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Inspiration

The Commitment to Awakening: BuddhistPractice and Inner Transformation

Be Here Now Network
Be Here Now Network
Dec 8, 2025
7 min read

TLDR: Joseph Goldstein, a contemporary Buddhist teacher rooted in the Theravada tradition, addresses what it truly means to commit to awakening—not as a fleeting inspiration but as a sustained dedication to the path of liberation. Drawing from the Satipatthana Sutta, one of Buddhism's most foundational teachings on mindfulness, Goldstein examines how practitioners must cultivate genuine resolve to investigate the nature of mind, body, and reality. The commitment to awakening is not optional or circumstantial; it is the cornerstone upon which all other spiritual practices rest, and it requires honest assessment of one's motivation, capacity, and willingness to transform.

Read · 6 sections

What Does Commitment to Awakening Actually Mean?

In Buddhist practice, awakening (bodhi) refers to the direct realization of the true nature of reality—that phenomena lack inherent, permanent selfhood and that liberation from suffering is possible. Commitment to this goal distinguishes casual spiritual interest from serious practice. Goldstein's teaching emphasizes that this commitment is not merely intellectual agreement with Buddhist philosophy; it is a lived orientation that shapes how practitioners engage with each moment.

The Satipatthana Sutta, which Goldstein references from the Pali Canon, establishes mindfulness (sati) as the direct path to nirvana. The sutta outlines four foundations of mindfulness: mindfulness of body, of feelings (vedana), of mind (citta), and of mental phenomena (dhamma). Without commitment to awakening, these practices become exercises in relaxation or self-improvement rather than instruments of liberation. Genuine commitment transforms practice from self-help into genuine inquiry into the nature of suffering and its cessation.

How Does the Satipatthana Sutta Guide Practice Toward Awakening?

The Satipatthana Sutta is often described as the most direct path to nirvana. It provides systematic instructions for observing the body, feelings, mind states, and phenomena with clarity and non-reactivity. Goldstein's emphasis on this text reflects its centrality in Theravada Buddhism and its practical applicability to modern practitioners.

The first foundation—mindfulness of body—invites practitioners to observe breath, posture, movement, and the bodily sensations that arise moment by moment. This is not disembodied meditation; it is grounded, concrete observation. When practitioners commit to this practice with awakening as their goal, they begin to see patterns: how the body responds to mental states, how sensation is constantly changing, how even the sense of "I" inhabiting the body is a constructed experience. This direct seeing undermines the illusion of a solid, permanent self.

The second foundation—mindfulness of feelings—addresses the affective tone (pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral) that colors every experience. Without commitment to awakening, practitioners often unconsciously chase pleasant feelings and avoid unpleasant ones, reinforcing the cycles of craving and aversion that Buddhism identifies as roots of suffering. With commitment, practitioners observe these patterns with equanimity, recognizing how reactivity perpetuates bondage and how non-reactivity opens the door to freedom.

The third and fourth foundations—mindfulness of mind and mental phenomena—involve observing thoughts, emotions, mental patterns, and the specific obstacles to awakening (greed, hatred, delusion, restlessness, and doubt). This is where the rubber meets the road: Can you observe your own mind without judgment? Can you recognize when you're caught in habitual patterns? This capacity develops only through sustained commitment to practice.

Why Is Personal Commitment Essential to Buddhist Awakening?

Buddhism does not offer salvation through external grace or belief in a divine being. Each person must undertake the investigation themselves. The Buddha himself emphasized this in the Kalama Sutta, instructing disciples not to accept teachings on authority but to test them against their own experience. This places enormous responsibility on the practitioner: awakening is not something that happens to you; it is something you must actively pursue through committed practice.

Commitment also serves a practical function. Spiritual practice is difficult. Sitting in meditation reveals habitual patterns—restlessness, boredom, fear, grief—that the ordinary mind works hard to avoid. Without genuine commitment to awakening, practitioners abandon practice when it becomes uncomfortable. But when the commitment is deep, the practitioner recognizes discomfort as information, as an opportunity to understand the mind more fully rather than as a reason to quit.

Furthermore, commitment creates the conditions for sustained attention. The mind is naturally inclined toward distraction, fantasy, and reactivity. Developing strong mindfulness—the capacity to sustain attention on present-moment experience—requires repeated intention and effort. This is why Goldstein emphasizes commitment: it is the intention that holds practice together when inspiration wanes.

What Obstacles Arise on the Path to Awakening?

The Satipatthana Sutta identifies five primary hindrances: sensory desire (kamacchanda), ill-will (vyapada), sloth-torpor (thina-middha), restlessness-worry (uddhacca-kukkucca), and doubt (vicikiccha). These are not moral failures; they are natural patterns of the human mind that practice helps illuminate.

Sensory desire pulls attention toward pleasant experiences—the comfort of distraction, the allure of pleasant fantasies. Without commitment, the practitioner surrenders to these pulls. With commitment, the practitioner notices the pull itself and recognizes it as habit rather than truth.

Ill-will and aversion arise when practice confronts us with aspects of ourselves or reality we prefer not to see. Again, commitment to awakening means staying present with what arises rather than collapsing into reactivity.

Sloth and torpor manifest as lack of energy, dullness, or the sense that practice is not productive. A clear commitment to awakening provides the motivation to continue even when progress seems invisible.

Restlessness and worry reflect the mind's constant seeking and the anxiety that arises when certainty is threatened. Deep commitment to the path steadies the practitioner through these storms.

Finally, doubt—not intellectual doubt, which can be productive, but doubt about the path itself—can paralyze practice. Commitment to awakening, grounded in understanding why this practice matters, transcends the paralysis of doubt.

How Does Awakening Relate to the Cessation of Suffering?

The First Noble Truth of Buddhism is that suffering exists. This is not pessimism; it is clear-eyed observation that all conditioned phenomena are subject to impermanence, and that clinging to what is impermanent naturally produces dissatisfaction. The Second Noble Truth identifies craving and ignorance as the root causes. The Third Noble Truth asserts that liberation from suffering is possible. The Fourth Noble Truth is the path—mindfulness and wisdom practices.

Awakening, in this context, means realizing directly that all phenomena are empty of inherent selfhood (anatman), impermanent (anicca), and unsatisfactory when clung to (dukkha). This is not intellectual understanding but lived realization. When this realization is complete, the mental habits that generate suffering—greed, hatred, and delusion—lose their power. This is the cessation spoken of in the Third Noble Truth.

Commitment to awakening is commitment to this process of investigation and realization. It is the determination to see reality as it is rather than through the lens of conditioning, projection, and desire.

Where to go from here

For practitioners inspired by Goldstein's teaching on commitment to awakening, the path forward is clear: establish or deepen a meditation practice rooted in mindfulness. Begin with the breath or body sensations, the most concrete of the four foundations. Observe without judgment, without trying to change anything. Notice when the mind wanders, and gently return attention to the present moment. Do this regularly, with the understanding that you are training the mind to see clearly.

Consider studying the Satipatthana Sutta itself or reading Goldstein's detailed commentaries on it. Understanding the map helps sustain effort when the path gets difficult. Seek out a teacher or sangha (community) for guidance and support. Most importantly, clarify your own commitment: Why do you practice? What draws you toward awakening? Is it intellectual curiosity, or is it a deep longing for liberation? The more clearly you understand your own commitment, the more resilient your practice becomes.

Be Here Now Network
AuthorBe Here Now Network

Be Here Now Network is the creator of Heart Wisdom with Jack Kornfield, a podcast exploring consciousness, spirituality, and personal transformation. With 313 episodes, they have c…

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Commitment-awakeningMindfulness-practiceBuddhismSatipatthana-suttaLiberation

Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

The Satipatthana Sutta is a foundational Buddhist text that outlines the four foundations of mindfulness: body, feelings, mind, and mental phenomena. It is considered the direct path to nirvana in Theravada Buddhism and provides systematic, practical instructions for observing experience with clarity and non-reactivity to achieve awakening.
Commitment to awakening is the sustained, deliberate intention to investigate the true nature of reality and achieve liberation from suffering. It goes beyond casual interest and becomes a lived orientation that shapes how practitioners engage with each moment, helping them persevere through difficulties in their meditation practice.
The five hindrances—sensory desire, ill-will, sloth-torpor, restlessness-worry, and doubt—are natural patterns of the mind that distract practitioners from mindfulness and clear seeing. Strong commitment to awakening helps practitioners recognize these hindrances as habitual patterns rather than truths, allowing them to work with them skillfully.
Yes, according to Buddhist teachings. Awakening brings direct realization that all phenomena lack inherent selfhood and are impermanent. When this is realized completely, the mental habits that generate suffering—greed, hatred, and delusion—lose their power, resulting in what Buddhism calls liberation or nirvana.
Clarify why you practice and what draws you toward awakening. Establish a regular mindfulness meditation practice, study foundational texts like the Satipatthana Sutta, and seek guidance from a teacher or sangha. The clearer your understanding of your own commitment, the more resilient your practice becomes when challenges arise.
Buddhist practice emphasizes personal experience over blind belief. The Buddha himself instructed disciples to test teachings against their own direct observation rather than accepting them on authority. This places the responsibility for awakening squarely on the practitioner, who must investigate reality for themselves through mindfulness and wisdom practices.

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