Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu Explained

Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu
Religion:Buddhism
School:Theravāda
Lineage:Thai Forest Tradition
Order:Dhammayuttika Nikāya
Education:Oberlin College
Birth Name:Geoffrey DeGraff
Birth Date:28 December 1949
Birth Place:Long Island, New York, U.S.
Teacher:Ajahn Fuang Jotiko
Ordination:November 7, 1976, aged 26
[1]
Post:Abbot of Metta Forest Monastery (since 1993)

Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu (also known as Ajahn Geoff; born December 28, 1949) is an American Buddhist monk and author. Belonging to the Thai Forest Tradition, he studied for ten years under the forest master Ajahn Fuang Jotiko (himself a student of Ajahn Lee). Since 1993, he has served as abbot of the Metta Forest Monastery in San Diego County, California—the first monastery in the Thai Forest Tradition in the U.S.—which he cofounded with Ajahn Suwat Suvaco.

Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu is perhaps best known for his translations of the Dhammapada and the Sutta Pitaka—almost 1000 suttas in all—provided free of charge on his website "Talks, Writing & Translations of Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu"[2] as well as translations from the dhamma talks of the Thai forest ajahns. He has also authored several dhamma-related works of his own, and has compiled study-guides of his Pali translations.

Biography

Early life

Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu was born Geoffrey DeGraff in 1949 and was introduced to the Buddha's teaching on the Four Noble Truths as a high-school exchange student on a flight back from the Philippines.[3] Tricycle writes: "he grew up 'a very serious, independent little kid", spending his early childhood on a potato farm on Long Island, New York, and later living in the suburbs of Washington, D.C.[4]

Time at Oberlin

At Oberlin College in the early 1970s, "he eschewed campus political activism because 'I didn't feel comfortable following a crowd.' For him, the defining issue of the day wasn't Vietnam, but a friend's attempted suicide."[4] Ṭhānissaro took a religious studies class when he found out there was meditation involved. Ṭhānissaro writes: "I saw it as a skill I could master, whereas Christianity only had prayer, which was pretty hit-or-miss."[4]

First trip to Thailand

After graduating in 1971 with a degree in European Intellectual History from Oberlin College, he traveled on a university fellowship to Thailand.[5] After a two-year search, Ṭhānissaro found a forest teacher: Ajahn Fuang Jotiko, a Kammatthana monk who studied under Ajahn Lee Dhammadaro.

After a brief stay with the teacher, which was cut short by malaria, he returned to the U.S. to weigh the merits of academia and monasticism.

Return to Thailand

Ṭhānissaro states that when he returned to Thailand, he originally planned on becoming a monk tentatively for five years. When he said that he wanted to be ordained, Ajahn Fuang made him promise to either "succeed in the meditation or die in Thailand. There was to be no equivocating." Ṭhānissaro felt certain upon hearing this.

Time with Ajahn Fuang

By Ṭhānissaro's third year ordained as a monk, he became Ajahn Fuang's attendant. Ajahn Fuang's case of psoriasis deteriorated. It reached a point where Thānissaro had to be at his side constantly.

Ṭhānissaro writes: "When I talked with Ajahn Fuang about going back to the West, about taking the tradition to America, he was very explicit. 'This will probably be your life's work,' he said. He felt, as many teachers have, that the forest tradition would die out in Thailand but would then take root in the West."

Posting at Wat Metta

Before Ajahn Fuang's death in 1986, he expressed his wish for Ajahn Geoff to become abbot of Wat Dhammasathit. Ṭhānissaro says that in spite of Ajahn Fuang's wish there were a lot of people maneuvering to become abbot. After Ajahn Fuang died, Wat Dhammasathit had already come far from the outlying forest hermitage that Taan Geoff had once arrived at. Ṭhānissaro said: "Ajahn Fuang said to keep moving; this is not a tradition that works well in big groups." Taan Geoff declined the offer of abbot of Wat Dhammasathit, which came with strings attached, and no authority since he was a Westerner in a monastery founded by and for Thai monks.

Instead of taking that position, he travelled to San Diego County in 1991, upon request of Ajahn Suwat Suvaco, where he helped start Metta Forest Monastery. He became abbot of the monastery in 1993.[6] In 1995, Ajahn Geoff became the first American-born, non-Thai bhikkhu to be given the title, authority, and responsibility of Preceptor (Upajjhaya) in the Dhammayut Order. He also serves as Treasurer of that order in the United States.

Teachings

Classical Buddhist modernism

Views on commentarial meditation practice

Ṭhānissaro rejects the practice of kasina outlined in the Visuddhimagga, and warns against forms of "deep jhana" practiced by contemporary meditation teachers who draw from the commentaries. Ṭhānissaro calls these meditations "wrong concentration", and says that they have no basis in the Pali Canon, which he argues should be considered ultimately authoritative.[7]

Forest as teacher and Buddhist counterculture

Ṭhānissaro talks about the importance of the forest to give rise to the qualities of mind necessary to succeed in Buddhist practice.[8] Barbara Roether writes:

Unbinding with reference to nibbana

Ṭhānissaro and others use the term "unbinding" when discussing nibbana.[9] [10]

On the self

Ṭhānissaro says that our sense of self is an activity, and a strategy for avoiding suffering and maximizing happiness.[11]

Achieving "true happiness"

Ṭhānissaro writes, "You let go of the grosser forms of happiness, the grosser strategies for happiness, and get used to more and more refined ones. And they finally take you to the point where there's no course left but to let go of strategies. All strategies... This is the way to true happiness."[12]

Publications

Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu's publications include:[13]

Aside from Buddhist Religions, all of the books and articles and talks mentioned above are available for free distribution on Bhikkhu's website dhammatalks.org.

Some teaching locations

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://sangkhatikan.com/monk_view.php?ID=755 พระภาวนาวิธานปรีชา วิ. (เจฟฟรีย์ ฐานิสฺสโร)
  2. Web site: Talks, Writing & Translations of Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu .
  3. Right Next to Ignorance. De Graff. Geoffrey Furguson. 2022-04-29.
  4. Survival Tactics for the Mind: Thanissaro Bhikkhu speaks about tradition, sexism, and following the Buddha's rules . Winter 1998 . Tricycle.
  5. Web site: About; Thanissaro Bhikkhu (Phra Ajaan Geoff). January 13, 2019.
  6. Web site: Contributing Authors and Translators: Biographical Notes . Access to Insight (Legacy Edition) . August 31, 2010.
  7. Web site: Jhanas, Concentration, and Wisdom. DhammaTalks.net. March 11, 2016.
  8. Web site: The Customs of the Noble Ones. Access to Insight. March 11, 2016.
  9. Web site: DN 16 Mahā Parinibbāna Sutta | the Great Total Unbinding Discourse.
  10. Web site: Nibbana Sutta: Total Unbinding . www.vipassana.co.uk . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20201008040455/http://www.vipassana.co.uk/canon/khuddaka/udana/ud8-3.php . 2020-10-08.
  11. Web site: Mature Strategies | Meditations2.
  12. https://www.dhammatalks.org/books/Meditations2/Section0040.html at end
  13. Bullitt, John (2007), "Thanissaro Bhikkhu (Geoffrey DeGraff)", Access to Insight, retrieved August 31, 2010