Case 59 never ends, and so we lay down Case 60, Ryutetsuma's Old Cow ...
One of the few Koans to prominently feature a woman, and she gets called an "old cow"! Hmmm. For a Way beyond Preferences and Distinctions, maybe just a little sexism in Zen and all Buddhism (although perhaps just of reflection of the conservative, traditional Indian, Chinese, Japanese and other Asian countries where these folks lived). What do you think about that? Shishin Wick believes that the reference to "Old Cow" is actually to a symbol of wisdom and one's True Nature. Still, the Zen world, Buddhist Sutras and these Koans are rather a sausage festival.
In any case, as Shishin Wick points out in his commentary, the fact that it would be physically impossible to travel so far away as "Mount Tai tomorrow" has a message for a Sangha such as ours which transcends here and there, time and distance. Do you taste, or have experienced, how Enlightenment transcends time and space? Thus Kyozan is quoted as saying (to modernize), "if you beat a drum in China, they dance in Paris".
Was Isan's lying down such laziness and surrender? Or was it more a "no need to do, all has been said and done" statement?
Even though Isan lay down and the Old Cow left, do you feel that they met on Mount Tai or not?
Gassho, J
SatToday
One of the few Koans to prominently feature a woman, and she gets called an "old cow"! Hmmm. For a Way beyond Preferences and Distinctions, maybe just a little sexism in Zen and all Buddhism (although perhaps just of reflection of the conservative, traditional Indian, Chinese, Japanese and other Asian countries where these folks lived). What do you think about that? Shishin Wick believes that the reference to "Old Cow" is actually to a symbol of wisdom and one's True Nature. Still, the Zen world, Buddhist Sutras and these Koans are rather a sausage festival.

In any case, as Shishin Wick points out in his commentary, the fact that it would be physically impossible to travel so far away as "Mount Tai tomorrow" has a message for a Sangha such as ours which transcends here and there, time and distance. Do you taste, or have experienced, how Enlightenment transcends time and space? Thus Kyozan is quoted as saying (to modernize), "if you beat a drum in China, they dance in Paris".
Was Isan's lying down such laziness and surrender? Or was it more a "no need to do, all has been said and done" statement?
Even though Isan lay down and the Old Cow left, do you feel that they met on Mount Tai or not?
Gassho, J
SatToday
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