I go do Reggie Ray in the Tibetan tradition, and Iâm doing other retreats here and there.
And then, you know what, it wasâIâm almost embarrassed to admit that I spent so much of my life based on one sentence I read in one bookâbut it was Daniel Ingramâs book, actually. It was Mastering the Core Teachings of the Buddha, which I think is a great gift to the Dharma community, a wonderful book that is very inspiring.
Daniel is clearly a great practitioner. Anybody whoâs read the book understands what a great practitioner he is. And I appreciated that. And then, at the beginning of the book, thereâs one line that says, âIf I had to do it over again, I wouldâve started by attaining at least the first jhÄna before I got into my vipassanÄ practice.â
And Iâm like, if this dude says that, Iâm just gonna take that at face value and do it. And that became my jhÄna journey. So that was probably a year into meditation when I got that book introduced to me. The book had a huge impact.
And then I was actually working with Ron Crouch at the timeâanother of Kennethâs quite well-known students and a great Dharma teacher. And Iâm like, âRon, I wanna do jhÄnas,â and he says, âYouâre not gonna do them with me âcause thatâs not my thing.â
And we agreed that I would go do something, I would go pursue that, in a very nice way. Like, you always want the teacher that says, âThatâs not my thing.â Thatâs the best teacher everââItâs not my thing. Learn it from somebody else.â
So I started to look for the jhÄna teachers, which, twelve years ago, there werenât many. Right, Vince? Thereâs hardly anybody. So itâs like thereâs Leigh Brasington, thereâs Steven and Tina RasmussenâSteven Snyder and Tina Rasmussenâthereâs Shaila Catherine. Both those two are in the Pa-Auk tradition.
Leigh Brasingtonâs Ayya Khemaâitâs a totally different genreâand frankly, I couldnât find anybody else. And Iâm living in Asia at the time, guys. Iâve lived in Asia most of my life. So I chose the hardcore routeâread Steven and Tinaâs bookâand Iâm like, if Iâm gonna do the thing, I might as well do it as hardcore as possible.
And I started to do retreats. I did one retreat with them, to be clear, and then I worked with them for about a year. And then I found a nun in Asia, Sayalay SusÄ«lÄ, who has a retreat center called AppamÄda VihÄrÄ«, which means âdwelling in diligenceâ in Sanskritâwhich tells you exactly what kind of practitioner and teacher she is.
Thereâs something very special about finding a hardcore nun in Asia to teach you the Dharma. This is the way. I think itâs really a beautiful experience. Sheâs not publicâyou can go look at her retreat center, and the first thing youâll read is âNot open to any new students. No private retreats allowed.â
All this is negotiable, in case you guys are interested. So sheâs setting up a lot of obstacles for you to even get there. Interesting, isnât it? Very interesting. Very Asian.
And I go to the retreat center, and itâs just a magical place in Penangâon the island, in the jungle, on a mountain. I canât even describe it. And thereâs nobody there. You guys, this retreat hall could fit 300 people. Thereâs a Buddha statue the size of a house in there. Itâs unbelievable.
And Iâm the only one practicing. Sometimes thereâd be rotating nuns whoâd come through. So I probably went there five or six times over the course of a couple or three years.
And in February of 2018, she said, âBrian, itâs very clear to me that you have attained the third jhÄna, and I think youâre probably bouncing around the fourth.â This is the first time ever anybody acknowledged me as attaining jhÄnas.
So, Sayalay SusÄ«lÄ had spent ten years at the Mahasi Center under the Sayadaw teachings, under Mahasi. Then she became lead attendant for Pa-Auk Sayadaw, traveling with him around Asia. She spent like three years with him in Sri Lanka. She told me once, in confidence, that one of her big breakthroughs was just softening in Sri Lanka, attending to Pa-Auk Sayadaw in this primitive environment.
She was with him the whole timeâthe lady behind the curtain. So Iâm getting the Pa-Auk Sayadaw teachings in their full form from her. And this was a really beautiful experience to me. Itâs what Iâd been looking forâthe essence of it, I thought.
And then I met Kenneth, and Kenneth took a hatchet to what I had learned in the traditional way. You guys, I think maybe you have some experience or know of Kennethâheâs an iconoclastic teacherâand he really opened up the jhÄna for me in amazing ways. That is where my practice is today.
So maybe I could just rephrase that. I have very traditional teaching, specifically in the Pa-Auk lineage. Iâve been validated in that lineage. Their model of attaining jhÄna is a three-hour timed sitâyou make a resolution, you exit three hours later without looking at a watch. You naturally come out of the absorbed jhÄna after three hours.
Iâm sitting on the floor, guys. Iâm not sitting in easy chairs like they do at a lot of retreat centersâon the cushion, straight back, three hours, come out in a moment. Thatâs how you get jhÄna.
If you talk to Steven or Tina, thatâs the way they did it. They went through all eight. They did all the kasinas for every single one. This is seriousâa multi-month practice to complete the whole cycle.
And Sayalay SusÄ«lÄ said to me, âI think you should teach.â So Iâve been validated by her to go ahead and teach this.
So I have a very traditional Pa-Auk background. Iâm very appreciative of those models and understand them very well. And then I have a really sort of modern, postmodern view as wellâabout not needing to be totally absorbed. I have a much looser view about jhÄna on the spectrum. I believe thereâs a flavor of jhÄna that can be very light, and then a really strong flavorâand different ways to get into those states.
Vince: Okay, cool. We should talk more about the spectrum, because thatâs something weâve been exploring.
Brian: Are you into the spectrum community?
Vince: (Laughs)
Brian: Iâm all into the spectrum. Yeah. Itâs only the spectrum. Anybody telling you itâs not is engaged in black-and-white thinking, which is unskillful. Like, what is black and white in the world? JhÄna versus not-jhÄna is a really misguided way to approach it. Thinkâhow about, how much jhÄna?
Vince: Okay, cool. Before we switch into that, could you talk a little bit more about the training that you received with Silaâ
Brian: Sayalay SusÄ«lÄ. S-U-S-I-L-A.
Vince: Right. One side note here: very interestingly, a couple of my friends here in Asheville recently organized a retreat for college kids and invited her out to lead it. They were telling me, âWeâve got this nun whoâs in the Pa-Auk tradition, sheâs from MalaysiaâŠâ The more details I got, the more I realized this was your teacher.
Brian: Really?
Vince: Yeah, and I was shocked because of how youâve talked about how inaccessible she is. I was like, âWow.â And they were like, âYeah, no oneâs ever heard of her.â I said, âI have. My friend Brianâs trained with her.â
Brian: Oh, thatâs impressive.
Vince: Anywayâdid she come?
Brian: Yeah, she did. She came and led a reallyâI think it was a weeklong retreatâfor American college kids.
Vince: Oh man.
Brian: Itâs amazing. Sheâs an incredible teacher. We have a close relationship. I can be joking with her and Iâll say, âI donât know, these three-hour sits are killing me, theyâre brutal.â Sheâll say, âIâll come sit with you tomorrow.â Iâd never seen her sit beforeâlike a stone, forever. You guys, eight hours, I donât know, six hours? Sheâs just not going to move. Sheâs sitting like a fucking stone. So impressive.
Vince: Okay, so how does one learn to sit like a stone? What was the training like on the way up to three hours of stoniness?
Brian: This is the primary dilemma, guys, because all these books about jhÄnaâand Iâll tell you, the instructions on how to get jhÄnaâitâs two words, right? There are all these books, but itâs two words: âfocus here.â Thatâs it. You realize thatâs the end of the practice instructions.
So then we just become sort of masturbatory about all the different ways we can âfocus here,â but itâs constantly âfocus here.â
Hereâs what happens. Westerners go to the Pa-Auk monasteryâPa-Auk now has one in San Francisco or something. He doesnât live in Burma anymore, maybe in Malaysia, Iâm not sure if heâs alive actuallyâbut they go to the Pa-Auk monastery and are told to focus here, which is the only instruction in jhÄna: focus here, focus on the anÄpÄna spot (or region, more modernly, since itâs not just a spot but an area).
Then the Western practitioner, whoâs been trained at perhaps Western retreat centers where itâs really okay to psychologize your practice, will come in with all the reasons why they canât âfocus here.â Theyâll tell lots of storiesâlife stories, traumas, challenges, aspirations. The teacher listens kindly, says some nice things, and they go back and try to practice more.
So the Western practitioner takes a long time, is what Iâm getting at. It doesnât seem to go too smoothly, is what I hear in the Pa-Auk monastery.
I havenât been to Burma, but the laypeopleâthe Burmese women, often the ones who have the time to practiceâwill come in, the teacher says, âFocus here,â and they just go. They donât think about it, because theyâre reverent to the teacher. They just focus here. And two weeks later, theyâve got jhÄna. This is well known.
Thereâs something fascinating about just taking that simple instruction and doing the thing for a really long time.
So Iâm super into getting jhÄna fast, and I have lots of hacks. A certain kind of person can jack their way, hack their way, grind their way into jhÄna. If you guys want to know that, Iâll talk about that all day. I wanted to know it. Itâs good to know, right?
However, I would suggest to you that jhÄna is much better slowâlike some other things in life. Slow food is better than fast food, right, Vince?
Vince: Indeed it is.
Brian: Making love slowly is often better than fast. Playing the saxophone with a slow vibe is nicer than playing it fast, I think, in many cases. Isnât it amazing there are still practices in the world that encourage patience?
If you rememberâor if youâve readâthe Buddha predicted that the end of times, the end of the Dharma, would come when people stopped practicing jhÄna. So I think itâs wonderful that weâre talking about it.
I think itâs wonderful that Vince is in fights with people on Twitter about nuances of jhÄna, because that means weâre still talking about itâand that means weâre not at the end of time. Iâm super delighted by this. I have no opinion on the arguments; I just think itâs interesting weâre talking about it.
Twelve years ago, we werenât even talking about it. Iâm stoked about that.
Whatâs the practice, whatâs the right way to say itâwhat are they actually teaching you in the practice? I think youâve got to fill it out for yourself.
So Iâm going to get âfocus hereâ from the Sayalay, and sheâs really not going to engage with me much more than âfocus here,â and then question me if I say anything.
Iâll give you an example. I went to a teacher onceâactually Tinaâand said, âEvery time I sit down to sit, all Iâm getting is spiders. Iâm just getting spiders all the timeâspider images. Iâm trying to do jhÄna, Iâm just getting spiders.â
And there were spiders all over the retreat centerâsomewhere in the Pacific Northwestâcrazy numbers of spiders. I didnât love spiders at the time. Iâve changed my relationship because of that retreat.
And Iâm talking about the spiders, and she says to me, âWhatâs the most important thing to you right now?â And I said, âThe breathâand getting jhÄna.â And she says, âThen why are you talking to me about spiders?â
That was good teaching, you guys. She just said, âFocus here. Stop talking about stuff. Focus here.â
So thatâs the instruction, I think. We need to fill that out a little bit for somebody whoâs interested.
If youâre on this call today, you care about this, I think, so you want to fill it out. Iâd suggest you go read some other books. Read Richard Shankmanâs book, which tells you how all the different teachers think about jhÄnaâthatâs a great start.
Go to Leigh Brasington and learn the jhÄnic factor way inâthatâs a great teaching, totally in the suttas, very sutta-based. And then all the other ways we can hack our way in. Kenneth has lots of hacks.
But primarily, Vince, Iâd say the teaching I got was âfocus here,â and when you donât feel like focusing here, focus here more. That was basically it. It was very rigorous, down the line. If you canât take it, fine, donât come back.
Vince: Okay. So in that sense, that fits with the kind of traditional method ofâitâs pretty simple and straightforward and direct. But sometimes maybe thereâs a lack of exposition or opening up to all the different ways you can hack or grind, like you said.
Brian: Yeah. So itâs extremely powerful, but if it doesnât work for someone, it can really not work.
Vince: Yeah.
Brian: Even the sutta-based instructions are better than âfocus here,â right? So hereâs what the sutta says: Find somewhere really quiet. Bring mindfulness to the fore. So thisâwe could have a whole session: what does it mean to bring mindfulness to the fore?
Interesting. Does he mean bring it to the tip of your noseâmaybe itâs an anÄpÄna spot thing? Does he mean bring it to the mindâhave awareness that youâre doing a mindful practice?
If youâve looked at the suttas about the bathmaker making the ball of soapâthatâs the simile of the jhÄnaâthose are great practice instructions for the practitioner.
May I remind you that the fruits of the practice are only available to those who practiceâroughly quoting Mahasi.
So if we havenât done the practice, âfocus hereâ is the best instruction ever. If we have done the practice, the similes of the bathmakerâmaking that weird ball of soapâsuddenly start to make sense.
The jhÄnic factors become entry points. You can have pÄ«ti all day longâhave you ever had pÄ«ti just watching a movie or listening to angelic voices of a choir? Iâm getting it right now, talking about pÄ«ti.
Why couldnât I just take that and use it to access jhÄna? Because itâs a jhÄnic factorâI think I could. So we start toâwhat weâre looking for, guys, and this is a Kenneth teachingâweâre looking for handles.
Youâve got six sensesâfive senses plus the mindâand there are going to be handles that allow you to hold jhÄna in many different ways.
We could go through each of the senses and talk about handles, but let me just give you an example from the auditory senseâthe ear sense.
Many people, not all, will get a ringing in the ears thatâs associated with high concentration, and thatâs called the nÄda. Are you guys aware of that? Itâs like the sound of the universe, sometimes said to be.
Does anybody get thatâa ringing in your ears? You might not even notice. Itâs very subtle. Itâs said to be the cosmological sound of the universeâor it could just be the sound you hear internally when you get super concentrated.
So if I can get a sense of the nÄda and thereâs a jhÄnic factor arising, I know where to put my eyes, and Iâm good at following the breath.
Ajahn Chah said he could enter jhÄna in one breath. I suggest you can enter jhÄna in one moment. You donât need toâyou can just go in, you can just drop in.
Iâm saying this sort of nonchalantly only because I met Kenneth Folk some five years ago, and itâs true that you can only go inâbut he was the person who made that a possibility for me, by opening the idea of that up, as did, in his own way, Ajahn Chah saying you could enter in one breath. That seemed revolutionary at the time.
Vince: Thatâs interesting. I never heard the Ajahn Chah quote on entering jhÄna through the breath. But his backgroundâa lot of people donât knowâhe did super hardcore jhÄna training and vipassanÄ-jhÄna training before he met his teacher, Ajahn Mun, of course, who was like, âLet go of the states,â berated him for being in jhÄna, right?
Brian: Yeah, which was a good advanced teaching.
Vince: Butâ
Brian: So, Ram Dass used to enter jhÄna when he was with Babaji in India, and itâs talked about in Grist for the Mill, which is a wonderful Dharma book. And Babaji would see him super concentrated and heâd come up to him and say, âHey, Ram Dass, how much money you make?â
He would deliberately break his concentration, to teach him about not being stuck in those concentrated states.
Vince: Thatâs lovely. Okay, so Brianâwhen you stopped intensively working on the Pa-Auk jhÄna program, you said there were a few years when you were going on retreats and working hardcore on that project. Where did you leave that trainingâin terms of what you felt youâd learned or accomplished, or however youâd like to talk about it?
Brian: Yeah. My Dharma path has been a lot about trying to attain things I didnât haveâand then not being so impressed when I attained them. Does anybody have that experience?
I think this is a really good experience to have, guys, because it allows it all to fall awayâand we become immune from states.
So the pinnacle of my nut job jhÄna practice was probably when I checked into an Airbnb in Hong Kong and did a two-week solo. It was on an island actually, not in Hong Kong proper, and it was a super crappy, disgusting Airbnbâ150 square feet total. I hadnât vetted it first, and I brought enough food for two weeks.
I decided I wasnât going to leave this 150-square-foot place for two weeks. And I didnât. Basically, I wasnât going to leave until I got jhÄna.
So it was two weeks, but I was willing to extend it. I was just going to go for it. And I think I should have taken a pictureâaround day five, I started putting writings up on the wall. So Iâd gone full-on mad person nowâif the police came, itâs a crime scene.
And I didnât bring much paper, so Iâve got paper towel tubes and stuff Iâm writing on, and all I write is âfocus here.â I put it everywhere I could possibly seeâincluding the shower, you guys. It says âfocus here.â
One of the areas youâre going to lose your concentration is in the shower and eating. So we learn, if weâre serious jhÄna practitioners, you never let the pot stop boiling.
So really slow eating becomes a practiceâmaintaining the nimitta if you have it, or the awareness of the breath. And the showerâs a tough oneâtry washing yourself while maintaining jhÄna. So: in the shower, âfocus here.â
Around day 12, I had a massive breakdownâwho wouldnât? I actually left in the middle of the night and went down to the beach and cried for three hours. Then I finished the retreat out and said, âIâm never going to do that again.â
It was so much suffering to be free of sufferingâwhich is a Dharma dilemma, isnât it?
Around this time, I was really fortunate to have met Kenneth. The first thing Kenneth said to me was, âDonât take this stuff so preciously. Let me show you how I can go through the eight jhÄnas in two minutes.â
I said, âWhat are you talking about?â He said, âIf youâve been there once, you can just do it again right now. Just remember.â
That really loosened up the practice.
Now, I continued to go see the nuns. I asked Kenneth, âWhat should I say to her?â and he said, âDonât tell her anything. Just say, âIâm here to learn, please teach me.ââ That was great advice.
So I kept getting âfocus hereâ from her and âmagicâ from Kennethâand that duet really worked for me.
What ended up happening from Kennethâs teaching was, he taught me eye postures. I think thatâs the hack. If youâre able to bring your eyesâthe jhÄna one, two, three, or fourâthere are distinct eye postures (drishti, itâs called in Sanskrit). I think thatâs the thing that gets us into jhÄna quicker than anything else.
And, guys, just a general suggestionâitâs worthwhile to pay attention to where your eyes are in any practice of meditation.
If youâve ever done MahÄmudrÄ, where do your eyes go when you do it? Thatâs interesting. Where are the monksâ eyes when theyâre doing open-eye Dzogchen? You can take a look.
Very interesting whatâs happening with eyes. There are some hidden teachings there, I think.
I mentioned to Sayalay SusÄ«lÄ about eye postures onceâagainst my better judgmentâand she said, âYouâre looking with your eyes.â Because she wants an internal drishti. She doesnât want a real one.
And I said, âYeah, Iâm looking with my eyes.â And she said, âIf youâre already doing it, keep doing it.â That seemed like an interesting way to respond.
So I felt Kenneth was really onto something there when she validated that.
Kenneth really helped me make things quicker so I didnât have to sit long. I would sit likeâdaily life, three hours to start my day, for years. Then Iâd sit an hour at night.
Thatâs how you maintain jhÄna in daily life. I probably would have to do an hour and a half to two in the morning and thirty minutes to an hour later in the day.
With that practice, I could enter any jhÄna on the Tokyo subway in rush hour if I was sitting down. Thatâs where I got with the practice.
Soâwhat else do you need to do? At that point, I didnât need to do anything else. Iâd had it. I realized that there were two people in the world who caredâmy teacher Kenneth and my friend Vince.
And I wasnât really impressing anybody. My wife didnât care, my friends didnât care, nobody else cared. So it really loosened me up.
And when I got loose around it, I started to have some fun with it. My jhÄna now is much more like playing the saxophone. Itâs real gentle.
If thereâs a nimitta, Iâll go with it, but I donât worry about it. So itâs veryâIâm going to call it opportunistic jhÄna, where Iâm not so rigorous.
Preparing to talk to you guys today, I wanted to dust off the skills, so Iâve spent the past couple weeks practicing pretty rigorous jhÄna. Itâs fascinating to do thatâhow fun it is, and how much it impacts my life.
I notice that I sit much quieter. My yoga practice is really different, just by doing a little jhÄna practice before that.
Does that answer the question, Vince? I might have gone on a tangent.
Vince: Yeah, noâreally interesting. What you were saying about ramping up your jhÄna practice recently flashed me back to the last retreat I didâa jhÄna retreat with Phillip Moffitt.
Right after that, I had a Rolfing sessionâwhere they massage the fasciaâand it was shocking how much more pliable my body was after sitting on my ass for ten days breathing.
Even the Rolfer was like, âHoly crap, this is a lot different than our normal sessions.â
That really showed me the power of jhÄnaâlike hard jhÄna.
Brian: Yeah, and what you said is so interesting, because whatâs the end game here, guys? Nobody ever said the end game was to get jhÄna. Whatâs the end game?
The Buddha wants us to have a mind that is pliant and malleableâthatâs what he said.
So if we have a triangle where first jhÄna is the bottom layer, second is above that, and you get nirodha somewhere at the topâthe peak of the triangle is a mind that is malleable and pliant.
Which is interesting, because thatâs not quite what an absorbed jhÄnic mind is. The absorbed jhÄnic mind is super one-pointedâit can burn a hole through things, like a laser.
And I really lived in that dichotomy for a while. I had to make a life choice: which do I like better?
I like a pliant and malleable mind more than I like a laser-focused pointer.
I can see tremendous value in that. Itâs greatâfor my golf game, if I want to putt, turn on the jhÄna mind, great. Archeryâwonderful.
If I need to sit down and plan a class Iâm going to teach, I need four hours of focused concentrationâno problem anymore.
But itâs much nicer to play the saxophone, Iâd sayâmore in line with where Iâm at.
Also, when you get somethingâyou know how it goesâonce youâve got the call, you can hang up the phone. Isnât that what somebody famous said?
Vince: That was Ram Dass, no?
Brian: Was that Ram Dass? Once youâve got the call, yeahâyou can hang up the phone.
Vince: Yeah. Thatâs cool. Makes sense. So you had this period where you were training intensivelyâand what I find really interesting about your description is what it took you to maintain that type of access in modern life.
Brian: Weâre talking about that. Peopleâyeah, no oneâsâ
Vince: Iâve never heardâ
Brian: Wife goes to the bathroom at the restaurantâIâm going to be in jhÄna. Iâm waiting in a line at the grocery storeâIâm going to be in jhÄna. Crowded Tokyo subwayâIâm going to be waiting for a client meeting in a corporate lobbyâIâm going to be in jhÄna.
Thatâs how I was living my life.
Vince: So you were living in a way that would keep you from losing access to that subtle level of concentrated awareness.
Brian: To go into the seventh jhÄna while waiting in line at the post officeâitâs no easy feat. Thatâs not meant to be egotistical.
Itâs super cool to be able to play the drums. Itâs super cool to do aikido. Itâs super cool to cook Vietnamese food. And itâs super cool to go into seventh jhÄna in the post office.
We all have our things weâre into. Itâs just another fun thing to figure out in oneâs life, for those who are interested.
Vince: Nicely spoken. Like a true lifelong learner.
Youâve mentioned the term nimitta a number of times, and I know probably everyone here is familiar, but for those who might not beâcould you talk about what the nimitta is in the context of Pa-Auk training?
Brian: Yeah, sure. So, in the tradition, the nimitta is a signâI believe nimitta means âsignââand itâs something that arises in the mind through concentration.
In the Pa-Auk tradition, itâs ÄnÄpÄnasati leading to the nimitta, and then one takes the nimitta as the object, which is interesting, right? Because you might wonder, why would you move away from the thing that got you there in the first placeâthe breathâand switch to something else? Thatâs a really interesting question.
Some traditions say donât do that. Ayya Khema, my understanding is, said that was a distraction and one shouldnât look at the nimitta.
Now it doesnât matterâIâll talk more about the nimitta in a secondâbut it doesnât matter because a nimitta is going to arise.
Hereâs what happens: in my experience, the nimitta arisesâitâs a very exciting moment when it arises for the first time, and one wants to look at it, because this is the best thing weâre trying to get.
And the nimitta is squirrely. It always goes away when you look at it. So it doesnât really matter whether you choose to look at it or not; if it happens for youâand not everybody is prone to getting itâthen one will become absorbed in it, not by looking at it but by continuing the ÄnÄpÄnasati practice that you were doing before.
Let me flesh out the nimitta a little bit more. It doesnât happen for everybody, and the Pa-Auk tradition acknowledges this. Thereâs a separate path for those who arenât predisposed to getting the nimitta, which I think is wonderfulâisnât it nice to have an alternative?
The alternative path is, youâre going to work on the four elements, and youâre going to do vipassanÄ using the four elements as your framework.
So instead of saying, âpressure in my shoulderâ or âmy elbow is resting on the chair,â you say âearth element,â because thatâs earth. Then the wind element would be the pressure.
This is very interesting and shamanistic. So they want you to do four elementsâyou do that a ton until the body dissolvesâand thatâs enough concentration to start vipassanÄ practice, which is meant to get you enlightened.
Pa-Auk tradition is not about getting jhÄna; itâs about getting enlightened. He just wants you to get all the jhÄnas super great, then bring that into vipassanÄ. His whole game is getting enlightened.
So much so that, if Iâm not mistaken, in that tradition you have to revoke the Bodhisattva vow so that you can get enlightened.
Iâve had teachers who were asked to revoke their Bodhisattva vow so they could progress in his traditionâand they declined because they didnât want to revoke it. Super interesting. Also tells us how these rigorous traditions differ from MahÄyÄna and so on.
What else is not really talked about in the nimitta? Traditionally itâs considered a bright white lightâlike someone turned the lights on, headlights shining in your face.
Thatâs not true for everybody, though. Everyone can have different nimittasâreverse nimittas, black with a white ring around it, for example, not rare. And then there are just âsigns.â
Probably the most concentrated Iâve ever beenâway deep into a long solo in PenangâI was getting Buddha-head nimittas, spinning skull nimittas, upside-down Buddha-head nimittasâwild stuff. I could basically take any of those things as an object and use them.
I donât know other traditions well enough to know what would happen, but the act of absorption is the nimitta getting bigger and closer, then a sense of being sucked into it. Thatâs absorption in the tradition.
And I think, Vinceâyou can see if you can validate thisâI think if youâve been absorbed, you know it. I donât think itâs one of those things like, âMaybe Iâm a stream-enterer, maybe that was A&P.â
I think if youâve been absorbedâyou know it.
Vince: Yeah, definitely.
Brian: What else about the nimitta? Itâs very frustrating when itâs not arising and youâve been told thatâs the thing thatâll get you to jhÄna. So baked into that practice is real frustration.
My first retreat with Tina and Steveâit was all about the nimitta.
So I just basically sat for eleven days not getting it and freaking out because I was a jhÄna failure. I only learned later that not everybody gets the nimitta.
Iâm fortunate that it arises for meâitâs wonderful to be absorbed into that.
Vince: This is a really interesting conversation, because for me, I donât get nimittaâor not often. My very earliest practice years, there was a lot of light and visual stuff, then it all died down and didnât arise again.
Even on very long retreats. So for me, Iâm not super into the nimittaâvipassanÄ was more my way into concentration.
I wouldâve loved the element practice, I think. But when I was on retreat with Jack Kornfield, I remember talking to him about the Pa-Auk tradition, and he suggested that probably only about 10% of people who went on those retreatsâAmericans, in this caseâwould even be able to get into Pa-Auk jhÄna one.
So they would have the capability or body-mind fit for that model.
What do you think of that statement?
Brian: Itâs so disempoweringâitâs painful, isnât it? Steven and Tina told me that I think they were on a one-month retreat with Pa-Auk the first time he came to the U.S.âand nobody else got jhÄna on that retreat except for them. Which is wildly disempowering.
But I do think there are predispositions, Vinceâand guysâitâs an open question.
I have a sense that maybe Iâm just prone to concentrated states in general as a human being. Iâve done martial arts from an early age. Iâm a black belt in Japanese archery, which is very single-pointed.
Iâve done three hours of yoga every day for ten years. So Iâm doing lots of things that support concentration.
Iâm not sure if itâs predisposition or if I developed itâbut like anything in life, some of us have talents in some areas and others donât. Which leads us to the wonderful truth that dry or wet both seem to work.
Vince: Okay, yeahâthis is interesting. The best analogy here is high-performance sports.
I was an amateur cross-country track runner before I got old and became a parent. And I remember competing at the state levelâyou had to prove yourself in multiple races before that. You donât just show up to the state championships and say, âIâm ready.â
So thatâs something that seems different with the Olympic-level jhÄna versus Olympic-level anything else. Thereâs more of a filter.
Brian: It calls to mind a couple of stories that are so on point with that.
I had a teacher interview onceâthe teacher said to me, âI can look around this retreat center and tell you who will ever get jhÄna and who wonât. And Brian, you will.â
This was helpful for meânot so much for everyone elseâbut heâd been doing the practice for thirty years. He could tell.
And the first time I met Sayalay SusÄ«lÄ, I remember vividly, I was in the kitchen of the retreat center and she comes up to me and saysâthe first words out of her mouthââI can see you have very strong past-life pÄramÄ«s.â
The Western world isnât unapologetically Buddhist-cosmology like that, but if you believe in karma, then maybe Iâve had some great past-life stuff going on.
She literally said, âYouâre going to work on the light kasina, because thatâs the fastest way to get jhÄna, and fast is better.â
I said, âOkay.â Isnât that greatâto meet a teacher so rooted in the tradition?
In the suttas, the Buddha chose a red sapphire for a jeweler to concentrate on. Kennethâs got a storyâif you want to get concentrated, take a cereal bowl, set it on a table, and look at it every day for an hour.
Thereâs something special about finding an Asian teacher still in that modelâtheyâll say, âThis is the best object for you. You probably did this in a past life. So do more of that.â
Iâm not saying true or falseâitâs just wonderful to hear it.
And, Vince, it does seem like thereâs a quality of amateur versus pro.
Vince: Yeah, absolutely. Even within professional levels, there are distinctionsâamateur pros versus Tiger Woods or Caitlin Clark.
This isnât talked about much because most meditation conversations are broaderâpeople just trying to maintain daily practice. Weâre not professional jhÄna practitioners, most of us.
But itâs useful to acknowledge that professional levels exist.
Brian: Right. And jhÄna isnât a hidden teachingâitâs right there in the five masteries: advert, enter, abide, exit, reflect.
Thatâs what Iâd do next after âfocus here,â because that fills out the whole practice. It starts with âMay the mind incline to the first jhÄna.â At the end we say, âDid the mind incline to the first jhÄna?â
What a great practice.
And how many jhÄna practitioners are doing that? If theyâre not, theyâre not opening up to masteryâitâs right there in the suttas.
Vince: Yeah, clearly this is what it takes to be a master.
Brian: Such a good model. And itâs interesting to consider that alongside what you mentionedâjhÄna on the spectrumâbecause presumably you can attain that mastery at light, deep, or ultra-deep levels.
Vince: Absolutely.
Brian: My criteria lately is: did I have the flavor of jhÄna?
Hereâs a Kenneth story. Someone gives you a glass of clear liquid and adds a tiny bit of super-concentrated strawberry essence that has no color. They give you the glass and say, âDrink it.â You drink it. They ask, âWhat does it taste like?â You say, âItâs strawberry.â
Itâs always strawberry. Doesnât matter how muchâit doesnât have to be red or have actual strawberries to taste like strawberry.
So thatâs my barometer now: did I have that quality? Because I know if the qualityâs there, itâs just a ball rolling down the hill, gathering speed. Thatâs what jhÄna is.
If I have longer to let that quality manifest, itâll happen. If I only have thirty minutes this morningâgood enough with just a taste, a little tingling on the back of the neck, a little bliss in the lower region. Sounds good to me.
Vince: Now, your earlier question about entering jhÄna with the nimittaâhow thatâs very obviousâIâd say that rings true to me at the moderately deep or deeper levels.
But the light jhÄna doesnât have that quality for me. Itâs not even close.
Brian: Not even close for me.
Vince: Yeah.
Brian: I think thereâs a fine line between really deep jhÄna practice and absorptions. Whatâs the difference? Someone tell me the difference between a long fruition, eighth jhÄna perception/non-perception, and a good nirodha.
Maybe Daniel Ingram will parse that for us someday. Nobody really knows.
So basically, the way my practice concludedâor at least settledâwas practicing one by one as they occurred, working up and down, vipassanizing the jhÄnas.
Every time Iâd do this and reach the later stages, Iâd be goneânot just absorbed, goneâfor significant periods. And it happened often enough that I became clear about coming outââOh, auditory formations just kicked in, mind just came back online.â
It was like nirodha, pretty much. But maybe thatâs perception/non-perception, maybe a super-long fruition. It doesnât matter. I was gone for a long time. It seemed good.
Maybe itâs my personalityâI donât have the desire to parse those states so much.
Iâm comfortable calling that the super high-end Pa-Auk tradition.
A teacher once told meâI asked, âHow long does it take you to get to jhÄna?â He said, âTwo to three days on retreat, maybe more.â
I vividly remember that. I didnât love itâI wanted access all the time. But to his credit, he was saying, âThatâs how long it takes me to get a massive nimitta, get absorbed, sit for three hours, and demerge without a prompt.â
Thatâs amazingâfor two or three days. I donât know if I could get up to that level in just two or three days of practice.
Vince: Yeah, I heard the same thingâsomeone asked her how long it would take to power up to that level of jhÄna where you can be absorbed for days, and she said, âYeah, a few days.â
Brian: I totally appreciate that now. Then I was dismissiveââHeâs defining jhÄna too hard.â But now I seeâthatâs how long it takes to get that.
How long does it take to get a light jhÄnic flavor? One momentâless than a breath.
Vince: Cool. Okay, great. This brings nuance to the jhÄna spectrum. The deeper end sounds attainable but requires lots of daily practiceâmultiple hours a day.
Brian: Thatâs my sense, and Iâve heard that echoed. I remember hearing Leigh Brasington say you need four hours a day or so.
Vince: Yeah, but itâs not like ten minutes.
Brian: Basically, for me, itâs the nimitta. When you take the pot off the boiling water, it stops boiling.
So in the classical Thai TheravÄda tradition, they talk about guarding the signâguarding the nimittaâlike itâs the most precious thing. You never let it go.
Thatâs why I had to maintain such a long daily practiceâso whenever I looked, I could find the nimitta.
It was frustrating to rebuild it if I lost it. So I tried to maintain itâbut honestly, itâs not sustainable in daily life.
Hereâs how that plays out in relationships: Iâd be sitting there in jhÄna at dinner with my wife, and sheâd say, âStop meditating.â And Iâd be like, âOh, you caught me.â I was completely tranced out, not even with her.
Vince: Yeah, I could see that being a problem.
Okay, so thatâs an interesting statementâis it even possible to maintain ultra-deep jhÄna in modern life?
Brian: Answer is yesâbut at the cost of life. Yes, with significant practiceâand being careful.
Iâve hadâreally crazyâyou guys have had big experiences, Iâm sureâitâs like being stuck in a third-jhÄnic state. Has that ever happened to you, Vince?
The world is super wacky. Trying to have a client meeting while being stuck thereânot skillful. Quite difficult.
It has a direct impact on daily life.
Have you guys talked about correlating stages of insight with jhÄna?
Vince: I think weâve talked about it a little bitâthat you can look at both the samatha-jhÄnas and vipassanÄ-jhÄnas as two different ways of looking at jhÄna.
Brian: Yeah. Third jhÄna for me sits in the whole dukkha-ñÄáča spectrum. Then the second and the first would be pre-dissolution. So third jhÄna is dissolution and onwards, everything before that would be first and second.
Vince: Yeah, I was gonna say I feel like I spend about 50% or more of my time in third jhÄna.
Brian: (Laughs) Yeah. So itâs an interesting question. When youâif we play with eye postures, or just noticeâwhere do your eyes want to go when you close them?
Sometimes the anÄpÄna spot is comfortable; sometimes itâs super uncomfortable, maybe because weâre abiding in a dukkha-ñÄáča.
My position on that is: take the easy one. What jhÄna do you want? If third is sitting there for you, take third, work down to first, then back upâplay a little.
If Iâm grinding away at first, like I was this morningâhilariouslyâI literally cracked up after twenty minutes. I was like, âWow, itâs literally impossible to get first jhÄna right now.â
But if Iâd tried the others, Iâm sure they wouldâve been accessible. I was trying to make a point about how good I wasânot skillful. It was a great comeuppance.
Vince: Yeah, Rob Burbea talks about that as wellâin his jhÄna retreat he said if you canât get pÄ«ti going and access through the first, maybe the fourth is more accessible. Come in through the fourth, then explore the spectrum.
Brian: Rob Burbeaâmay he rest in peaceâa wonderful Dharma teacher. What was the line he had about that? âDonât control the breathâ? ÄnÄpÄna is all about letting go of the breathânotice it being long or short, count the breath, donât control it.
Burbea said, âWho said donât control the breath? Do whatever you want. Breathe well.â
He encouraged using the breath deliberately to provoke pleasant sensations in the body. Seems skillful to me. If you get some sukha, youâll easily fall into jhÄna.
He was totally iconoclasticâitâs not really spoken about how much of an iconoclast he was. He was so out there with some of the stuff he saidâwonderful, helpful, what?
Vince: Yeah. It helped that he came up within the insight tradition and then became more samatha-oriented over time, so he maintained one foot in the institution but also went beyond it.
Brian: Totally.
Vince: Yeah. Thanks for mentioning him.
So anything else you want to say before we open it up for questions?
Brian: No, I think thatâs enough. Iâd love to hear from other people.
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit whatisthisvince.substack.com


