Dear All Self-Studiers,
We will read the first pages of Chapter 6, stopping at P 81 (just before the section "Dropping Off Body and Mind.")
ln our weekly Zazenkai, we had a language teacher come. So l spoke of a language of Zazen that drops the subject and pronouns (l, me, you, it) and the objects of the sentence, subject and predicate. We also drop the adjectives and adverbs which judge and describe the nouns and verbs ... and when remains in reality as a great verb which we cannot even really say in words (even "being" does not cut it). This Great Verb is action which expresses you, me, all things and everything, and somehow contains every word in the dictionary!
Okumura Roshi speaks of the Japanese "narau" as study ("To study the self ... "), but the Japanese tend to learn many things by physically doing and trying, rather than book study or philosophy (e.g., the way to learn Karate is to practice Karate, not think about it or read books about it.). So, l often feel that "learn through practice" might be a better translation of "narau" than is "study." Something like "To learn by practice with the self is to forget the self ... "
There is a close connection here to the earlier lines ...
Conveying oneself toward all things to carry out practice-enlightenment is delusion. All things coming and carrying out practice-enlightenment through the self is realization.
When we somehow drop the selfish insistence, judgementalism and pushiness of the self, the who world comes pouring in and enlightens the self.
Gassho, J
Stlah
STLah
We will read the first pages of Chapter 6, stopping at P 81 (just before the section "Dropping Off Body and Mind.")
ln our weekly Zazenkai, we had a language teacher come. So l spoke of a language of Zazen that drops the subject and pronouns (l, me, you, it) and the objects of the sentence, subject and predicate. We also drop the adjectives and adverbs which judge and describe the nouns and verbs ... and when remains in reality as a great verb which we cannot even really say in words (even "being" does not cut it). This Great Verb is action which expresses you, me, all things and everything, and somehow contains every word in the dictionary!
Okumura Roshi speaks of the Japanese "narau" as study ("To study the self ... "), but the Japanese tend to learn many things by physically doing and trying, rather than book study or philosophy (e.g., the way to learn Karate is to practice Karate, not think about it or read books about it.). So, l often feel that "learn through practice" might be a better translation of "narau" than is "study." Something like "To learn by practice with the self is to forget the self ... "
There is a close connection here to the earlier lines ...
Conveying oneself toward all things to carry out practice-enlightenment is delusion. All things coming and carrying out practice-enlightenment through the self is realization.
When we somehow drop the selfish insistence, judgementalism and pushiness of the self, the who world comes pouring in and enlightens the self.
Gassho, J
Stlah
STLah
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