Dear Deluded Buddhas,
We continue Master Dogen's Genjo Koan, starting from p. 55 (with the sentence, "And so, Dogen next addresses these questions:"), and finishing on p. 58 (just before the sentence, "Buddha doesn't need to note she is Buddha.").
In our delusion, we try to make the world how we personally wish it to be. We rarely succeed completely, and sometimes not at all. Then, we might expect that, when "enlightened," the world will then be just how we wish it to be. That is also a kind of delusion.
But might "enlightenment" be our letting the world be as the world be? Then our desires and the world will match.
(Nonetheless, as we let the world be as it be, we can also try to fix what we can.)
We might also think that "enlightenment" brings a permanent peace which never leaves us.
But might "enlightenment" be our experiencing a timeless peace right hand-in-hand with the fact that life rarely stays one way, and is constantly changing and often is frustrating and uncomfortable?
ASSIGNMENT:
1 - Describe a problem in your life or in this world, and your frustration that it does not go your way or become as you would like it.
2 - Describe the problem as completely vanishing in "emptiness," as in the second sentence of the opening paragraph of Genjo Koan that we read last week.
3 - Describe your being at peace with the problem when you let it be as it is (including, perhaps, letting the frustration or discomfort it causes you also "be as it is.")
4 - Question: Now answer, are all of the above different or the same? Can they be simultaneously true?
(Note that it may not be a coincidence that my 4 questions are kinda parallel to the 4 sentences of last week's assignment. )
Gassho, J
STLah
We continue Master Dogen's Genjo Koan, starting from p. 55 (with the sentence, "And so, Dogen next addresses these questions:"), and finishing on p. 58 (just before the sentence, "Buddha doesn't need to note she is Buddha.").
In our delusion, we try to make the world how we personally wish it to be. We rarely succeed completely, and sometimes not at all. Then, we might expect that, when "enlightened," the world will then be just how we wish it to be. That is also a kind of delusion.
But might "enlightenment" be our letting the world be as the world be? Then our desires and the world will match.
(Nonetheless, as we let the world be as it be, we can also try to fix what we can.)
We might also think that "enlightenment" brings a permanent peace which never leaves us.
But might "enlightenment" be our experiencing a timeless peace right hand-in-hand with the fact that life rarely stays one way, and is constantly changing and often is frustrating and uncomfortable?
ASSIGNMENT:
1 - Describe a problem in your life or in this world, and your frustration that it does not go your way or become as you would like it.
2 - Describe the problem as completely vanishing in "emptiness," as in the second sentence of the opening paragraph of Genjo Koan that we read last week.
3 - Describe your being at peace with the problem when you let it be as it is (including, perhaps, letting the frustration or discomfort it causes you also "be as it is.")
4 - Question: Now answer, are all of the above different or the same? Can they be simultaneously true?
(Note that it may not be a coincidence that my 4 questions are kinda parallel to the 4 sentences of last week's assignment. )
Gassho, J
STLah
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