From next time, we will begin our next book, "WHAT IS ZEN?" by NORMAN FISCHER and SUSAN MOON ...
Today, Case 79 never ends, yet now we move on to Case 80 - Ryuge Pass the Chin Rest ...
The Koan is here ...
And most pages of Shishin's comments are here ...
The traditional Zen question "What is the meaning of Bodhidharma's coming from the west" seems to refer to the travels of Bodhidharma, the fellow who is said to have first brought Zen from India in the west to China in the east. However, the real meaning of the question in Zen circles is usually taken to be "what is is the essential truth of the Buddha Dharma, what is the real meaning of Zen" and the like. That is what is really being asked.
He gets struck twice, once by a Zafu and once by a traditional chin rest used by monks in retreats or other intensive sittings in which they wished to sleep in the sitting position. Here is a picture. They also tied ropes to themself and to a hook hanging from the ceiling so that they would not fall over. Kinda cheating if you ask me! :-) It is called a Zenpan ...
About the Zenpan ...
Striking someone is usually a way to impress on the person, "Wake up, don't you know it is this here. Feel it like the sting on a slapped cheek."
In any case, as Shishin points out, some folks think that Ryuge was just a clod who did not get the teachings, so deserved to be hit. Others (I am one) think he got the point, and was just being very modest, not needing to impress anyone in his confidence. It shows that even Zen folks can't agree on these things, and read these Koans differently. A bit "eye of the beholder."
I take his "no meaning" as very profound. You see, Bodhidharma did not "come from" or "go to" anywhere in the absolute, so what meaning? Further, saying "no meaning" is a meaning so big and boundless that no "meaning" can hold it. For example, if you are asked the "meaning" of the flower that the Buddha upheld in the famous Koan, how could one begin to describe some "meaning" for that which represent everything?
I take the preface and closing verse to both be pointing to Ryuge's modesty and lack of showing off his understanding. He roams free through space and the vast sky, no obstacles.
Do you think Ryuge got it or did not? Is there a meaning or no meaning?
Gassho, Jundo
SatTodayLAH
Today, Case 79 never ends, yet now we move on to Case 80 - Ryuge Pass the Chin Rest ...
The Koan is here ...
And most pages of Shishin's comments are here ...
The traditional Zen question "What is the meaning of Bodhidharma's coming from the west" seems to refer to the travels of Bodhidharma, the fellow who is said to have first brought Zen from India in the west to China in the east. However, the real meaning of the question in Zen circles is usually taken to be "what is is the essential truth of the Buddha Dharma, what is the real meaning of Zen" and the like. That is what is really being asked.
He gets struck twice, once by a Zafu and once by a traditional chin rest used by monks in retreats or other intensive sittings in which they wished to sleep in the sitting position. Here is a picture. They also tied ropes to themself and to a hook hanging from the ceiling so that they would not fall over. Kinda cheating if you ask me! :-) It is called a Zenpan ...
About the Zenpan ...
Striking someone is usually a way to impress on the person, "Wake up, don't you know it is this here. Feel it like the sting on a slapped cheek."
In any case, as Shishin points out, some folks think that Ryuge was just a clod who did not get the teachings, so deserved to be hit. Others (I am one) think he got the point, and was just being very modest, not needing to impress anyone in his confidence. It shows that even Zen folks can't agree on these things, and read these Koans differently. A bit "eye of the beholder."
I take his "no meaning" as very profound. You see, Bodhidharma did not "come from" or "go to" anywhere in the absolute, so what meaning? Further, saying "no meaning" is a meaning so big and boundless that no "meaning" can hold it. For example, if you are asked the "meaning" of the flower that the Buddha upheld in the famous Koan, how could one begin to describe some "meaning" for that which represent everything?
I take the preface and closing verse to both be pointing to Ryuge's modesty and lack of showing off his understanding. He roams free through space and the vast sky, no obstacles.
Do you think Ryuge got it or did not? Is there a meaning or no meaning?
Gassho, Jundo
SatTodayLAH
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