The Buddha sometimes spoke of and believed in the existence of
psychic abilities (iddhi). Several of these abilities seem impossible; being
able to walk through walls, walking on water, levitating, etc (D.I.78). Others
seem problematic while not being totally impossible, and are certainly intriguing;
being able to hear things over a great distance and being able to read other
people’s minds being two of these. I am much more open to the possibility to
these two, particularly the last, because I once had an experience which seemed
to be something like it.
Late one night I was meditating in my darkened room. I had been in
a deep, stable concentration for some time when suddenly I heard someone’s
voice in the room very near me. The
voice was clear and loud. I was immediately jolted out of my meditation and
opened my eyes to see who it was. I looked around the room (my eyes were
accustomed to the dark and there was some light coming through the window) but
could see no one. Intrigued and a little worried that there was an intruder in
the premises, I got up and looked around. Again nothing. I went to the window
and out in the street saw several young men fixing a motorbike under a street
lamp. They were some distance away but I could just hear their voices. Initially it was the voice I had heard in my room itself which had startled me, not what it said. Now I
recalled that the voice had been talking about things related to motorbikes. I
realized that for a few moments or so I had spontaneously heard
part of a conversation that had been going on out in the street as if it had
taken place just a few feet from me. For
the next few weeks every one of my
meditation was a failure. I longed
to get into a deep stable concentration so I could have a similar ‘psychic’ experience
again. Of course this hope was the very thing that disrupted my meditation and blocked
it from happening. And nothing like it has ever happened again. However, since
this experience I have met several deeply committed meditators who have told me
that they have had similar experiences. Of course one meets plenty of
meditators who are more than happy to tell you all about their amazing psychic experiences,
often after just a few weeks meditation. I am referring to long-term mediators
who have spent extended periods in
silence and solitude.
Another psychic ability mentioned
by the Buddha is what he called producing the mind-made body (mano maya kaya). He described it like
this, “He (i.e. the meditating monk) draws out of his body another body, having
form, made of mind, complete in all its limbs and faculties” (D.I,77). This sounds very like the often reported
phenomena now called out-of-body experience, OBE. People who have been brain
dead and then revived sometimes report having OBE, others say it occasionally
happens to them during sleep or during a
period of intense physical exhustition. Interestingly, the Buddha specifically says
that creating a mano maya kaya is a willed experience,
one has to “apply and direct the mind” (cittam
abhiniharati abhininnameti) to producing it. However, perhaps this does not cancel out the possibility
of it happening spontaneously. OBE is often enough reported that it has
attracted the attention of cognitive scientists and others and there is a surprisingly large amount of literature on the subject. The Wikipedia article Out-of-body
Experience offers a good overview of this literature. Charles T. Tart’s article ‘Six Studies of
Out-of-body Experience’ in the Journal of
Near-Death Studies, No.2, 1998 is a good read – rigorously scientific while
being open to the possibility of a spiritual/psychic (if that’s the right term)
explanation. But to return to the Dhamma; how does the mano maya kaya fit into the Buddhist model of consciousness?
And is there anything in modern or neurological research that could
explain it. Any opinions?