Hello Fellow Grains,
The POINTER talks about "killing a man," but not literally of course. It means killing the ignorance of a little "self," bringing Buddha to life on the spot. The Zen fellow must bring illumination and function (i.e., wisdom and really putting it into action in this life) together. The Zen teacher is "wrapping up and opening out, " which means something like "she knows when to be silent and when to talk, when to stand still and when to act out" in order to teach. "Principal and phenomena are not two ... he practices in both the provisional and the real" means that he brings Emptiness/the Absolute and this messy world together as one. "Letting go of the primary, he sets up the secondary meaning" probably means something like "even though the actual thing is beyond expression, he tries to say and do something, however, imperfect, to get the point across. It leads to all kinds of misunderstandings (faults and errors), but if he did not, beginning and less advanced students would not understand at all, so he needs to explain as best he can." However, the "clear eyed" who have transcended life and death (as if in the mouth of a tiger) understand whatever the case.
Then the CASE, which is fairly straight forward (although, as always, this is not to be understood just intellectually, but viscerally, truly experienced and known in the bones.) It happens to be very much related to the little (BIG) talk I offered at Zazen today, BIG is small, small is BIG, so maybe have a listen (at 59:25 here: LINK) It is something like Blake's "To see a world in a grain of sand."
For the Zen fellow, Everything, the tiniest thing, the most mundane things, fully contains ... nay, fully IS ... everything, every other thing, the whole world, the universe, all time and space and then some.
If you throw it down like Hsueh Feng (Seppo) says, the grain vanishes from sight into Emptiness ... but truly, it is everywhere the eyes can see. Everybody cannot fail to see it, though they may be missing it, looking for it here and there beating their drums, as if lost inside a dark bucket of lacquer (a metaphor usually meaning to be lost in ignorance.)
The COMMENTARY has reference to other Koany stories in praise of Hsueh Feng/Seppo which I will not dive into, except to note the ones where the Universe, the Absolute, the Teaching is equated with the most mundane things and object: Dirt, the teacher's staff, defecation, rice grit. Where and what is it not?
In the VERSE, "Ox head disappears, horse head emerges" is probably a Chinese saying for "waves come and go on the sea," i.e., the events and things of this world happen, coming and going. "The mirror ... has no dust" refers to a famous saying by the 6th Ancestor, meaning the dusty obstructions of this world are clear. Don't you see? All the "hundred flowers" of this world (all the things of this world) show it right before your eyes, and are you.
QUESTION:
- If the whole world is this grain of sand or rice in your hand, but the grain is a thing in the world, where are you located? Where is Hsueh Feng right now? (Hint: Whatever you say may be like the "wild fox interpretation" mentioned in the COMMENTARY.)
.
One grain of sand,
One grain of sand, one grain of sand.
One grain of sand,
One grain of sand, one grain of sand.
One grain of sand,
One drop of water in the sea.
One grain of sand,
One little you, one little me.
One grain of sand,
One little star up in the blue.
One grain of sand,
One little me, one little you.
One grain of sand,
One leaf of grass--upon a plain.
One grain of sand,
We come and go again and again, again.
One grain of sand
One grain of sand on an endless shore
One grain of sand
One little life who’d ask for more
One grain of sand
One drop of water in the sea
One grain of sand
One little you one little me
One grain of sand
One grain of sand is all my joy
One grain of sand
One little girl one little boy
One grain of sand
One leaf of grass upon a plain
One grain of sand
We come and go again and again and again
One grain of sand
One little snowflake lost in a swirling storm
One grain of sand
I’ll hold you close and keep you warm
The sun will rise
The sun will rise and then go down
The sun will rise
One little world go round and round and round
One grain of sand
One grain of sand is all my own
One grain of sand
One grain of sand is home sweet home
Gassho, J
stlah
-
The POINTER talks about "killing a man," but not literally of course. It means killing the ignorance of a little "self," bringing Buddha to life on the spot. The Zen fellow must bring illumination and function (i.e., wisdom and really putting it into action in this life) together. The Zen teacher is "wrapping up and opening out, " which means something like "she knows when to be silent and when to talk, when to stand still and when to act out" in order to teach. "Principal and phenomena are not two ... he practices in both the provisional and the real" means that he brings Emptiness/the Absolute and this messy world together as one. "Letting go of the primary, he sets up the secondary meaning" probably means something like "even though the actual thing is beyond expression, he tries to say and do something, however, imperfect, to get the point across. It leads to all kinds of misunderstandings (faults and errors), but if he did not, beginning and less advanced students would not understand at all, so he needs to explain as best he can." However, the "clear eyed" who have transcended life and death (as if in the mouth of a tiger) understand whatever the case.
Then the CASE, which is fairly straight forward (although, as always, this is not to be understood just intellectually, but viscerally, truly experienced and known in the bones.) It happens to be very much related to the little (BIG) talk I offered at Zazen today, BIG is small, small is BIG, so maybe have a listen (at 59:25 here: LINK) It is something like Blake's "To see a world in a grain of sand."
For the Zen fellow, Everything, the tiniest thing, the most mundane things, fully contains ... nay, fully IS ... everything, every other thing, the whole world, the universe, all time and space and then some.
If you throw it down like Hsueh Feng (Seppo) says, the grain vanishes from sight into Emptiness ... but truly, it is everywhere the eyes can see. Everybody cannot fail to see it, though they may be missing it, looking for it here and there beating their drums, as if lost inside a dark bucket of lacquer (a metaphor usually meaning to be lost in ignorance.)
The COMMENTARY has reference to other Koany stories in praise of Hsueh Feng/Seppo which I will not dive into, except to note the ones where the Universe, the Absolute, the Teaching is equated with the most mundane things and object: Dirt, the teacher's staff, defecation, rice grit. Where and what is it not?
In the VERSE, "Ox head disappears, horse head emerges" is probably a Chinese saying for "waves come and go on the sea," i.e., the events and things of this world happen, coming and going. "The mirror ... has no dust" refers to a famous saying by the 6th Ancestor, meaning the dusty obstructions of this world are clear. Don't you see? All the "hundred flowers" of this world (all the things of this world) show it right before your eyes, and are you.
QUESTION:
- If the whole world is this grain of sand or rice in your hand, but the grain is a thing in the world, where are you located? Where is Hsueh Feng right now? (Hint: Whatever you say may be like the "wild fox interpretation" mentioned in the COMMENTARY.)
.
One grain of sand,
One grain of sand, one grain of sand.
One grain of sand,
One grain of sand, one grain of sand.
One grain of sand,
One drop of water in the sea.
One grain of sand,
One little you, one little me.
One grain of sand,
One little star up in the blue.
One grain of sand,
One little me, one little you.
One grain of sand,
One leaf of grass--upon a plain.
One grain of sand,
We come and go again and again, again.
One grain of sand
One grain of sand on an endless shore
One grain of sand
One little life who’d ask for more
One grain of sand
One drop of water in the sea
One grain of sand
One little you one little me
One grain of sand
One grain of sand is all my joy
One grain of sand
One little girl one little boy
One grain of sand
One leaf of grass upon a plain
One grain of sand
We come and go again and again and again
One grain of sand
One little snowflake lost in a swirling storm
One grain of sand
I’ll hold you close and keep you warm
The sun will rise
The sun will rise and then go down
The sun will rise
One little world go round and round and round
One grain of sand
One grain of sand is all my own
One grain of sand
One grain of sand is home sweet home
Gassho, J
stlah
-
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