Journal of Meditation based Psychological Counseling (J Medit Psychol Couns)
Indexed in KCI
OPEN ACCESS, PEER REVIEWED
pISSN 2289-0823
eISSN 2671-6119
Research Article

Structural analysis of daratha narration in the Cūḷasuññata Sutta (MN 121): Scriptural foundations for understanding meditation adverse effects

PhD Candidate, Department of Meditation Counseling Psychology, Dongbang Culture University, Republic of Korea

Correspondence to Ha, Dae Yong(Katadhammo), E-mail: gatadhammo@naver.com

Volume 36, Pages 61-74, April 2026.
Journal of Meditation Based Psychological Counseling 2026, 36, 61-74. https://doi.org/10.12972/mpca.2026.36.5
Received on March 04, 2026, Revised on April 23, 2026, Accepted on April 30, 2026, Published on April 30, 2026.
Copyright © 2026 Meditation based Psychological Counseling Association.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0).

Abstract

This study explores the narrative structure of daratha (agitation) as presented in the Cūḷasuññata Sutta (MN 121) to provide a scriptural foundation for reframing contemporary discourses on meditation adverse effects. The Sutta consistently employs a specific formula- “there is only this measure of agitation”- across nine stages of perceptual (saññā) transition.
Through a structural and sequential analysis of this formula, this research identifies three distinct dimensions of daratha: (1) Perceptual daratha, characterized by a dual structure where previous agitation becomes transparent while new agitation remains; (2) Ontological daratha, a dimensional shift where agitation contingent upon the body and life-conditions emerges after perceptual agitations have ceased; and (3) Dissolution of the formula, where the conventional framework of observation is deconstructed through insight into the conditioned (abhisaṅkhata).
By correlating this three- dimensional structure with clinical vignettes and the taxonomy of challenging meditation experiences (Lindahl et al., 2017), this study suggests that the Cūḷasuññata Sutta frames agitation not as an element to be eliminated (pajahati) but as an object to be discerned (pajānāti). Consequently, meditation “adverse effects” are reframed as “structural residual agitation accompanying the transition toward emptiness (suññā).” Furthermore, the study suggests that sīla-based relational safety is not merely an ethical guideline but a structural prerequisite for the stable observation of daratha, advocating for a shift in meditation guidance from technique-centered interventions to those rooted in ethical foundations.
Keywords

daratha, pajānāti, Cūḷasuññata Sutta (MN 121), meditation adverse effects, suññā

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