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INTERNATION
SCHOOL
OF
SELF STUDY IS THE
SUPREME AUSTERITY
स्वाध्याय परम
AN STUDIES
particles, pus, skin, blood, flesh, seeds, fruits, bulbs and roots. A monk should not go out for food when he suffers from diseases or when some misery befalls him, or when he wants to defend his celibacy or when he wants to refrain from causing injury to living beings or when he is desirous of renouncing the body.
Whatever articles a monk has, he has to handle them carefully. He should remove insects from the place where he wants to put an article. When a monk feels call of nature, he has to choose a place, which is, devoid of all life. Thus, we find that all the activities of a monk are to be regulated in accordance with the observance of the code of conduct.
4.0 Other Supporting Activities for Practicing Spiritual Purification
There are a number of activities detailed which the monk should practice regularly so that he develops detachment and practice non-violence to enable him o meditate on the self/soul.
4.1 Ten Fold Dharma
To strengthen the moral virtues a monk should have forgiveness, humility, straight forwards, contentment, truth, restraint, penance, renunciation, detachment, and celibacy. These qualities are excellent because they are to be cultivated with the purpose of spiritual development only and not with any worldly gain. These qualities come automatically to a monk if he is clear about his goal. The goal is to check the inflow of karmic matter, which is a foreign element and which pollutes the purity of soul.
4.2 Attitude towards Hardships (22 Parişahas)
With such a strict code of conduct, it is but natural that a monk should face many hardships, which he is expected to overcome with detachment and forbearance. He should understand that the physical pains and pleasures are transitory in nature and they come and go. A worldly man tries to overcome such hardships by various means, which are not always free from sins. However, the monk has to face hardships with fortitude. He should not feel disturbed at all. It increases his will power, so necessary for treading the path of asceticism.
The monk has to deny comforts to the body. The hardships which he may face, are 22 in number: hunger, thirst, cold, heat, insect bites, nakedness, discontentment, woman, fatigue from walking etc., disturbance by animals, sleeping or sitting on hard earth, abuse, beating. begging failure to get alms, etc., disease, contact of thorny shrubs, etc., discomfort from dirt, respectful or disrespectful treatment, pride of knowledge, lack of knowledge and failures in
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STUDY NOTES version 5.0