WHAT IS ZEN? - Chap 4 - Awakening

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  • Jundo
    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
    • Apr 2006
    • 40025

    WHAT IS ZEN? - Chap 4 - Awakening

    Good Morning! Time to Wake Up!

    I think we will stay with this chapter for a couple of weeks, just to give some folks a chance to reflect or catch up a bit.

    The topic is "awakening," and some interesting insights from Norman Roshi.

    I sometimes use my "whole bus trip" analogy, which I feel is much as Norman describes ...

    The best analogy I have for this is a universal "bus trip to visit the Grand Canyon" ... Experiencing the boundless vistas of the Grand Canyon is wondrous and insightful, but not really the point of the trip. For Soto Folks, when we realize such ... every moment of the Buddha-Bus trip, the scenery out the windows (both what we encounter as beautiful and what appears ugly), the moments of good health and moments of passing illness, the highway, the seats and windows, all the other passengers on the Bus who appear to be riding with us, when we board and someday when we are let off ... the whole Trip ... is all the Buddha-Bus, all Enlightenment and Kensho, all the "destination" beyond "coming" or "going" or "getting there", when realized as such (Kensho). This ride is what we make it. The bus just us and us the bus.
    ... or the hike up and down Buddha Mountain ...

    Each step up and down the mountain is a total arrival, each inch cross the finish line, yet we keep pressing forward to live this life (just doing our best to avoid the mud holes and poison ivy).

    In fact, while trying to get to the peak of "Buddha Mountain", one might say that we realize that the whole mountain, from base to summit, was Buddha all along, and you and I are the Buddha, and the hike itself is Buddha ... so your climbing the mountain is actually "Buddha Buddha-ing Buddha". All of it is the "Summit".

    Even reaching some "peak experience", we do not stay there long, but keep moving. Soon we realize that the whole trek, with sunny weather or rainy, is the point of life.

    Something like that.
    He also speaks of "suffering without suffering." In this practice we can feel many seemingly conflicting emotions as transcended without the least conflict. I am working on a book that puts it this way ...

    I sometimes describe the sensation as experiencing life simultaneously from two angles at once through Zen Practice. It is as if we see the world one way out of the left eye (accepting, with complete equanimity, the borders of self/not self dropped away) and also out of the right eye (very human, not pleased, a bit fearful etc.), while both eyes open at once provide the clarity of Buddha Eye. We can experience both emotions at once, as one, each perfuming the other. As mysterious as it sounds, we can learn to be totally free and fearless even as, simultaneously, we remain within the confines of this often scary and disappointing, up and down, good and bad human life. ... [T]his Practice allows one to encounter a Peace and Wholeness beyond all sense of loss, even as the tears roll down one’s cheeks. Loss, yet no loss at once, as all just flows back to and as the Sea. It is, again, much like that “seeing life two ways at once, with two eyes”. Both eyes open together bring a Buddha’s clarity to this world.

    Through our Buddha Way, we encounter a Peace and Wholeness, transcending birth and death, a Joy which holds both the happy days and sad ... yet at the same time, there is birth and there is death, happy days and sad. I hope a little of that Light can shine through your moments of darkness and grief.
    Anyway, a short but rich chapter.

    Gassho, J

    STLah
    Last edited by Jundo; 08-07-2018, 02:56 PM.
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE
  • Mp

    #2
    Thank you Jundo. =)

    Gassho
    Shingen

    Sat/LAH

    Comment

    • Kyonin
      Treeleaf Priest / Engineer
      • Oct 2010
      • 6745

      #3
      Thank you Jundo! Lets read

      Gassho,

      Kyonin
      Sat/LAH
      Hondō Kyōnin
      奔道 協忍

      Comment

      • Troy
        Member
        • Sep 2013
        • 1318

        #4
        I think many people have satori experiences at some point in their spiritual journey. My experiences have shaped my view of “suchness”, but it is not a switch that gets turned on and I get to live the rest of my life as an enlightened person. I am still the same old me with the same old problems and imperfections. So, I enjoy my satori moments and then its back to sitting, studying the sutras, and doing my best to live an ethical and compassionate life.


        Sat2day

        Comment

        • Doshin
          Member
          • May 2015
          • 2641

          #5
          I am liking the Buddha Mountain approach. Have climbed alot of them. The top was always the point. Now because of Siting, retirement, age or a combination, I try to enjoy the hike up and the top no longer seems as important.

          Gassho
          Doshin
          St

          Comment

          • Troy
            Member
            • Sep 2013
            • 1318

            #6
            Originally posted by Doshin
            I am liking the Buddha Mountain approach. Have climbed alot of them. The top was always the point. Now because of Siting, retirement, age or a combination, I try to enjoy the hike up and the top no longer seems as important.

            Gassho
            Doshin
            St
            I love this [emoji3]


            Sat2day

            Comment

            • Frank Murray
              Member
              • May 2018
              • 37

              #7
              Thanks everyone so far for sharing.

              Questions around ‘enlightenment’ and all it’s various meanings, perspectives and purposes are very interesting.

              I guess if we were to look at ‘seeking enlightenment’ it as being ‘goal oriented’, it may be an interesting model in which to demonstrate how the process is indeed what it’s all about as opposed to the goal itself. Thus putting the goal in perspective as something which is maybe irrelevant, and even as something we might not know if we reached or not anyway.

              A favourite author of mine describes how important it is not to ‘fall in love with the goal’, but fine to have one for the sake of having general bearings. As you might not even like it when/if you get there, so make the journey matter. Then going on to describe the details of how one takes a journey.

              Maybe if we set out on a journey with ‘heading east’ as our goal? We would never reach it, but it facilitates the whole journey and prevents us from stalling or going in circles. East is also paradoxical as everywhere could be east, but ultimately it’s just a direction in which to travel. [emoji848] It would also allow us to understand why others we encountered are traveling west, with wisdom to see how it’s identical to heading east in terms of goals.

              It has taken me many years to really ‘feel’ and ‘get it’ how the way one travels on the journey is where the magic is. At the same time I am wary of getting to caught up in the definitions of who/why/what/where/when, but I think it’s valuable to stop and look sometimes, from that perspective.

              I do feel that when I’m in the zone, I know it. That could be potentially useful as a description... maybe [emoji846]

              Good topic!

              Gassho,

              Frank

              Sat today and lent a hand.



              Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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              • Michael Joseph
                Member
                • Mar 2017
                • 181

                #8
                I've enjoyed tasting the views on this thread, and I thank those who have shared. I'd like to offer something as well.

                I think when we talk about enlightenment (which Norman wisely avoids defining in an objective way), we're actually talking about what we see ourselves doing in our practice, which will vary from person to person. If I've had a taste of enlightenment, it's come through a gradual giving up of the idea of the perfectability of the world and the self (not two because how can we separate ourselves from what we're in?). Giving up the idea of perfectability (which just the ego trying to make all things in its own image) opens the possibility of caring for ourselves and the world (in Uchiyama Roshi's words, "the self that is just the self [which is] life"). Our life does not need our views nor will it bend to them, but it does need our care, our compassion.

                Please forgive any of my rookie mistakes. [emoji846]

                Gassho,

                Michael

                STLAH

                Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk

                Comment

                • Eishuu

                  #9
                  I agree with Troy that it doesn't seem to be a switch that gets turned on permanently, even though that is how it is often spoken about. I always liked the way Chogyam Trunpa talked about it in one of his books: he described how we are all enlightened but fall into delusion continually in every moment. I also found Jill Bolte Taylor's idea in My Stroke of Insight (which I haven't read, but read about) that one hemisphere of the brain experiences enlightenment, unfiltered raw experience devoid of a 'self' and that the other hemisphere filters that experience through the ego. I think Richard Wright came to a similar conclusion in his course on Buddhism and Psychology. So in that way we are all enlightened all the time, but also continually experiencing the world through the filter of 'self'. This seems to me compatible with Zen practice. Maybe through practice we gradually have access to the part of our brain that can perceive the emptiness and non-self of everything...but I think if we do, it comes in glimpses which we then have to integrate into the rest of our lives. Trungpa wasn't a great example of being integrated with his alcoholism...but who am I to judge? I always liked the title of Jack Kornfield's book 'After the Ecstacy, the Laundry', which talks about what happens after the big insight experiences. That's just where my thoughts are on it. On another level, I have no idea.

                  With regard to the question of how you can tell if someone is more spiritually developed, there are people I have been in the presence of either at a talk or through being lucky enough to spend some time with who had a certain way of making people around them feel loved. With one person, it was an effortless kindness whereby he seemed to know what was needed and went out of his way to put people at their ease. So for me kindness is a sign...not soppy, gushy, over the top, but a certain way of treating people.

                  Gassho
                  Eishuu
                  ST/LAH

                  Comment

                  • Meitou
                    Member
                    • Feb 2017
                    • 1656

                    #10
                    I've always felt perplexed by this chapter; I haven't ever really understood what enlightenment is, or what makes an enlightened person, but just because I don't get it, doesn't mean to say that I don't or can't believe it's possible. I've never met anyone who claims to be an enlightened being, have you? It's a bit like death and rebirth isn't it, something that can't be known in fact and takes a genuine leap of faith to believe in. I do like the old stories about immediate enlightenment after being hit over the head with a sandal or suddenly dropping something ( not acid though, eh) in an amazed state, but I treat them as myths, legends and allegories - but who knows really?
                    I relate much more to the idea of awakening - is a fully awakened person also a fully enlightened one? Either way, it's the journey I aspire to, difficult enough in itself, without thinking about the end game. I've often wondered if that very first moment when we read/see/hear about Buddhism and recognise ourselves within it, is actually the moment of awakening and / or enlightenment, and then the work to get back to what we truly are begins. ( I also agree with Chogyam Trungpa's take on this Eishuu, was that in Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism?).
                    I have had some ta-da moments, but I've never considered them as satori or as enlightenment, only as glimpses of something. felt but undefinable and not to get attached to as 'this is it' because saying that means it can't 'be it'.
                    I liked this quote from Jundo in the discussion about dharma and drugs https://www.treeleaf.org/forums/show...edlic-Buddhism

                    Ri no kano mo mata satori ni arazu. Satori is "enlightenment"-No, not
                    enlightenment. It is better not to say anything. If I translate it into English it
                    is ji already. [Ji is something which you can see, or hear, or smell or taste, and it includes
                    objects of thinking or ideas. Whatever can be introduced into your consciousness
                    is ji. Something which is beyond our conscious world is ri.] If you "recognize"-kai, as in San-do-kai- if you recognize the
                    point, if you make some point about ri, it is not enlightenment. Enlightenment
                    is not something you can experience, actually. Enlightenment is beyond
                    our experience. At the same time, if you think that enlightenment is beyond
                    our experience, something which you cannot experience, if when you hear
                    someone say " I have attained enlightenment" you think he is wrong, it means
                    that you stick to some explanation of enlightenment, you stick to words.
                    That is delusion. So you cannot say, there is no enlightenment, or there is
                    enlightenment. Enlightenment is not something which you can say there is,
                    or there is not. And at the same time, something which you can experience
                    is enlightenment too.

                    http://cuke.com/pdf-2013/srl/v14-sandokai-lec-no3.pdf
                    It's great to have this discussion by the way, enlightenment is such a huge concept but it's not often we get to talk about it. This is why I love this book, for those 'What is...' questions that I'm always frightened to ask Thanks everyone.

                    Gassho
                    Meitou
                    satwithyoualltoday/lah
                    Last edited by Meitou; 08-26-2018, 06:20 PM. Reason: awful sentence construction!
                    命 Mei - life
                    島 Tou - island

                    Comment

                    • Jishin
                      Member
                      • Oct 2012
                      • 4821

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Meitou
                      It's great to have this discussion by the way, enlightenment is such a huge concept but it's not often we get to talk about it.
                      First rule of enlightenment club is...



                      [emoji3]

                      Gasho, Jishin, _/st\_

                      Comment

                      • Jundo
                        Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                        • Apr 2006
                        • 40025

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Meitou
                        I've always felt perplexed by this chapter; I haven't ever really understood what enlightenment is, or what makes an enlightened person, but just because I don't get it, doesn't mean to say that I don't or can't believe it's possible. I've never met anyone who claims to be an enlightened being, have you? It's a bit like death and rebirth isn't it, something that can't be known in fact and takes a genuine leap of faith to believe in. I do like the old stories about immediate enlightenment after being hit over the head with a sandal or suddenly dropping something ( not acid though, eh) in an amazed state, but I treat them as myths, legends and allegories - but who knows really?
                        "I" know (the "I" is the interesting part in saying so) from experience "first hand" (is there "even one" for such moments?) that the self/other divide can be dropped away, leaving only the wondrous Wholeness which flows in and out and as all things, as "you" and "I" too. All fears, and even "birth and death" are no longer at issue.

                        Such experiences can be had, a dime a dozen. In fact, "I" have had such "moments" many times ("time" also is strange in this discussion for there is something timeless here, beyond beginnings and endings) through Zen Practice, in ways which I would call deep and shallow by how much this world of "samsara" ... birth and death, win and lose, me and you ... is also present or seems to drop away. In fact, there is no "deep and shallow," because one comes to realize that "samsara" is just a face of all this. Our Zazen Practice can help us realize this face (as if two faces of a no sided coin), and helps "train the brain" to access such perspectives (I feel that much of it has to do with regions of the brain, such as the prefrontal cortex, which create the hard borders of the "self/other" divide, and our sense of independence, time and the like, quieting or shutting down with training.)

                        However ...

                        Then getting on with life, finding out how that all fits together in the messy day to day lives we lead is the trick. Any "myth, legend and allegory" I feel is the old rumor that once someone has had such insight that they become perfect saints, all suffering dropped away, never to burp and blunder again like the rest of us humans. Not so. (The scandals that sometimes infect otherwise insightful teachers in the Zen and wider Buddhist world should be evidence of this enough). Such experiences are just a glimpse of something, the Grand Canyon, but then we must get on with the whole bus trip of life.

                        That is why Brad is so right that drugs will not cut it (the above kinds of experience can be chemically recreated in various ways). It is the helicopter to the summit, not learning to walk the mountain knowing that every step is "it" too.

                        That is why Suzuki Shunryu said "we are all perfect as we are, yet we need work." It is why Dogen spoke of our already being enlightened Buddhas, yet we are not and need to take care to live gently, more like Buddhas, in each daily choice ... his vision of constant "practice-enlightenment." In fact, I would go so far as to call the above small e "enlightenment," but living with grace and skill in this messy world as real "Enlightenment."

                        Gassho, Jundo

                        SatTodayLAH
                        Last edited by Jundo; 08-27-2018, 01:26 AM.
                        ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

                        Comment

                        • Jundo
                          Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                          • Apr 2006
                          • 40025

                          #13
                          For anyone who is interested in how the brain comes to play in such "moments," this is not to be missed ...

                          Visit http://TED.com to get our entire library of TED Talks, transcripts, translations, personalized talk recommendations and more.Jill Bolte Taylor got a re...


                          Yes, an amazing story and a unique understanding as a neurologist. I know a pair of interviews with here on two Public Radio science programs, Insight and Radiolab. She had something to say about what she recommends to folks as a daily Practice (short of having a lucky stroke, of course!) ...

                          Taylor: Yea, it was really wonderful, you know we have these two very different hemispheres inside of our heads and they process information in totally different ways. In the right hemisphere thinks in pictures and it is all about the present moment. It is analyzing and perceiving all the information from our sensory systems and creating a big enormous collage of this present moment. And the existence of the present moment is beautiful, there’s no judgment there, it’s just it is. And when I lost the judgment and the critical analysis ability of my left hemisphere in that language structure and the ability to think linearly and sequentially and methodically and the make sense of the past and to project ideas into the future I lost the past, I lost the future I was given the present moment and for me it was a total experience of peacefulness and euphoria. And for me, so much of my motivation to recover and to reconnect with the external world is to help people recognize that they have this experience of deep inner peace right there in the right hemisphere its always there if you allow the left hemisphere verbiage system to shut down enough to allow you to come back to the present moment.

                          ...

                          Taylor: Yea, I think that it’s very important that we recognize that both hemispheres are always functioning and I kind of, I don’t know who it was someone famous said that the blue sky is always there, and to me the blue sky is the consciousness of the right hemisphere. And then the clouds come in which is the consciousness of the left hemisphere and the verbiage and it blocks our ability to see the blue sky but the blue sky is still always there. So I encourage people to pay attention to the two very distinctively different characters inside of your body. You always have the option, moment-by-moment, of saying in this moment I'm going sit back, I’m going to look at the world around me, I’m going to escape all the things that I’m thinking about and I’m just going to pay attention to how the air feels, the temperature of the air, my breath, pay attention to feeling it come in and go out, look at the colors in the field around me stop thinking and analyzing everything that’s going on inside of your left hemisphere, all the jargon. Then you can consciously choose to have that experience at any moment.

                          Strainchamps: You make it sound so easy but I don’t think it’s that easy.

                          Taylor: You have to be persistent. You know, I think that what I bring to this story that hasn’t been brought before is, through the eyes of a scientist, who specializes in the brain, we do have two very separate hemispheres and I think it’s a matter of recognizing we are biologically designed to have this experience of feeling at one with all that is and to be able to say, oh, all I’m doing is quieting a certain group of cells inside of my brain , you know judgment, that critical judgment not just of I’m wasting my time here, why am I sitting here doing this I’m just wasting my time and it’s like, yea that’s the point , the point is to allow yourself to get out of the fact that you think that you’re wasting your time.

                          http://ttbook.org/book/transcript/tr...taylor-insight
                          She said on Radiolab as she was in the hospital ICU ...

                          JILL BOLTE TAYLOR: And I lost all my memories



                          ROBERT KRULWICH: And yet she says sitting there and that's suddenly wordless space—



                          JILL BOLTE TAYLOR: I had found a peace inside of myself that I had not known before. I had pure silence inside of my mind. Pure silence.



                          JAD ABUMRAD: Pure silence



                          JILL BOLTE TAYLOR: Pure Silence

                          JAD ABUMRAD: What was—



                          JILL BOLTE TAYLOR: You know, not that little voice that you know you wake up in the morning and the first thing your brain says it Oh man the sun is shining. Well imagining you don't hear that little voice that says man the sun is shining you just experience the sun and the shining.



                          ROBERT KRULWICH: Is this the absence of reflection of any kind? Is it just sensual intake and “period?”



                          JILL BOLTE TAYLOR: That is exactly what it was it was. It was all of the present moment.



                          JAD ABUMRAD: Did you have thoughts?



                          JTB: I had joy.



                          (R. laughing.)



                          JILL BOLTE TAYLOR: I just had joy. I had, I had this magnificent experience of I’m this collection of these beautiful cells. I am organic. I’m this, this organic entity.



                          ROBERT KRULWICH: Did you have a dead head period by any chance?



                          JILL BOLTE TAYLOR: You know why I missed that by a few years, but I get that a lot.



                          ROBERT KRULWICH: And, and the other thing that she told us is that lying in that bed without words, she says she felt connected to things, to everything, in a way that she never had before.



                          JILL BOLTE TAYLOR: Oh yeah I lost all definition of myself in relationship to everything in the external world.



                          JAD ABUMRAD: You mean like he couldn't figure out where you ended.



                          ROBERT KRULWICH: How much of that was about language. A little part? A lot? I mean.



                          JILL BOLTE TAYLOR: Oh I would say it was huge. Language is an ongoing information processing it's that constant reminder. I am, this is my name, this is all the data related to me, these are my likes and my dislikes, these are my beliefs, I am an individual, I'm a single, I am a solid, I'm separate from you. This is my name…



                          JAD ABUMRAD: Now as fruity as this may all sound to pin all this on language, we have run into this idea before. A couple seasons ago. Paul Brucks, remember him?



                          ROBERT KRULWICH: Yeah sure.



                          JAD ABUMRAD: Neuropsychologist.



                          P: Well if you have to ask me about myself…

                          JAD ABUMRAD: He told me that there's a theory out there, which he believes actually, that all a person is in the end. Like all the personhood of a person, the I or the you of a person all that is in the end is a…



                          P: Story.



                          JAD ABUMRAD: A story you tell yourself.



                          P: What we normally think of when we think about ourselves. Is really a story; it's the story of what's happened to that body over time.



                          JILL BOLTE TAYLOR: I did not have that portion of my language center that tells a story curious little Jill, me, Jill Bolte Taylor climbing the Harvard ladder, through language, loves dissection, cutting up things, that language was gone. I got to essentially become an infant (baby sounds) again.

                          http://www.radiolab.org/story/91725-words/
                          Yeah, yeah ... blue sky, clouds, past present and future, judgments, like and dislikes, names dropped away ...

                          The cut up, time measured, "me" vs. "you" way we usually experience this world ... and the whole, timeless, selfless way ... both perfectly good ways for the mind to experience reality. Both viable mental models for describing how the universe is put together and works as individual things or as a whole. In fact, not being a prisoner of the former, nor merely the latter, is our practice ... not one, not two.

                          Gassho, J

                          SatTodayLAH
                          Last edited by Jundo; 08-27-2018, 01:15 AM.
                          ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

                          Comment

                          • Mp

                            #14
                            That was a great talk by Jill ... thanks for sharing that Jundo. =)

                            Gassho
                            Shingen

                            Sat/LAH

                            Comment

                            • Jakuden
                              Member
                              • Jun 2015
                              • 6142

                              #15
                              Oooh this is so cool. Jundo do you think Nishijima Roshi would have enjoyed these types of discussions? With his interest in relating the autonomic nervous system to Zazen (which actually does make some sense to me) Here the discussion is about the Somatic or conscious nervous system. There is so much still to learn.

                              Gassho
                              Jakuden
                              SatToday/LAH


                              Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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