Am I "studying" too much and practicing too little?

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Accepted answer
  1. Every ordinary are living with unwholesome mind arising normally even we are studying or meditating until the access meditation arise instead.

The point of the sitting meditation is to learn "what is the real strongest wholesome mind", which is Jhana. It's not only leaning about wholesome, but it also pull the past uncountable-lives' wholesome karma, Parami, to give it's resultant and let the genius abilities inside shine bright like a diamond, perspective photographic memories with supernatural-mind's-arising-speed and the best purified wholesome minds which arising with no interval of any dirty unwholesome mind arising in between of purified wholesome mind arising.

  1. Studying is good only with Jhana meditation because only Jhana can pause the ordinary's unwholesome and the strong insight meditation, BalavaVipassana, can't arise with unwholesome. Study before Jhana-Attainment could break the concentration meditation and make the practitioner meditate hard confuse and doubt because everything of no-jhana-person is five strings, including study. Study is good and must do, but strong wholesome minds at Access/Attained Jhana state is basis of Study. Without Jhana, the practitioner could loss the path, wholesome minds leading by right view, easily.

There are some people can purify their mind while listening Sutta, but it's rare to find the perfect one like that, so don't waste the very little life period with that big risk, study without Jhana.

Upvote:0

You might find, like I did, that one will swing more to reading than practising, and conversely so. I can't see that there is anything wrong with that. I memorized the satipathana sutta, and like Bonn says, the various components of that sutta arise fluidly in daily experience as and when it is needed. In fact, I had studied so many suttas - Mahayana and Theravada - that I started writing my own. This one draws upon the prose of both of those traditions...

Hotpoint Sutra – Where Nothing Can Be Found

Here's the thing, Shariputra. With my mind thus purified, pliant, malleable, steady, attained to imperturbability, I directed it to the knowledge of the disappearing socks. I saw, by means of the divine eye, various kinds of socks in various kinds of colours disappearing and reappearing in accordance to the cycle of the washing machine - but yet after the cycle had finished, some did not reappear. Not able to determine a realm for those missing socks, this line of thinking arose in me, 'what is the yonder from whence these missing socks abide? What is their secret destination?'

Now, at that time, the carpenter's apprentice happened to be strolling by. With a loud voice that would drown out a clap of thunder, I shouted, "come, carpenter's apprentice! Bring me an assortment of tools". With an assortment of tools at hand I then took to the washing machine like a steadfast monk takes to contemplating the body parts: 'here are the nuts, there the bolts, here is the motor, over there the drum, over here the circuitry, over there the wires'. Shariputra, I did not even find the fluff of those missing socks, let alone an entire sock. Having penetrated where the sun doth shine and the moon doth glow, perplexed, I sat there in deep contemplation. In the time it takes to consume the contents of the morning's alms round, knowledge and vision arose in me - clear, bright, unblemished: form is no other than emptiness, emptiness no other than form.

Upvote:1

Study to gain knowledge, meditate to turn the knowledge into skill.

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