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The Eightfold Path  /  Part II of VIII  ·  Wisdom (Paññā)

The Arrow
Before the Bow

Right Intention is the second factor and the second half of the wisdom division. It is the aiming that happens before anything is done. The Buddha named three intentions: renunciation, goodwill, harmlessness. This meditation is about the why beneath your training and your work — and how it decides where they land.

Series
The Eightfold Path · Wisdom Series
Division
Wisdom · Paññā
Factor
02 · Sammā Saṅkappa
Author
Noah Wickliffe
Read
~10 minutes
“All that we are is the result of what we have thought.”— after the Buddha · Dhammapada, opening verses
Before you read further

Take one thing you do faithfully — a sport, a job, a role in someone's life — and ask: why am I actually doing this? Not the dinner-party answer. The one underneath. Hold whatever surfaces as you read.

§01 — The Second Factor

Wisdom has two hands

“Whatever a monk frequently thinks about becomes the inclination of his mind.”— after the Buddha · Dvedhāvitakka Sutta, MN 19

The wisdom division has two factors. Right View is the seeing. Right Intention is the aiming. One without the other is a map never followed, or a journey without a map.

You can see clearly and still aim at the wrong thing. History is full of clear-eyed people aimed badly. Seeing truly is necessary. It is not sufficient. The second factor asks what the first cannot: given what you now see, what will you set your heart toward?

The Pali is sammā saṅkappa — Right Intention, Right Resolve. The Buddha named three intentions that make up the factor. Renunciation (nekkhamma): the willingness to release, to want less, to travel lighter. Goodwill (avyāpāda): the settled wish that beings be well — including difficult ones, including yourself. Harmlessness (avihiṃsā): the resolve to move through the world causing as little damage as your passage allows.

Notice what is not on the list. Not achievement. Not victory. Not self-improvement. All three right intentions are forms of open-handedness. Their three opposites — craving, ill will, cruelty — are forms of grasping. The wisdom division teaches one integrated lesson: see clearly, then aim generously. The rest of the path is those two hands, working.

The path, and where this factor stands
Fig.01 · Three divisions, eight factors
Right Intention completes the wisdom division. View cleans the glass. Intention sets the heading. Together they steer every factor downstream.
Wisdom
view · intention
Ethics
speech · action · livelihood
Discipline
effort · mindfulness · concentration
Part II sits here: Right Intention, the second factor of the wisdom division
Framework: Magga-Vibhaṅga Sutta (SN 45.8) · the three intentions of MN 19
The arrow is aimed before the bow is drawn. By the time you act, the decision has usually been made.— why intention precedes ethics on the path
§02 — The Teaching

Two kinds of thinking, watched

“I divided my thinking into two classes — and saw where each one led.”— after the Buddha · MN 19, the two kinds of thought

There is a sutta in which the Buddha describes his own training before awakening. It reads like a practice log. It is the most practical document on intention ever written.

His method was simple. He sorted his thoughts into two streams: those tending toward craving, ill will, and harm; and those tending toward release, goodwill, and care. Then he watched where each stream led. The first led to his own affliction and others'. Seeing that, honestly, again and again, was enough — those thoughts subsided, not by suppression, but the way an ember goes out when it is no longer fed. The second stream led to no harm. But even wholesome thinking, he noted, tires the mind if run all day, the way a workout tires the body. So he learned to think it, and then to rest.

Two things here deserve a slow look. First, the mechanism: intention is trained by observing consequences, not by force of will. He did not grit his teeth against unwholesome thoughts. He watched where they led until the watching changed his appetite for them. Second, the law: whatever the mind frequently dwells on becomes its inclination. Neuroscience later gave it a shorthand — what fires together, wires together. You are, at this hour, becoming what you most often intend. This is not a threat. It is the most hopeful sentence in the canon: the becoming is trainable, and the training is underway either way.

The three intentions also need rescue from their translations. Renunciation is not gray self-denial. It is the athlete's oldest secret: the boat that carries nothing extra is fast. Goodwill is not niceness. It is the decision to stop rooting against anyone, including your rivals, including your former self. Harmlessness is not passivity. It is strength that knows its own weight. Three aims. One open hand.

The three drift-intentions
  • Craving — more, again, mine
  • Ill will — quiet rooting against
  • Harm — winning that requires wreckage
  • Feels like: gripping, hot, narrow
The three right intentions
  • Renunciation — traveling lighter
  • Goodwill — may they be well, all of them
  • Harmlessness — strength without wreckage
  • Feels like: open, warm, wide
Fig.02 · The two streams of MN 19 — sorted not by rule, but by where they lead
A softer way to ask it

Of the thoughts you fed this week, which stream got the bigger meal? No judgment. Just the inventory the young Buddha kept of himself.

§03 — The Present Moment of History

Aiming a life in the age of the optimized self

“He who has a why to live for can bear almost any how.”— Nietzsche, as carried by Viktor Frankl · Man's Search for Meaning

Our culture is excellent at answering how and embarrassed by why. We optimize everything — sleep, splits, portfolios — and many people are optimizing at full speed toward destinations they never chose.

The research is clear. Fifty years of self-determination theory — Deci and Ryan's work — established that the quality of motivation matters as much as its quantity. Goals pursued for intrinsic reasons (growth, connection, love of the thing) predict well-being and persistence. The same goals pursued for extrinsic reasons (image, status, reward) predict burnout, fragility, and a hollowness that arrives on schedule with the achievement. It is not what you pursue. It is why. The intention is inside the outcome the way the seed is inside the tree.

And our moment makes the wrong intentions easy. The metrics of craving are ambient: follower counts, rankings, the quiet leaderboard in every pocket. Ill will has an economy: outrage is the most reliably monetized emotion online. This does not make the age evil. Every age arms the unwholesome intentions in its own way. It does mean Right Intention is now a practice with headwinds — something set deliberately in the morning, before the feeds set it for you.

Frankl, who kept his why alive in the place most designed to kill it, made the essential point: meaning is not found at the end of striving. It is carried into it. The intention is not the reward past the finish line. It is what you row with, every stroke, the whole way down.

A generation fluent in optimization is rediscovering the oldest question: optimized toward what?— the second factor, current again
§04 — The Athlete's Version

Why you row is how you row

“It is the journey toward the goal, not its attainment, that carries the value.”— after Deci & Ryan · self-determination theory

Coaches learn to hear it in the first week of the season. Two athletes, same scores, same technique. One is rowing toward something. One is rowing away from something. By spring, they are not the same athlete.

Sport makes intention visible. Consider the athlete competing not to lose — protecting a ranking, an identity, a parent's regard. Every race is a threat. Every rival is an enemy. Every result is a referendum. Now consider the athlete competing to find out — how fast, how deep, how far the training reached. Same course. Same pain. Different inner weather. The research calls this approach versus avoidance, mastery versus ego orientation, and the findings repeat across decades: the mastery-focused athlete performs better under pressure, recovers faster from failure, and is still in the sport ten years later. Intention is a performance variable and a longevity variable. They are the same variable.

The three intentions map onto a boat with precision. Renunciation is every ounce left on the dock: the grudge, the story about the coach, the outcome you cannot control from the six seat. Crews that carry nothing extra are fast in ways no ergometer explains. Goodwill is the sport's open secret: the best competitors row their finest races when they stop rooting against the crew in the next lane — when the rival becomes the whetstone, the one whose speed calls forth your own. Harmlessness separates the fierce from the cruel: the athlete who empties themselves to beat you, then holds the dock steady for your boat. The intention was never your diminishment. It was the shared discovery of what a body can do.

Coxswains ask an old question in the last five hundred meters, when the mind is bargaining: what did you come here for? It is not a trick. It is the second factor, shouted over the water. Athletes with a real answer — set long before the race — find something in those meters that athletes without one cannot. The arrow was aimed at dawn. The last strokes only release it.

Two athletes, one course
Fig.03 · The intention inside the outcome
Identical talent, identical training. The intention beneath the effort determines the experience, the resilience, and — over years — the trajectory.
Away-from
fear · image · protection
The race
same water, same pain
Toward
mastery · discovery · love of it
the course does not care — but the athlete becomes what they aimed with
Framework: Deci & Ryan (SDT) · Elliot (approach–avoidance) · Duda & Nicholls (goal orientation)
§05 — The Practice

Setting the heading, daily

“Whatever an enemy might do to an enemy, a wrongly directed mind does worse to itself.”— after the Dhammapada, verse 42

Intention decays. An aim set once drifts within days unless renewed. So Right Intention is not a decision. It is a rhythm: set, notice, re-aim.

In the morning, before the phone — before the world sets your intentions for you — name the aim for the day in the register of the three. What will I release today? Who gets my goodwill today — choose someone difficult, on the good weeks? What strength of mine needs gentling? During the day, notice when the drift-intentions take the wheel. Notice without drama, the way the young Buddha did: just see where the stream leads. Then re-aim, as many times as it takes. Re-aiming is the practice. The archer who adjusts a thousand times is not failing at archery.

This is the layer SportsFlow's reflective tools hold. A motivation profile, honestly taken, is a portrait of your current intentions — the actual whys running beneath the training, often news to the athlete carrying them. A goal entered with its reason attached, a check-in that asks what you are rowing toward: these keep the question alive. No app can hold your intention for you. But a mirror that keeps asking why keeps the aim from being set by whoever shouts loudest into your morning.

01
Aim before the feed morning, unarmed
Set one intention — release, goodwill, or gentleness — before the first screen of the day sets one for you.
02
Sort the streams MN 19, quietly
Once a day, catch a thought mid-flight. Which stream? Watch where it leads. The watching is the training.
03
Bless a rival the strangest rep
Pick the person you quietly root against and wish them well — genuinely, briefly. Feel what it un-grips.
04
Leave one thing on the dock renunciation, small
Each session, name one thing you will not carry today — a grievance, a comparison, an outcome. Row without it.
05
Ask the coxswain's question what did you come for?
When it gets hard, return to the aim you set at dawn. Release the arrow you actually drew.
an aim renewed daily — until, under pressure, it holds without you holding it
§ The Takeaway

See clearly. Then aim generously.

Right Intention completes the wisdom division. View is the map; Intention is the heading. The three aims — renunciation, goodwill, harmlessness — are not restrictions on a life. They are the lightening of one: less carried, less opposed, less harmed. More available for the actual race.

The state cannot be ordered; the conditions can be prepared. You cannot force yourself to want the right things. Wanting does not answer to commands. But you can set the aim each morning, watch the streams each day, and re-draw the bow each time it slackens. The mind inclines toward what it dwells on. That law is running right now. The practice is choosing what you feed it.

One last question

If someone could read only your intentions this past month — not your results, just the aims underneath — who would they say you are becoming? Is that who you meant?

SportsFlow · Field Report · The Eightfold Path · Part II of VIII
With gratitude to the voices behind this

The thinkers and texts I leaned on

Seek them out — they are worth your time

01The BuddhaDvedhāvitakka Sutta (MN 19), the two kinds of thought; Magga-Vibhaṅga Sutta (SN 45.8), Right Intention as renunciation, non-ill-will, harmlessness.
02The Dhammapada — opening verses on mind as forerunner of all states.
03Bodhi, BhikkhuThe Noble Eightfold Path (1984). The three intentions unpacked with unmatched clarity.
04Deci, E. L. & Ryan, R. M.Self-Determination Theory (2017); “Intrinsic and extrinsic motivations,” Contemporary Educational Psychology 25 (2000). Why the why beneath a goal shapes its fruits.
05Frankl, V. E.Man's Search for Meaning (1946). The carried why; meaning as what striving is made of.
06Elliot, A. J. — “Approach and avoidance motivation and achievement goals,” Educational Psychologist 34(3) (1999). Toward versus away-from, in the laboratory.
07Duda, J. L. & Nicholls, J. G. — “Dimensions of achievement motivation in schoolwork and sport,” Journal of Educational Psychology 84(3) (1992). Mastery versus ego orientation in athletes.
08Kasser, T. & Ryan, R. M. — “Further examining the American dream,” Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 22(3) (1996). Extrinsic aspiration and its costs.
09Hebb, D. O.The Organization of Behavior (1949). The plasticity principle: what fires together, wires together.

This is a reflective meditation — not advice, not doctrine, and not a substitute for study within a living tradition. The diagrams are schematic. The science referenced describes tendencies across many people, never a verdict about you. The Eightfold Path belongs to a tradition twenty-five centuries deep; this series approaches it as a student, for readers of any faith or none.