Heartfelt Sayings 1.10, With Bāhiya.
Translated by Bhikkhu Sujato for SuttaCentral .
So I have heard.
At one time the Buddha was staying near Sāvatthī in Jeta’s Grove, Anāthapiṇḍika’s monastery.
Now at that time Bāhiya of the Bark Cloth was residing by Suppāraka on the ocean shore, where he was honored, respected, revered, venerated, and esteemed. And he received robes, almsfood, lodgings, and medicines and supplies for the sick.
Then as he was in private retreat this thought came to his mind.
Then Bāhiya rushed out of the Jeta Grove and entered Sāvatthī, where he saw the Buddha walking for alms. He was impressive and inspiring, with peaceful faculties and heart, attained to the highest self-control and serenity, like an elephant with tamed, guarded, and controlled faculties.
Bāhiya went up to the Buddha, bowed down with his head at the Buddha’s feet, and spoke.
In that case, Bāhiya, you should train like this:
In the seen will be merely the seen; in the heard will be merely the heard; in the thought will be merely the thought; in the known will be merely the known.
That’s how you should train.
When you have trained in this way, you won’t be “by that”.
When you’re not “by that”, you won’t be “in that”.
When you’re not “in that”, you won’t be in this life or the next or between the two.
Just this is the end of suffering.
Then, due to this brief Dhamma teaching of the Buddha, Bāhiya’s mind was right away freed from defilements by not grasping.
And when the Buddha had given Bāhiya this brief advice he left.
But soon after the Buddha had left, a cow with a baby calf charged at Bāhiya and took his life.
Then the Buddha wandered for alms in Sāvatthī. After the meal, on his return from almsround, he exited the city together with several mendicants and saw that Bāhiya had passed away.
He said to the monks.
Where water and earth,
fire and air have no footing—
there no star does shine,
nor does the sun shed its light;
there the moon glows not,
yet no darkness is found.
And when a sage, a brahmin, finds understanding
through their own sagacity,
then, from forms and formless,
from pleasure and pain they are released.