
时间:05/30/2026 05/31/2026
地点:星湖禅修中心
主讲:龙示林
打坐参禅
四念处:最完整的观法
四念处被视为佛法中最完整、最系统的观修方法,它以身、受、心、法为四个观察维度,全面覆盖经验的生成与运作。四念处并非四种分离的修法,而是一套由浅入深、由显到隐的觉知路径,使修行者能够在当下直接看见无常、苦、无我,进而松脱执取,走向解脱。
一、观身念处:以身体为觉知入口
1. 身体是最直接的对象
呼吸、姿势、动作当下可知。
2. 身体帮助心安住
减少抽象与散乱。
3. 观身不是认同身体
而是看见身体的变化性。
二、观身的实践重点:如实觉察,不作美丑
1. 觉察呼吸
吸知吸,呼知呼。
2. 觉察动作
行、住、坐、卧皆可观。
3. 觉察身体感受
冷、热、紧、松如实照见。
三、观受念处:看见感受的牵引力
1. 受是经验的转折点
苦、乐、不苦不乐自动生起。
2. 受最容易引发执取
是爱与取的温床。
3. 观受能切断轮回动能
不随感受走。
四、观受的实践重点:觉受而不反应
1. 乐受不贪
不急于延续。
2. 苦受不嗔
不急于排除。
3. 舍受不痴
不寻找刺激。
五、观心念处:照见心的状态与倾向
1. 心是经验的主导者
状态不同,世界不同。
2. 心有染净明暗
并非恒常不变。
3. 观心破除“我在如此”的错认
六、观心的实践重点:看见而不评断
1. 散乱心、专注心
如实辨认。
2. 贪心、嗔心、痴心
出现即知。
3. 清净心、安住心
不执为“我”。
七、观法念处:洞察经验的结构与规律
1. 法指一切心理与现象法
不是外在事物。
2. 法是运作机制
揭示经验如何成立。
3. 观法直指智慧
看见无常、苦、无我。
八、观法的实践重点:以法照法
1. 观五盖
欲、嗔、昏沉、掉悔、疑。
2. 观七觉支
觉、择、精进、喜、轻安、定、舍。
3. 观三法印
无常、苦、无我。
九、四念处的内在次第:由粗入细,由显入隐
1. 身最粗显
易觉察。
2. 受居中
牵引力最强。
3. 心更微细
状态变化快。
4. 法最究竟
直观真相。
十、四念处为何被称为“最完整的观法”
1. 覆盖全部经验
无一遗漏。
2. 兼具定与慧
安住与洞见并行。
3. 可随时随地实践
不依特殊条件。
总结
四念处之所以被称为最完整的观法,在于它以身、受、心、法四个层面,全面照亮经验的显现、牵引与结构,使修行者不再只在局部用功,而能在整体中觉察与松脱。当身体被看见、感受被照见、心态被识别、法则被洞察,执取便逐层松动,觉知自然成熟,解脱也不再是遥远的理想,而成为当下可行、可证的现实路径。
Date: 05/30/2026 05/31/2026
Location: Star Lake Meditation Center
Teacher: Shilin Long
Sitting Meditation
The Four Foundations of Mindfulness: The Most Complete Method of Observation
The Four Foundations of Mindfulness present the most comprehensive framework for insight practice. By observing body, feeling, mind, and phenomena, they encompass the full range of experience. Rather than four separate techniques, they form a progressive path—from the obvious to the subtle—through which impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, and non-self are directly seen, allowing attachment to loosen and liberation to emerge.
1. Contemplation of the Body: Entering Through the Tangible
1. The body is immediately accessible
Breath, posture, and movement are present now.
2. The body stabilizes attention
Reducing abstraction and distraction.
3. Contemplation does not mean identification
It reveals the body’s changing nature.
2. Key Practices in Body Contemplation
1. Knowing the breath
Knowing in-breath and out-breath.
2. Knowing posture and movement
Walking, standing, sitting, lying down.
3. Knowing bodily sensations
Heat, cold, tension, and relaxation.
3. Contemplation of Feelings: Seeing the Pull of Experience
1. Feelings mark a turning point
Pleasant, unpleasant, and neutral arise automatically.
2. Feelings easily trigger attachment
They fuel craving and clinging.
3. Contemplating feelings weakens cyclic momentum
Reaction is interrupted.
4. Key Practices in Feeling Contemplation
1. Not clinging to pleasant feeling
Letting it pass.
2. Not resisting unpleasant feeling
Allowing without aversion.
3. Not drifting in neutral feeling
Maintaining clarity.
5. Contemplation of Mind: Seeing Mental States Clearly
1. Mind shapes experience
Different states create different worlds.
2. Mental states are variable
They are not permanent.
3. Contemplation dissolves misidentification
“I am this way” loosens.
6. Key Practices in Mind Contemplation
1. Knowing scattered and collected mind
Recognizing as they arise.
2. Knowing greedy, angry, or confused mind
Simple recognition.
3. Knowing clear and settled mind
Without ownership.
7. Contemplation of Phenomena: Understanding the Structure of Experience
1. Phenomena refer to mental factors and processes
Not external objects.
2. Phenomena reveal mechanisms
How experience is constructed.
3. This contemplation gives rise to wisdom
Seeing impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, and non-self.
8. Key Practices in Phenomena Contemplation
1. Observing the five hindrances
Desire, aversion, dullness, restlessness, doubt.
2. Observing the seven factors of awakening
Mindfulness, investigation, effort, joy, tranquility, concentration, equanimity.
3. Observing the three marks
Impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, non-self.
9. The Internal Progression of the Four Foundations
1. Body is most tangible
Easiest to observe.
2. Feelings are central
Strongly compelling.
3. Mind is subtler
Rapidly changing.
4. Phenomena are ultimate
Direct insight into reality.
10. Why the Four Foundations Are the Most Complete Method
1. They cover all experience
Nothing is excluded.
2. They unify calm and insight
Stability and understanding develop together.
3. They are always applicable
Independent of special conditions.
Conclusion
The Four Foundations of Mindfulness are the most complete method of observation because they illuminate experience in its entirety—body, feeling, mind, and phenomena—revealing how experience appears, pulls, and is structured. As each layer is clearly known, attachment naturally loosens; awareness matures without force. Liberation thus becomes not an abstract promise, but a practical, verifiable path unfolding in the present moment.