Some
of my earliest childhood memories feature a series of what seemed to be
unendurable debates my parents assailed over the spiritual values of securing
good incomes and the rewards and pitfalls wealth produced from one’s work and
career. Such arguments were more than idle intellectual concerns; both my
parents were first generation Americans who grew up amidst considerable
poverty, and their sentiments toward finances revealed deeper issues involving
both assimilation and the existential purpose of life itself.
My
father, for many years a Zen Buddhist who started his practice in the early
70s, came to view the post 60s era as far too object-oriented and consumerist
by nature, at odds with his veneration of the heroic, anti-materialist abstract
painters and jazz musicians he venerated. From this vantage, financial concerns
were profane affairs that distracted from one’s deepest purpose in life:
creating art and attaining peace through meditation. He quit his job as a
“refrigeration specialist” (thankfully he never bothered to explain what that
profession entailed) at 50 years of age and never returned to work, spending
the balance of his life painting, while permitting my mother to address the
baser concerns of making a living. It is somewhat ironic to note that despite
his lack of earnings, he was fond of purchasing expensive foreign cars and,
during one forgettable period, owned a succession of second hand sailboats,
which he never failed to sink into the Long Island sound.
My
mother, a very worldly advertising copywriter who enjoyed the creative
challenges of her career, was deeply invested in attaining enough security so
that we—which additionally included my sister and I— could avoid the hardships
that abounded throughout her childhood in The Bronx. This was a prospective
that could discern little ease or abatement resulting from ‘seeking the sublime
by turning one’s back on financial security;’ indeed, spiritual endeavors were
more like a perk or supplement to life rather than an essential component. And
so she diligently attended to her work, ascending the career ladder, while
maintaining a careful eye over the family’s budgetary concerns. Rarely setting
foot on my father’s sailboats—for good reason—her financial flourishes involved
good books, meals and off broadway theater evenings. Pleasures, but not that
those that significantly depleted one’s savings.
In
the decades that have passed I’ve come to view these debates as needlessly
combative. Over the course of practice and study, the domain of spiritual
endeavor has revealed itself to engage both concerns of “the sacred” and “the
profane;” transcendent experiences—my recent jungle retreat in Thailand—and
mundane responsibilities—paying the mortgage, bills from a sinus operation,
purchasing clothes for harsh northeastern winters—overlap, reinforcing each
other when properly balanced, causing stress only when they placed directly at
odds for our attention. (There have been times in my life, when falling into
the story of being a spiritual seeker, I neglected to secure enough funding to
pursue much seeking to speak of; the resulting bills that piled up made it
difficult to develop any peace during those prolonged periods of practice in
upstate New York.) And so, rather than only being of use on the cushion, the
tools and insights of spiritual practice serve me well in establishing a
budget, planning vacations and other expenditures, setting aside income for the
future, etc. As a student of the Pali Canon I’ve found a rich array of concepts
that allow me to address these concerns.
To
the Western practitioner, locating fiscal guidance in the canon may sound
unlikely. Buddhism has long been portrayed in our literature and culture as a
spiritual practice that is entirely anti-materialistic in dharma, presenting
finances and material possessions as a principle causes of misery. The Buddha
is thought of as a renunciate figure who who lived above
the mundane and secular concerns of money, viewing wealth and possessions as
hinderances to serenity and being utterly distinct from the relief of human
suffering. However, a review of relevant texts of the Pali Canon, particularly
in the teachings given to an array of
householders—such as the wealthy Anāthapiṇḍika, the merchant Vyagghapajja of
the Koliyans and Sigala, son of a householder—reveal an “Awakened One” who was
well acquainted with the budgetary concerns of lay householders, understanding
how maintaining and managing personal finances presented significant
challenges.
This
should not be eye-opening: Siddharta was born heir to the thrown of a wealthy
warrior clan, the Shakya, and spent most of his years, until his renunciation
of lay life at 28 years of age, at Kapilavastu, the clan’s commercial center
and palace. The Buddha’s father, King Suddhodana, fully intended his son to
take on his duties running the clan, and so the prince was not only raised
amidst great luxury (he enjoyed the use of three seasonal castles) but was also
well acquainted with the pleasures and responsibilities of court life. The
Buddha’s disavowal of his splendid life was due to the distractions it
presented, diverting him from addressing the deeper issues of life:
“While
I lived amidst great fortune, I become oblivious to the inevitable onslaught of
aging, sickness and death I would one day face; seeing other people
experiencing these universal horrified and disgusted as I was oblivious to
their universal nature.”
(AN:
3.38 my trans.)
The
prince did not reject the notion of a lay practitioner achieving awakening, he
simply referred to it as difficult:
“It’s not easy to lead a holy life that is pure and
polished as a shell while living in a home filled with possessions.” (MN 36)
And
so Siddhartha took leave of the palace, and all the wealth it afforded, and
sought lasting wisdom amidst the spiritual seekers of his time. Having endured
years of privation and destitution, starving himself to emaciated severities,
he attained his awakening by seeking a balance between the extremes of 1) pure
materialism and temporary pleasure seeking and 2) pure abstinence from the
requisite substances (food, clothing, shelter, etc) that allow one to practice
and skillfully engage with others in comfort. During the years he wandered
Northern India, teaching and answering questions about the dhamma, The Buddha often
encountered wealthy merchants who approached him for insights into achieving
peace of mind amidst wealth. There are quite a number of such interactions in
the Pali Canon, and when viewed together present clearly the buddha’s views on
how a householder should relate to money:
• Income should be lawfully obtained: illicit or secretive sources of wealth invariably results
in fear of and vulnerability to exposure; a compartmentalized, agitated mind
invariably results
• Income should be skillfully maintained: we should be heedful of paying taxes that are owed, but
not to an unnecessary degree; risky investments, those that tempt us with
unlikely and unwarranted payoffs, should be avoided, as the drama of such
speculation proves distracting
• Spend money in a balanced way: enjoying its use while supporting those in need and our
spiritual community, especially those renunciates who teach and live completely
in dependence on the generosity of others
• Surround oneself with skillful examples: the mind is prone to following the precedents and
standards embodied by those we associate with.
• Oversee income without unnecessary attachment: it is the way of the world that material gains are prone
to unforeseen setbacks and reversals; moreover, our sense of ‘what is enough’
is constantly subject to fear and an underlying sense of vulnerability; so we
learn to relate to money without burdening the process without extreme fears or
unrealistic expectations.
Reviewing
these suggestions, the gist of the Buddha’s teachings are clear to me: if I
attach to my finances in the hope they’ll provide any lasting security or
happiness I’ll be disappointed, as nothing material can provide such stability
or ease (believe me, I’ve tried my fair share of short term pleasures). On the
other hand, mundane life does carry requisite foundations for successful
practice; the buddha taught that even the most strict renunciate requires
clothing, food, safe lodging and medicine to practice the dhamma successfully;
as a lay practitioner I additionally require some semblance of financial
cohesion in order to not distract me from the challenging process of developing
inner peace and compassion and equanimity towards others.
So
my view the project is to establish a balanced life: neither reckless with what
money I’ve accumulated nor overly penurious; neither unaware and shunning of
financial concerns nor overly fixated on the state of my bank accounts and
investments. This process of balancing is never fully resolved: for a long
period I was able to practice while working long days as an art director for
various design firms around the city; eventually the demands and ceaseless
dramas of that employment became incompatible with my practice and had to be
put aside; fortunately I was able to make due with less income, as I invested
the money I made during those earlier years wisely. If I am careful, I can
still afford the occasional splurge on a trip or shiny new iGadget. Such a
balance requires continual adjustment and will always be an ongoing undertaking,
one I address with diligence, for it provides the foundations for my practice
and teaching.
——————————————————————————————
Sources in the canon:
“Anāthapiṇḍika, there
are five reasons a householder should maintain wealth that was skillfully accumulated
by hard work and obtained lawfully:
1)
It makes the householder, the householder’s family, and all in their employ
contented and relieved.
2)
makes the householder’s friends happy, glad, and keeps them contented and
relieved.
3)
it keeps the householder’s goods in safety.
4)
the householder lives up to civic oblations and responsibilities.
5)
the householder supports renunciates and arahants who teach the dhamma.
Should
the householder’s wealth increase, let the thought arise: 'Truly, I've heeded
those reasons and my wealth has grown!' — thus he is not upset in either
case."
(AN
5.41)
In
this series the Buddha continues to explain that those who are not attached to
their wealth or infatuated by it, but are sensible in maintaining it safely so
that they can both enjoy the use of it themselves and spend it towards the
benefit of others.
(AN
5.91)
To
the young Sigala, the son of a householder, on the value of maintaining wealth:
"What are the six channels for dissipating wealth
which he does not pursue?
1)
indulgence in intoxicants which cause infatuation and heedlessness;
2) sauntering in streets
at unseemly hours [eg. leaving oneself unprotected];
3) frequenting
inebriating performances [eg. gigs where drugs are common];
4) indulgence in gambling
which causes heedlessness;
5) association with evil
companions;
6) the habit of
idleness.”
(DN
31)
To
the merchant Vyagghapajja:
“If a lay practitioner has accumulated righteous
wealth—which is skillfully gained by hard
work, honest toil, obtained in a lawful way—this
householder should protect it vigilantly, thinking 'How can I maintain my
wealth so that neither kings [ie. paying unnecessary amounts in taxes and
tariffs] nor thieves [people offering poor investments] will make off with my
property, nor unforeseen events destroy it, nor unworthy heirs inherit it?’”
(AN
8:54)
Very helpful advice about a topic I constantly wrestle with - thank you so much!
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