Why You Don't Want Vipassana

Date published: Tue, 12 Mar 2013 17:00:00 -0700.

This is based on a series of PMs I exchanged with someone on LW asking me why I thought vipassana isn’t what most people are looking for and might be actively dangerous. I cleaned it up a bit and reposted it here.


Where specifically does it talk about vipassana being set up to break people down? That sounds fairly interesting. Also, I’m usually disappointed by the clarity of presentation in most meditation books. It seems that if you ask questions that are too hard they just say “the map is not the territory” or some koan and expect that to suffice. I prefer a sort of LW-type detailed analysis that taboos words and tries to be precise and clear. Are there any works that you know of that are like that?

Daniel Ingram calls that the “mushroom culture” - keep ‘em in the dark and feed them shit.

Buddhists have a pretty bad track record of being open and honest about their own practice. I think there are basically three reasons:

  1. Hardcore practice doesn’t sell. Most people seeking meditation, at least in Western contexts, want easy psychotherapy, not enlightenment. If you go all out, you lose most of your paying customers. Teachers in Asian countries tend to be much more hardcore (or so I heard, I’ve never actually used a teacher, only read their stuff).

  2. Real Buddhism isn’t “nice”. Even if you try to take meditation seriously, as Goenka’s organization does (their courses are all pretty good and free), you can’t actually do what Buddhists have been doing for centuries. For example, try this and see how many students are willing to listen:

    Furthermore, as if the monk were to see a corpse cast away in a charnel ground - one day, two days, three days dead - bloated, livid and festering, he applies it to this very body, ‘This body, too: Such is its nature, such is its future, such its unavoidable fate’…

    Or again, as if he were to see a corpse cast away in a charnel ground, picked at by crows, vultures and hawks, by dogs, hyenas and various other creatures… a skeleton smeared with flesh and blood, connected with tendons… (…) decomposed into a powder: He applies it to this very body, ‘This body, too: Such is its nature, such is its future, such its unavoidable fate.’

    (…) His mindfulness is established, and he lives detached, and clings to nothing in the world.

    Yet corpse meditation (i.e. thinking of one’s own body as a rotting corpse, ideally using a fresh corpse for comparison) is an absolute core practice in Buddhism. The Satipatthana Sutta and Visuddhimagga, two foundational texts, spend whole chapters discussing them and similar practices. There are Buddhist traditions that don’t have so negative values and would be much nicer, but for historical reasons, they never became very influential outside Tibet. David Chapman talks a lot about this.

  3. Most teachers have no idea what they’re talking about. Initially, Western teachers (in the 60s-70s) didn’t talk about enlightenment because they didn’t want to scare away their audience. But if they don’t talk, then idiots are indistinguishable from real teachers, and if the audience only wants useless psychotherapy anyway, well, then you get the current situation. (Zen is also partially responsible here. They have a very pragmatic attitude of “don’t care about the map or territory, just practice”, which means Zen practice has much less bullshit in it, but it’s also unnecessarily hard to understand and no one can effectively contradict you if you’re doing it wrong.)

Anyway, back to vipassana. Bear in mind that the core technique (pay attention to every sensation and detach from it) is deceptively simple and can be taught even without knowing what it’s for, so it ends up a lot in new age and mindfulness bullshit.

But it’s real purpose is the destruction of the self and all desires - and it’s pretty good at that (if you keep it up; otherwise you get stuck in mental hell). But that’s not what most people want. They like their identity and goals in life, so it fucks them up. This purpose is clear from the history of vipassana. Basically, it was (re-?)invented in the 20th century, based on old texts like the Visuddhimagga (good book btw, very detailed and explicit, but pretty dense and could use an extensive commentary). These texts are very explicit about their goals: life is bad, desires and the self lead to reincarnation and more life, so we must get rid of all attachment to anything in life. All techniques are designed only for this purpose. (For a more detailed history, again Chapman and the books he mentions.)

Vipassana is a modern reconstruction of these techniques (a pretty close one, I think, having both done vipassana and read the Visuddhimagga), so it’s no surprise that it causes breakdowns and all kinds of issues.

For example, the Visuddhimagga has a chapter “The Benefits of Developing Understanding” that outlines the whole point of Theravada meditation (of which vipassana is the most famous form):

Briefly, though, its benefits should be understood as these: (A) removal of the various defilements, (B) experience of the taste of the noble fruit (i.e. “the fruits of asceticism”), (C) ability to attain the attainment of cessation (i.e. nirvana), and (D) achievement of worthiness to receive gifts and so on.

What are these defilements?

Herein, it should be understood that one of the benefits of the […] is the removal of the various defilements beginning with [mistaken] view of individuality. This starts with the delimitation of mentality-materiality [i.e. dualism]. Then one of the benefits […] is the removal […] of the various defilements beginning with the fetters.

The fetters are:

  • belief in a self
  • doubt or uncertainty, especially about the teachings
  • attachment to rites and rituals
  • sensual desire
  • ill will
  • lust for material existence, lust for material rebirth
  • lust for immaterial existence, lust for rebirth in a formless realm
  • conceit
  • restlessness
  • ignorance

It then gives this nice poem:

With dreadful thump the thunderbolt
Annihilates the rock.
The fire whipped by the driving wind
Annihilates the wood.
The radiant orb of solar flame
Annihilates the dark.
Developed understanding, too,
Annihilates inveterate
Defilements’ netted overgrowth,
The source of every woe.
This blessing in this very life
A man himself may know.

It also gives this explanation:

What is the difference between one who has attained [cessation] and one who is dead?

This is also given in a sutta, according as it is said: ‘When a monk is dead, friend, has completed his term, his bodily formations [i.e. perception of the body] have ceased and are quite still, his verbal formations have ceased and are quite still, his mental formations have ceased and are quite still, his life is exhausted, his heat has subsided, and his faculties [i.e. seeing, hearing, …] are broken up. When a monk has entered upon the cessation of perception and feeling, his bodily formations have ceased and are quite still, his verbal formations have ceased and are quite still, his mental formations have ceased and are quite still, his life is unexhausted, his heat has not subsided, his faculties are quite whole’.

So the only difference between an ideal monk and a corpse is that the monk still has a beating heart. :) Given these goals, it’s no surprise that someone doing a lot of vipassana doesn’t get much done. That’s the whole point!

So much for the background. For the actual technique, I’ll recommend Ingram’s MCTB. No bullshit, direct and honest, doesn’t hide any information. It’s popular among LW meditators and rightfully so, I think. It does tend to get a bit fuzzy sometimes, but that’s really hard to avoid when you’re dealing with unusual states of consciousness. There isn’t much of a reference frame you can use, and so far introspection is the only tool we have, so it’s bound to suck occasionally.

Also, Ingram has a whole chapter about different definitions of enlightenment and his thoughts on how they came about. His pet theory is fairly plausible and clearly defined (even has testable criteria!), so it’s worth a read as well.

Having said all that, vipassana isn’t all of meditation or Buddhism, and particularly Tibetan Buddhism has a lot of nice stuff that is quite the opposite of renunciation, but they have major problems with their epistemology. It’s all full of demons and shit, and you never know when it’s just a useful visualization and when they’re quite serious about talking to a god.

Also, what is it exactly that you (and Ingram) are trying to get out of meditation?

Good question. Ingram thinks of insight meditation (i.e. vipassana etc.) as a kind of ratchet. There are certain stages where once you reach them, you can’t go “back” to a normal life. You are either stuck in an emotionally unstable state or you have to get it over with completely. There’s some truth to that and most hardcore practitioners I know unintentionally crossed this first threshold (often through drugs or lucid dreaming) and then found that only careful meditation made it any better.

I don’t think meditation (and vipassana in particular) is really the best option here, and I suspect that a lot of the problems are one of your own making by using techniques designed for renunciation. So I’m not doing any vipassana anymore.

Basically I tend to think of it this way: there are unmet desires and they will cause a lot of suffering. One way to solve this problem is to remove the desires, but that’s like fighting spam by shutting down the internet. A better approach is to transform these desires in a way that doesn’t cause you any problems. I can’t recommend any good introductions to that because I would have to provide elaborate clarifications, but if you’re into Buddhism anyway, check out the tantra people. At least they have interesting breakdowns.

Regardless, vipassana isn’t the only form of meditation. Another common form is concentration meditation (or samadhi / samatha), also called kasina meditation, after the typical concentration object. Basically, you pick a simple object (a colored disc, a mantra, the breath, a god, …) and pay attention to it. That’s… pretty much it. (The Attention Revolution by B. Alan Wallace is a good detailed explanation, but he’s a dualist crank and you know, “sit and watch this disc for as long as you can” isn’t really hard to explain.)

The interesting thing is that with enough practice, certain states of concentration arise. MCTB also talks about them, so I won’t repeat myself, but they are quite fun and relaxing. My main criticism of concentration practice really is just how friggin’ hard it is. It takes ages to make progress and quite honestly, I don’t have the patience for that. It’s really blissful, but I got bored of bliss after a while. I like reading more, but it’s a matter of taste, I guess.

Also, these hardcore states of concentration don’t seem to transfer to anything else. Someone who can hold an hour of unwavering concentration on their breath (an impressive feat that probably takes hundreds of hours to achieve) isn’t any better at math, programming, video games or whatever task that requires concentration you can think of. The only way to get better at X is to practice X. There isn’t any universal concentration practice.

Another technique is typically called metta meditation. Basically, you pick an emotion you would like to cultivate (normally kindness) and expand it. To do so, you think of something particularly joyful (like a cute puppy or someone you love) and concentrate on the feeling. You then try to localize it somewhere in your body (try the heart) and see if you can expand it a bit. You grow the sensation till your whole body, then the room, then all space is filled with kindness. Then you pick a less kind thought (say a neutral acquaintance) and expand the kindness to them. Then to stuff you hate and so on.

So basically, you grasp onto a strong sensation of whatever emotion you want and begin to associate it with as many things as you can, overriding other emotional responses if necessary. This works pretty well (and is not unique to Buddhism in any way). Jack Kornfield and Pema Chödrön have a lot of good material about it. Personally, I’m quite fond of my emotional landscape nowadays (there are people I want to hate) and I have no use for metta practice myself. But it’s exactly what it says on the tin and gets fast results, so if you’re looking for it, check them out.

I find your views on metta to be humorous, though why would you want to hate somebody?

Because they are bad people? Without getting into any moral or political reasons, I’m not CooperateBot. There are people I defect against in the Prisoner’s Dilemma, and hate is an appropriate emotional response (among others) in these cases, I think. It’s important not to surrender yourself because of a misguided dislike for discomfort.

What have you learned about tantra? I usually associate that with tantric sex. I haven’t heard tantra outside of that context.

Yeah, it doesn’t get much attention, unfortunately. David Chapman is currently working on a good presentation. Eating the Shadow is what characterizes tantra for me. Instead of trying to detach or remove “bad” aspects of yourself, you accept them as your own and integrate them. That’s inherently a very messy and personal process, so it doesn’t seem to lend itself to such nice models as in vipassana.

It’s also a very “narrative” approach, if you want, so the process of doing it tends to create all kinds of useful-but-blatantly-false explanations. I would like to be able to just say, “shut up and do what they say, and don’t pay attention to what that literally means”, but that’s obviously very dangerous advice. I wish there was a group of people I could point to and say, “follow them, they are competent and sane”, but alas.

If you dance with demons, don’t be surprised if they eat your brain.

by Frances on Sat, 23 Mar 2013 08:09:33 -0700

I noticed at the end of the post you mentioned preferring tantric buddhist philosophies. In links of the links you posted though, I came across aro, dzogchen*, and even zen philosophies. I wonder what your opinion is on those?

*described as inline with "virtues beloved of scientists, engineers, and businessmen...however, rather dry and abstract" and "most compatible with Western Cultures" over here: http://approachingaro.org/why-.... Though I do believe that site is rather biased

by muflax on Sat, 23 Mar 2013 09:56:59 -0700

I like what I've heard of Aro and Dzogchen, but my impression even after quite a few books and expositions, is that in terms of actual practice, it's indistinguishable from Theravada (as described here) except in two aspects:

1. Aro is metal, whereas Theravada is obsessive. They end up *doing* the same things, but Aro has fun doing it (and so avoids some of the problems), but they also suck a lot more at it. (Don't tell the tantra people I said that, though. They like to pretend their stuff is unique and highly advanced, even though technical competence is concentrated almost exclusively in the Theravada tradition.) This lack of depth keeps them out of much of the problematic territory though, so that actually helps.

2. Tantra (in general) has yidam practice. It's insane, incredibly useful, and I'm deeply in love with it. Unfortunately, nearly all the people who talk about it are really crazy and of no help to anyone who doesn't share at least a bit of their particular madness.

The main complication in using these tantric techniques is that they rely on ambiguity. I doubt there's any *inherent* mystery involved, but to make them work, you have to at least temporarily be able to *think* in ambiguous terms, which makes it very hard to then snap out of the ambiguity and write coherent things about them. :)

I don't know of any no-nonsense introduction that covers the whole range, although Keith Johnstone's "Impro" has a great chapter about "the Mask", which is the same technique, just used for slightly different purposes. It might help.

Lastly, I think Zen is useful if done well, but taught in the least helpful way imaginable. (With koans as a possible exception.) I don't feel qualified to actually teach it properly, so I can't help to remedy that. (Nor do I care much.)

by Matthias on Sat, 06 Apr 2013 02:32:01 -0700

i've been inconsistently "meditating" for a while now, hoping for great <various benefits="">. ;) yeah i dont know what im doing. i kinda just try not to think and focus on my breath or something. that's not vipassana, is it? what's it called? Samatha?

i also tried going through some aro email meditation course, but they lost me in week three when they tried to teach me how to effortlessly sit upright. :D

i'm not too happy with my life as it is. kinda unproductive and anxious about everything. wondering if and in what ways any of this meditation stuff might help me and where to start.

any advice?</various>

by muflax on Sat, 06 Apr 2013 16:42:13 -0700

Well, to clarify the difference in methods first:

In samatha aka samadhi aka concentration meditation, you're trying to pick one "object" and stick with it without interruption, kinda like a sniper picking out one specific soldier and keeping them in their scope for as long as possible. That's what most breath meditation is.

In vipassana, you try to notice as many aspects of the experience as possible and as fast as possible, like in this video. You don't care what the object is and how often it jumps around, but just take whatever comes along, as long as you get all its aspects.

Shi-ne, zazen and some other forms are kinda in-between, and try to just "let go" of any guided attention.

There's some minor medical benefit for samadhi and plausibly for zazen, but seriously, just go running or take a bath, it's easily as good and less boring. Anxiety is something that should be solved by psychology, but unfortunately most psychology is hopelessly incompetent, so I can't point to anything awesome yet that doesn't require a lot of "assembly" first, with the exception of CBT maybe.

I like the description I read recently that meditation is a tool to fix a mental illness you gave yourself, often through meditation. So I don't really have anything to recommend. :)