Samatha - Five jhana-factors III
Another jhāna-factor is sukha. This jhāna-factor is not bodily pleasant feeling (sukha vedana), but it is somanassa or mental happy feeling. Sukha which is developed in samatha is happy feeling about a meditation subject. However, as we know, happy feeling arises also with attachment. Paññā should know precisely when happy feeling is akusala and when it is kusala. The jhāna- factor which is wholesome sukha inhibits the hindrances which are restlessness and worry (uddhacca and kukkucca). When there is wholesome happy feeling about a meditation subject there is no restlessness and no worry.
Pīti and sukha are not the same. Sukha, which is translated as happiness,
bliss, ease or joy, is happy feeling. Piti, which is translated as joy, rapture,
zest, and sometimes also as happiness, is not feeling; it is not
vedanākkhandha, but sankhārakkhandha (the khandha which is all the
cetasikas, except vedanā and saññā). When reading the English translations,
we have to find out from the context which cetasika is referred to, pīti or
sukha.
The 'Visuddhimagga' (IV, 100) states concerning the difference between
happiness (pīti) and bliss (sukha):
'And wherever the two are associated, happiness (piti) is the contentedness at
getting a desirable object, and bliss (sukha) is the actual experiencing of it
when got. Where there is happiness there is bliss (pleasure); but where there
is bliss there is not necessarily happiness. Happiness is included in the
sankhārakkhandha; bliss is included in the vedanākkhandha (feeling). If a
man exhausted in a desert saw or heard about a pond on the edge of a wood,
he would have happiness; if he went into the wood's shade and used the
water, he would have bliss...'
The jhāna-factor which is samādhi or concentration is the cetasika which is
ekaggata cetasika. This cetasika arises with every citta and its function
is to focus on an object. Each citta can have only one object and ekaggata
cetasika focuses on that one object. Ekaggata cetasika or samādhi can: be
kusala as well as akusala. Samādhi when it is developed. in samatha is
wholesome concentration on a meditation subject.) Together with samadhi t
here must be right understanding which knows precisely when the citta is
kusala citta and when akusala citta and which knows how to develop calm,
otherwise the right concentration of samatha will not grow. If one tries very
hard to concentrate without there being right understanding there may be
attachment to one's effort to become concentrated, or, if one cannot become
concentrated, aversion may arise. Then calm cannot grow. If there is right
understanding there are conditions for samādhi to develop. The
'Visuddhimagga' (XIV, 139) states concerning samādhi:
'It puts (ādhiyati) consciousness evenly (samam) on the object, or it puts it
rightly (sammā) on it, or it is just the mere collecting (samādhāna) of the
mind, thus it is concentration (samādhi). Its characteristic is non-wandering,
or its characteristic is non-distraction. Its function is to conglomerate
conascent states as water does bath powder. It is manifested as peace.
Usually its proximate cause is bliss. It should be regarded as steadiness of the
mind, like the steadiness of a lamp's flame when there is no draught.'
Samādhi inhibits kāmacchandha (sensuous desire). When there is right
concentration on a subject of meditation, one is at that moment not hindered
by kamacchandha.