55 / 108 Gates of Dharma Illumination

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  • Shokai
    Dharma Transmitted Priest
    • Mar 2009
    • 6912

    55 / 108 Gates of Dharma Illumination

    4 Quaint gate.jpg
    一百八法明門
    IPPYAKUHACHI-HOMYOMON

    One Hundred and Eight Gates of Dharma-Illumination






    [55] The Dharma as an abode of mindfulness is a gate of Dharma-illumination; for [with it] wisdom is free of blurs.

    "The Dharma as an abode of mindfulness" refers to using the teachings, principles, and laws of reality as a "home," shelter, or resting place for the mind, often through the practice of the Four Foundations of Mindfulness. This concept involves moving from a state of distraction, craving, and aversion into a stable state of conscious awareness (the "abode") by grounding oneself in the truth of experience. In the Four Foundations of Mindfulness, the fourth foundation is specifically mindfulness of dharmas or phenomena​, which means examining the underlying principles of experience such as sensations or thoughts rather than just the objects themselves. This involves Observing how thoughts, emotions, and mental objects arise, exist, and pass away. Recognizing key Buddhist concepts like impermanence, clinging to things, and non-self. Moving from "this is me/mine" without taking them personally. By resting in the awareness of the Dharma, one is no longer tossed around by emotional turmoil, craving, or aversion. The Dharma is not just theory; it is "visible here and now" in one’s own experience. By making the Dharma an "abode," one is not merely studying teachings but actively residing in the truth of reality, which provides a true spiritual shelter in place.

    How do you envision adopting this gate into your practice?

    合掌,生開
    gassho, Shokai
    stlah
    仁道 生開 / Jindo Shokai
    "Open to life in a benevolent way"​​​​​

    ​​​
    Attached Files
    合掌,生開
    gassho, Shokai

    仁道 生開 / Jindo Shokai

    "Open to life in a benevolent way"

    https://sarushinzendo.wordpress.com/
  • Ryūdō-Liúdào
    Member
    • Dec 2025
    • 141

    #2
    I adopt this gate by using the teachings as a lens, not a belief system. When something arises, I focus that lens, quietly checking: impermanent, not-self, conditioned.

    For example:
    Anger arises; instead of “I am angry and justified,” the lens says: “This is a conditioned mental event. Impermanent. Not-self.”
    Anxiety arises; “This is craving for certainty. Also impermanent. Also not me.”

    In this way, the Dharma becomes less like a book on a shelf and more like a house I live in… like a rug that ties the whole room together.

    Gasshō,
    流道-Ryūdō-Liúdào
    Satlah

    Comment

    • Tenryu
      Member
      • Sep 2025
      • 248

      #3
      Sometimes practice is just noticing what is already happening. Thoughts, moods, reactions appear, and occasionally they’re seen without getting caught up in them. Nothing is solved. Nothing needs to be added. Living this gate feels like staying oriented. Not clear all the time, not confused all the time either. When things are seen as they are, even briefly, the mind feels usable. That’s enough to keep going.

      Gasshō,
      Tenryū
      st lah
      恬流 - Tenryū - Calm Flow

      Comment

      • Tairin
        Member
        • Feb 2016
        • 3295

        #4
        Thank you Shokai

        I think both Ryūdō and Tenryū have touched on this but I’ll reiterate by saying I try to put this Gate into practice by actually putting the Gate into practice. This isn’t an intellectual pursuit. This is a living Path of life. To reuse an analogy, you swim by getting in the water not by sitting at the edge.

        The Dharma is all around us. We just need to be open and aware


        Tairin
        sat today and lah

        泰林 - Tai Rin - Peaceful Woods

        Comment

        • dorgan
          Member
          • Oct 2025
          • 89

          #5
          The abode is the practice; the dwelling is the mindfulness. This collapses the distinction between the practitioner who takes up residence and the residence itself. The "abode" is not a protected enclosure within which one is safe from the turbulence of phenomena. It is the recognition that phenomena, seen clearly — without blur — are the resting place. The wisdom that is "free of blurs" is not wisdom that has achieved some purified state apart from experience, but wisdom that no longer mistakes experience for something it is not. This gate, then, points to the fourth foundation not as the most intellectual or analytical of the foundations but as the one in which mindfulness and its object become indistinguishable — where dwelling in Dharma and seeing Dharma clearly are a single activity, and where that unity is itself the clearing of obscuration. To bring this into my practice, I need to avoid intellectualizing Buddhism and experience it in zazen and mindfully executed actions; uniting the ordinary with its true nature, and being kind, compassionate, empathetic, and, to my capacity, wise.

          gassho, david
          stlah

          Comment

          • Choujou
            Member
            • Apr 2024
            • 598

            #6
            I feel I am in the midst of this gate… with practice, I am starting to recognize patterns and feelings that allow me to recognize changes in my emotions and mood. This allows me to be more mindful of it and not identify with it so much… rather than being swallowed up in emotions, being mindful allows me to see the reasons as to why I am feeling the way I do and to address that, rather than just the symptom (emotions). It is one thing to heal past traumas and issues, but one must let them go as well, and seeing everything for what it is in reality allows for this with more ease.

            Gassho,
            Choujou

            sat/lah today

            Comment

            • Chikyou
              Member
              • May 2022
              • 1052

              #7
              Despite reading the description, which points it out fairly plainly, I interpreted “Dharma” a little differently. I guess this shows where my mind is at lately.

              More and more in my practice I am feeling that the Dharma is a refuge. More and more I am finding genuine comfort in my practice and study. Reading zen books, or currently, the Lotus Sutra, I find that the cares of the world drop away for a time.

              Gassho,
              SatLah,
              Chikyō
              Chikyō 知鏡
              (Wisdom Mirror)
              They/Them

              Comment

              • Seikan
                Novice Priest-in-Training
                • Apr 2020
                • 1111

                #8
                I agree with all of the above perspectives on this being a very pragmatic gate that needs to be practiced to understand it.

                Ryūdō hit the nail on the head for me in describing the Dharma (teachings) as a lens through which to focus one's awareness/mindfulness. I may be able to develop a strong sense of powerful mindfulness through practice, but I need to direct that mindfulness through the lens of the Buddhadharma in order to truly bring the world-as-it-is into sharp focus.

                Without the Dharma to help shape my practice of zazen, etc., I may simply end up with a fantastic attention span, but little wisdom.

                Gassho,
                Seikan
                stlah
                弘道聖簡 Kōdō Seikan
                (Vast Way Sacred Simplicity)

                "If someone asks / about the mind of this monk, / say it is no more than / a passage of wind / in the vast sky."
                —Ryokan

                Comment

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