91 of 108 Gates of Dharma Illumination

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  • Shokai
    Dharma Transmitted Priest
    • Mar 2009
    • 6912

    91 of 108 Gates of Dharma Illumination

    24Quaint gate.jpg
    一百八法明門
    IPPYAKUHACHI-HOMYOMON
    One Hundred and Eight Gates of Dharma-Illumination



    [91] The dhyana paramita is a gate of Dharma-illumination; for [with it] we accomplish all balanced states of dhyana and mystical powers, and we teach and guide distracted living beings.

    Dhyana paramita (Perfection of Meditation) is the fifth of the six Mahayana Paramitas (Perfections) of a Bodhisattva, representing the cultivation of deep, unbroken mental focus, tranquility, and, ultimately, wisdom. It is a state of meditative absorption—or Dhyana—that frees the mind from distraction, dullness, and emotional disturbances.

    How is this gate working for you?

    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 find this moves in and out, like the ocean tides. Some days, even weeks, it’s easy to settle in and everything just clicks. Other times, it feels like Sun Wukong himself is at the helm, joyfully bouncing from one distraction to the next.

    In those moments, I return to the breath, to zazen, and sometimes even a simple mantra. I find each to be a valuable tool for settling the wild monkey mind.

    Gasshō,
    流道-Ryūdō-Liúdào
    Satlah

    Comment

    • Tenryu
      Member
      • Sep 2025
      • 248

      #3
      Dhyana, as it shows up, is usually a calm, steady flow. Most days sitting feels simple and continuous, nothing to manage. And then, on rarer days, something shifts and it’s more like whitewater rafting. Thoughts, restlessness, everything moving at once. Both seem to belong to the same practice.

      Gasshō,
      Tenryū
      satt and lah
      恬流 - Tenryū - Calm Flow

      Comment

      • Tairin
        Member
        • Feb 2016
        • 3295

        #4
        Thank you Shokai

        I definitely don’t have sustained periods of dhyana paramita but I do get the sense of it in from time to time. Although our Practice is a goalless Practice I will admit that those moments helps sustain my daily practice


        Tairin
        sat today and lah
        泰林 - Tai Rin - Peaceful Woods

        Comment

        • Choujou
          Member
          • Apr 2024
          • 595

          #5
          I think that unless one is a full Buddha, this gate is a constant work in progress. Same as Tairin, I get glimpses of it but I don’t find that my meditative state goes unbroken by distractions. I do my best and strive to fully open this gate someday…

          Gassho,
          Choujou

          sat/lah today

          Comment

          • Chikyou
            Member
            • May 2022
            • 1052

            #6
            Dhyana, in our practice, is obviously zazen (and in other traditions it would be another method). While there’s not much “mystical” about it, the transformative power of zazen practice can’t be overstated.

            —-

            Others here seem to be interpreting dhyana like samadhi (and maybe that’s the correct translation, though I didn’t immediately see it that way). Like others here, I have days where sitting just flows and there is peace, and other days when the monkey mind is up to all its antics.

            At some point, I started to see zazen as a great, cosmic garden. I come to the garden to sit, and in that garden, there’s room for all of it. Sometimes I come to the garden and I am at peace. Sometimes I bring my monkey mind with me. Sometimes I bring pain, disease, or some stress from the day I cannot shake. And the cosmic garden which is zazen has more than enough room for all of it, because it is the whole universe! So I sit with whatever it is that I am dealing with, knowing that it is all held, all there, nothing that doesn’t fit.

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

            Comment

            • Seikan
              Novice Priest-in-Training
              • Apr 2020
              • 1107

              #7
              As others have stated, our preferred method of Dhyana (i.e., meditation) is Shikantaza Zazen, and as such, it is more of an ongoing work-in-progress than a permanent state to achieve.

              I'm not sure about what "mystical powers" I have or will achieve. Although, the simple ability to observe something as it arises, persists, and slowly fades back into nothing does feel a bit "mystical" when it happens.

              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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