Collected Talks by Ajahn Cha


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A Collection of 58 Talks by Ven Ajahn Cha translated in to English and read by western sangha members are archived here for the future. Venerable Ajahn Chah was born on June 17, 1918 in a small village near the town of Ubon Ratchathani, North-East Thailand. After finishing his basic schooling, he spent three years as a novice before returning to lay life to help his parents on the farm. At the age of twenty, however, he decided to resume monastic life, and on April 26, 1939 he received  upasampadā  (bhikkhu ordination). Ajahn Chah’s early monastic life followed a traditional pattern, of studying Buddhist teachings and the Pali scriptural language. In his fifth year his father fell seriously ill and died, a blunt reminder of the frailty and precariousness of human life. It caused him to think deeply about life’s real purpose, for although he had studied extensively and gained some proficiency in Pali, he seemed no nearer to a personal understanding of the end of suffering. Feelings of disenchantment set in, and finally, in 1946 he abandoned his studies and set off on mendicant pilgrimage.  He walked some 400 km to Central Thailand, sleeping in forests and gathering almsfood in the villages on the way. He took up residence in a monastery where the  vinaya , (monastic discipline), was carefully studied and practised. While there he was told about Venerable Ajahn Mun Bhuridatta, a most highly respected meditation master. Keen to meet such an accomplished teacher, Ajahn Chah set off on foot for the Northeast in search of him. At this time Ajahn Chah was wrestling with a crucial problem. He had studied the teachings on morality, meditation and wisdom, which the texts presented in minute and refined detail, but he could not see how they could actually be put into practice. Ajahn Mun told him that although the teachings are indeed extensive, at their heart they are very simple. With mindfulness established, if it is seen that everything arises in the heart-mind, right there is the true path of practice. This succinct and direct teaching was a revelation for Ajahn Chah, and transformed his approach to practice. The Way was clear. For the next seven years Ajahn Chah practiced in the style of the austere Forest Tradition, wandering through the countryside in quest of quiet and secluded places for developing meditation. He lived in tiger and cobra infested jungles, using reflections on death to penetrate to the true meaning of life. On one occasion he practised in a cremation ground, to challenge and eventually overcome his fear of death. While he was in the cremation ground, a rainstorm left him cold and drenched, and he faced the utter desolation and loneliness of a wandering homeless monk. In 1954, after years of wandering, he was invited back to his home village. He settled close by, in a fever ridden, haunted forest called ‘Pah Pong’. Despite the hardships of malaria, poor shelter and sparse food, disciples gathered around him in increasing numbers. This was the beginning of the first monastery in the Ajahn Chah tradition, Wat Pah Pong. With time branch monasteries were established at other locations. In 1967 an American monk came to stay at Wat Pah Pong. The newly ordained Venerable Sumedho had just spent his first Vassa (‘Rains’ retreat) practicing intensive meditation at a monastery near the Laotian border. Although his efforts had borne some fruit, Venerable Sumedho realized that he needed a teacher who could train him in all aspects of monastic life. By chance, one of Ajahn Chah’s monks, one who happened to speak a little English, visited the monastery where Venerable Sumedho was staying. Upon hearing about Ajahn Chah, he asked to take leave of his preceptor, and went back to Wat Pah Pong with the monk. Ajahn Chah willingly accepted the new disciple, but insisted that he receive no special allowances for being a Westerner. He would have to eat the same simple almsfood and practice in the same way as any other monk at Wat Pah Pong. The training there was quite harsh and forbidding. Ajahn Chah often pushed his monks to their limits, to test their powers of endurance so that they would develop patience and resolution. He sometimes initiated long and seemingly pointless work projects, in order to frustrate their attachment to tranquility. The emphasis was always on surrendering to the way things are, and great stress was placed upon strict observance of the vinaya. In the course of events, other Westerners came through Wat Pah Pong. By the time Venerable Sumedho was a bhikkhu of five vassas, and Ajahn Chah considered him competent enough to teach, some of these new monks had also decided to stay on and train there. In the hot season of 1975, Venerable Sumedho and a handful of Western bhikkhus spent some time living in a forest not far from Wat Pah Pong. The local villagers there asked them to stay on, and Ajahn Chah consented. The Wat Pah Nanachat (‘International Forest Monastery’) came into being, and Venerable Sumedho became the abbot of the first monastery in Thailand to be run by and for English-speaking monks. In 1977, Ajahn Chah was invited to visit Britain by the English Sangha Trust, a charity with the aim of establishing a locally-resident Buddhist Sangha. He took Venerable Sumedho and Venerable Khemadhammo along to England. Seeing the serious interest there, he left them in London at the Hampstead Vihara, with two of his other Western disciples who were then visiting Europe. He returned to Britain in 1979, at which time the monks were leaving London to begin Chithurst Buddhist Monastery in Sussex. He then went on to America and Canada to visit and teach. After this trip, and again in 1981, Ajahn Chah spent the ‘Rains’ away from Wat Pah Pong, since his health was failing due to the debilitating effects of diabetes. As his illness worsened, he would use his body as a teaching, a living example of the impermanence of all things. He constantly reminded people to endeavor to find a true refuge within themselves, since he would not be able to teach for very much longer. Before the end of the ‘Rains’ of 1981, he was taken to Bangkok for an operation. However, the procedure did little to improve his condition. Within a few months he stopped talking, and gradually he lost control of his limbs until he was virtually paralyzed and bedridden. From then on, he was diligently and lovingly nursed and attended by devoted disciples, grateful for the occasion to offer service to the teacher who so patiently and compassionately showed the Way to so many.

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Chapters

Part 1 - Ch01 - The Middle Way Within 18:02
Part 1 - Ch02 - The Peace Beyond 26:12
Part 1 - Ch03 - Convention And Liberation 17:17
Part 1 - Ch04 - No Abiding 15:15
Part 1 - Ch05 - Evening Sitting 25:02
Part 1 - Ch06 - About Being Carefull 41:08
Part 1 - Ch07 - it Can Be Done 36:59
Part 1 - Ch08 - Understanding Dukkha 20:13
Part 1 - Ch09 - The Dhamma Goes Westward 34:45
Part 1 - Ch10 - Even One Word is Enough 28:21
Part 1 - Ch11 - Making The Heart Good 18:22
Part 1 - Ch12 - Why Are We Here 26:24
Part 1 - Ch13 - Our Real Home 26:33
Part 1 - Ch14 - The 4 Noble Truths 24:47
Part 1 - Ch15 - Living In This World 19:17
Part 1 - Ch16 - Tuccho Pothila 28:10
Part 1 - Ch17 - Transcendence 35:00
Part 2 - Ch18 - Timeless Teachings 9:10
Part 2 - Ch19 - Fragments of A Teaching 16:50
Part 2 - Ch20 - A Gift of Dhamma 14:35
Part 2 - Ch21 - Living With The Cobra 7:56
Part 2 - Ch22 - Reading The Natural Mind 38:38
Part 2 - Ch23 - Just Do it 17:25
Part 2 - Ch24 - Questions And Answers With Ajahn Chah 35:44
Part 2 - Ch25 - Steady Practice 32:00
Part 2 - Ch26 - Detachment Within Activity 28:49
Part 2 - Ch27 - Training This Mind 2:38
Part 2 - Ch28 - Tranquility And Insight 12:27
Part 2 - Ch29 - The Path In Harmony 12:07
Part 2 - Ch30 - The Place Of Coolness 10:38
Part 2 - Ch31 - Monastery Of Confusion 36:07
Part 2 - Ch32 - Knowing The World 36:16
Part 2 - Ch33 - Supports For Meditation 23:32
Part 2 - Ch34 - Still Flowing Water 28:36
Part 2 - Ch35 - Toward The Unconditioned 41:07
Part 2 - Ch36 - Clarity Of Insight 55:22
Part 2 - Ch37 - Learning To Listen 3:29
Part 2 - Ch38 - Unshakable Peace 1:46:50
Part 2 - Ch39 - Just This Much 3:54
Part 3 - Ch40 - What Is Contemplation 10:50
Part 3 - Ch41 - Dhamma Nature 18:13
Part 3 - Ch42 - Two Faces Of Reality 32:17
Part 3 - Ch43 - The Training Of The Heart 25:37
Part 3 - Ch44 - The Wave Ends 16:29
Part 3 - Ch45 - Dhamma Fighting 11:22
Part 3 - Ch46 - Understanding Vinaya 26:47
Part 3 - Ch47 - Maintaining The Standard 22:01
Part 3 - Ch48 - The Flood Of Sensuality 24:08
Part 3 - Ch49 - In The Dead Of Night 40:59
Part 3 - Ch50 - The Fountain Of Wisdom 34:44
Part 3 - Ch51 - Not Sure 30:52
Part 3 - Ch52 - Wholehearted Training 55:54
Part 3 - Ch53 - Right Restraint 27:48
Part 3 - Ch54 - Suffering On The Road 1:02:55
Part 3 - Ch55 - Opening The Dhamma Eye 32:00
Part 3 - Ch56 - The Path To Peace 51:55
Part 3 - Ch57 - Toilets On The Path 48:28
Part 3 - Ch58 - A Message From Thailand 4:38

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