No Reason for Zazen

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  • Kyōsen
    Member
    • Aug 2019
    • 311

    #16
    The more I sit, the more I appreciate these words, Jundo. The more I appreciate the words of Dogen. To just sit and expect nothing ... that is liberation, and we are free from the very beginning. It is as the Buddha said: "netaṃ mama, nesohamasmi, na meso attā" ("This is not mine. This I am not. This is not myself").

    Gassho
    Kyōsen
    Sat|LAH
    橋川
    kyō (bridge) | sen (river)

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    • Nanrin
      Member
      • May 2018
      • 262

      #17
      Gassho

      Nanrin

      Sat today
      南 - Southern
      林 - Forest

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      • lapsus_linguae
        Member
        • Feb 2020
        • 8

        #18
        The simplest, yet most elusive concept. You explain it well- it's just easier said than done!

        Thank you, Jundo.

        Gassho.

        Jen.
        SatToday

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        • Seibu
          Member
          • Jan 2019
          • 271

          #19


          Seibu,
          Sattoday

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          • Tai Shi
            Member
            • Oct 2014
            • 3482

            #20
            Thank you Jundo Roshi.
            Tai Shi
            sat
            Gassho
            Peaceful, Tai Shi. Ubasoku; calm, supportive, for positive poetry 優婆塞 台 婆

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            • shikantazen
              Member
              • Feb 2013
              • 361

              #21
              TBH, I won't do the practice if there is no gaining. Right now I am acting as if I believe there is nothing to gain and nothing will change / improve and sitting with no expectations.

              I don't really know why teachers keep bringing "no gaining" but here are some guesses.

              1) Zazen is a sudden enlightenment practice unlike gradual one like vipassana where the stages are clearly laid out. In zazen nothing happens for a while and all of a sudden you realize the oneness with everything (like brad warner's oneness experience when he was trying to cross the bridge). So I feel teachers discourage gaining ideas and looking for progress as this is a sudden practice and nothing much seems to happen for a while. The student will only be disappointed if they look for signs of progress.

              2) The sense of self is itself an illusion (you don't exist) and hence this illusory self can never theoretically get anything

              3) The idea of "improving", going somewhere, gaining something (adding to yourself) all of these will only make this sense of self stronger just like all worldly pursuits do. There can be a pitfall where the student is using zazen too the same way.

              Gassho,
              Sam
              ST
              Last edited by shikantazen; 03-15-2020, 03:42 AM.

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              • Jishin
                Member
                • Oct 2012
                • 4823

                #22
                Originally posted by shikantazen

                I don't really know why teachers keep bringing "no gaining" but here are some guesses.
                Hi Sam,

                If you pay careful attention, you will note that teachers do not bring up “no gaining”. Students do and so teachers are forced to address “no gaining”. There are a million things to direct our attention to. If attention is focused on “no gaining” then there is “no gaining”. If attention is not focused on “no gaining” then there is “no gaining”. Don’t make “no gaining” with your mind and then its not a problem. It’s just sitting.

                I hope this helps.

                Gassho, Jishin, __/stlah\__

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                • Kotei
                  Dharma Transmitted Priest
                  • Mar 2015
                  • 4349

                  #23
                  Hello Sam,
                  imho 'nothing to gain' does not automatically mean 'nothing will change'.

                  Just writing with my very limited understanding... I might be totally off.

                  I don't think that Zazen, as taught by the Soto school, is a practice of sudden enlightenment, imho quite the opposite is the case...
                  Letting it sink into the bones over the years of continuous practice.
                  The Rinzai school seems to be teaching this 'sudden enlightenment' way.
                  Of course, this does not mean, that it might not happen this or that way.

                  I think that it's difficult finding words for what Zazen is about, because it's about practically experiencing something beyond words and thinking.
                  Pondering koans for invoking something comparable to 'no gaining' just 'being' Zazen, doesn't work well for me.
                  To me, Zazen is about resting in a state of non-dual, non-discriminating, non-active-thinking, non-self-centered, non-wanting, just-pure-being.
                  Everything is already there, there is nothing to gain... If anything... dropping all the layers of Self-invented delusion... is 'gained'.
                  But that is dropping... giving away... letting go... not 'gaining'.

                  Maybe over the years, some of what is experienced while sitting Zazen might ooze into the Self, the acting person.
                  It does. But I am not sitting with that intention.
                  I am sitting because of sitting. Pure being.

                  Reading the above, I am not sure that it's what I wanted to say, but I tried...
                  Gassho,
                  Kotei sat/lah today.
                  義道 冴庭 / Gidō Kotei.

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                  • vanbui
                    Member
                    • Dec 2018
                    • 111

                    #24
                    Hi Sam,

                    Thank you for raising this interesting point.

                    My understanding is according to Dogen the Circle of the Way is always complete and Practice-Enlightenment is one and the same. So there is nothing to gain in practice. We suffer because of attachment and discrimination, so zazen is the best medicine for these ailments. To have gaining idea is another attachment. However, it's true that most or all of us come to practice to gain or look for something, but practice should eventually shred this idea as well. Just my humble opinion.


                    Fundamentals of Dogen’s Thoughts

                    This is an excellent article on master Dogen's thoughts, which talk about The Circle of The Way.

                    Gassho,
                    Van
                    Satlah _/\_

                    Sent from my HD1913 using Tapatalk
                    Last edited by vanbui; 03-15-2020, 09:46 AM.

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                    • Jundo
                      Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                      • Apr 2006
                      • 41168

                      #25
                      Sam,

                      Do you know that you have been making about the same comment, repeatedly, for years, and l have responded again and again about the same way? Here is one example from 2013!

                      NOTE FROM JUNDO: PLEASE SEE MY RESPONSE BELOW. This is not a philosophical thread. I just realized I have been doing Zazen all wrong till this point. I started only 3 months back so it is not such a bad thing. What I was doing: Just sitting doing nothing. When awareness comes back by itself to the current moment, then just


                      But, let me try once more ... maybe this time will sink in ...

                      Originally posted by shikantazen
                      TBH, I won't do the practice if there is no gaining. Right now I am acting as if I believe there is nothing to gain and nothing will change / improve and sitting with no expectations.
                      Saying that there is "no goal" and "nothing to attain" --does not-- mean that there is nothing to attain, and that sure changes everything! lf one is on a mountain, one does not get to the mountain by looking for the mountain, but instead by realizing that one has been on the mountain walking the mountain (and is the mountain walking!) all along. The way to true peace and satisfaction is not to hunger for satisfaction and fight for peace, but to rest and drop all hunger. The way to escape from those Chinese thumb cuffs that tighten and tighten the more one pulls and pulls is to stop resisting and yield completely. Capiche?


                      One more: Does the wave "gain" the sea when it realizes that it has been the wetness of the sea all along? ls anything "gained" to the water when it rises up in the "birth" of a wave, or lost when the wave "dies" by fading back into the sea? Not one drop is added to the waters or taken away. Sam, you are the wave looking for the water. And that make you just all wet!

                      1) Zazen is a sudden enlightenment practice unlike gradual one like vipassana where the stages are clearly laid out. In zazen nothing happens for a while and all of a sudden you realize the oneness with everything (like brad warner's oneness experience when he was trying to cross the bridge). So I feel teachers discourage gaining ideas and looking for progress as this is a sudden practice and nothing much seems to happen for a while. The student will only be disappointed if they look for signs of progress.
                      Not really. As Brad often emphasizes with his experience on the bridge story, sometimes such things happen and they are wondrous ... then your Zen teacher says when you tell him, "that's nice, but nothing to see here, go eat an orange," and then we move on and realize that all the world is enlightenment. Otherwise, it is like being on a bus trip to the Grand Canyon thinking that the wonder is just at the Grand Canyon, but missing the point that the whole trip is the wonder ... and the bus, the road, the scenery, the Canyon, the orange, the other passengers are just you, and you just all that whole. Some folks emphasize the open Canyon too much, missing the dust right under their feet, the sky above and their own life in between.

                      ln fact, some very wise passengers never even get to the Canyon, never have some opening experience, but realize just as much to the bone that they are the Buddha Bus Trip all along.

                      ln either case, Soto Zen is BOTH "sudden" and "gradual" (Rinzai Zen really is too) because we realize that every inch of the trip is suddenly and thoroughly and immediately the trip as we gradually head on down the Dharma road.

                      2) The sense of self is itself an illusion (you don't exist) and hence this illusory self can never theoretically get anything
                      Yes, the self is an illusion of the mind which separates "you" from the whole ... and yet, for Soto folks, the whole is also "you" (and everything) as the whole (and everything) pours back into you and everything, making each precious and as real as real can be.

                      3) The idea of "improving", going somewhere, gaining something (adding to yourself) all of these will only make this sense of self stronger just like all worldly pursuits do. There can be a pitfall where the student is using zazen too the same way.
                      This is true.

                      Originally posted by Jishin
                      Hi Sam,

                      If you pay careful attention, you will note that teachers do not bring up “no gaining”. Students do and so teachers are forced to address “no gaining”.
                      Not sure about that. l raise "no gaining" ad nauseum, again and again ... in the OP at the start of this thread in fact.

                      Gassho, J

                      STLah
                      Last edited by Jundo; 03-15-2020, 03:09 PM.
                      ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

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                      • Jishin
                        Member
                        • Oct 2012
                        • 4823

                        #26
                        No Reason for Zazen

                        Originally posted by Jundo

                        Not sure about that. l raise "no gaining" ad nauseum, again and again ... in the OP at the start of this thread in fact.
                        Not sure about that. My (student) lack of understanding of “no gaining” on other threads once again forced Jundo (teacher) to raise “no gaining” in this thread again. If I (student) just kept my mouth shut on other threads Jundo (teacher) would have “no gaining” to talk about...



                        Gassho, Jishin, __/stlah\__

                        This is a baby gorilla from the Fort Worth Zoo. Somehow it gets away with harassing much much larger gorillas.
                        Last edited by Jishin; 03-15-2020, 02:27 PM.

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                        • Kyonin
                          Dharma Transmitted Priest
                          • Oct 2010
                          • 6752

                          #27
                          Just sitting with what is.

                          Thank you Jundo.

                          Gassho,

                          Kyonin
                          Sat/LAH
                          Hondō Kyōnin
                          奔道 協忍

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                          • shikantazen
                            Member
                            • Feb 2013
                            • 361

                            #28
                            Gassho,

                            Thanks all for your replies.

                            Why don't we just tell the student not to expect to see signs of progress (unlike other practices) and not be too focused on enlightenment. Telling there is nothing to gain seems like a mental trick and even lying. The final oneness experience does change things. Without clinging to the illusory self, life is a lot less suffering.

                            I would take it as that. Just a mental trick to help the student not to focus on an end goal but on their reality and life now. I take that as I sit more, I will be less focused on the end goal and more at peace with what is

                            Gassho,
                            Sam
                            ST

                            P.S. BTW, Jundo that old post of mine is about clarifying the technique of sitting. Seems different from what I asked now. Please don't point to my old posts. Reading them now is so embarassing

                            Comment

                            • Tairin
                              Member
                              • Feb 2016
                              • 2963

                              #29
                              I don’t think there is any mental trickery involved or intended. You are just sitting staring at a wall without expectations that anything will come of it.


                              Tairin
                              Sat today and lah
                              泰林 - Tai Rin - Peaceful Woods

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                              • Jundo
                                Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                                • Apr 2006
                                • 41168

                                #30
                                Originally posted by shikantazen

                                Why don't we just tell the student not to expect to see signs of progress (unlike other practices) and not be too focused on enlightenment. Telling there is nothing to gain seems like a mental trick and even lying. The final oneness experience does change things. Without clinging to the illusory self, life is a lot less suffering.

                                I would take it as that. Just a mental trick to help the student not to focus on an end goal but on their reality and life now. I take that as I sit more, I will be less focused on the end goal and more at peace with what is
                                Who said that there are no signs of progress? This radical "no place to go" revolutionizes our life which is ordinarily always engaged, morning to night, in changing, fixing, and hungering for progress. In Zen Practice, one learns to change, fix and move forward while, at the same time, one's heart knows there is nothing to change, nothing lacking, and never was. One knows the pay-off of "nothing ever lacking" by the effects that it begins to have in one's life, when situations are met unlike they were before. (One example, I am encountering all the fear and frustration in my own life with the current pandemic far far differently than neurotic, "Woody Allen" me might have before all this Zen practice. For one, I don't believe in death in quite the same way as 30 years ago, and I feel gratitude and completeness for all of this happening).

                                It is not a "mental trick," but a whole new way to encounter reality!

                                A "final oneness experience"? Is that what you want? Try morphine, because it is quicker than all this sitting! Oneness experiences are overrated. Do you know how to live in this world where "one" manifests as "two three four" and all the myriad things, people and events of the world? Do you know how not to "cling to the illusory self" while yet alive as the "illusory self" which is also as real as real can be? Do you know how to have a feeling of "oneness" and wholeness even amid life situations which include broken bones and broken hearts sometimes?

                                As long as you are thinking that the "goal" or "end point" is some "oneness experience," you are missing the bus trip (and that fact that you are the bus and the road and the sky above ... even the potholes and flat tires ... the true meaning of "not one not twoness") while hoping for the momentary sojourn at the Grand Canyon.

                                Gassho, J

                                STLah
                                Last edited by Jundo; 03-15-2020, 04:47 PM.
                                ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

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