By effort and heedfulness, discipline and self-mastery, let the wise one make for himself an i sland which no flood can overwhelm.
By effort and heedfulness, discipline and self-mastery, let the wise one make for himself an island which no flood can over-whelm.

Deep Commentary

The heedless are those whose minds constantly run outward, becoming enslaved by the external world. To realize our true nature, we must look inward. As ancient meditation masters taught, the core duty of a practitioner is self-reflection, not seeking outside. Only by observing ourselves deeply can we recognize and clear away our wandering thoughts. In deeper meditative insight, these illusions are seen as inherently empty; when we look directly at them, they vanish, just as a troubled mind is pacified the moment one tries to locate it. The flood of afflictions is always ready to drown us if we drop our guard. Therefore, the Buddha urges the wise to build a firm "island" within. Though we all possess this inner island of pure awareness, it is often obscured by the clouds of ignorance. If we heed the Buddha's teaching and return to this secure refuge of mindfulness, no flood of worldly suffering can ever overwhelm us.

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