How much intensity?

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  • Jay_cg14
    Member
    • Aug 2017
    • 15

    How much intensity?

    Hi sangha!

    When we sit zazen, and rest as awareness are we still being intentionally alert to a degree? Or are we dropping our intentionality and effort all together? Or is this alertness kind of ever present in the background so to speak.

    Gassho, Jay.

    SatToday 🙇
  • Mp

    #2
    Hello Jay,

    When we sit, we just sit .. this is a natural occurrence. Alertness/awareness is always present so just allow it to be naturally. Try to not to focus your attention on attention, find your place, and just breathe naturally. No need to think "am I being aware? Am I alert to this present experience". When we sit in this natural state of just sitting, body and mind fall away naturally. Make sense? =)

    Gassho
    Shingen

    SatToday/LAH

    Comment

    • Rakurei
      Member
      • Jan 2017
      • 145

      #3
      If you become attached to a concept of Zen Mind then Zen Mind is not Zen Mind.

      Be gentle, natural - your mind will be analytical. Am I being alert? How's my breathing? Am I putting in too much effort? Not enough? Did the timekeeper die? This is all natural by product of our mind grasping. Your awareness and continual practice will make these thoughts less prominent with time. Judging alertness, judging good zen vs. bad zen, is all a distraction. Just be naturally present. No good, no bad.

      When I would teach Vipassana, we would say that our minds are addicted to thoughts. And just like an addict begins to have fits if they don't get their fix, when you sit on your cushion, your mind jumps and screams, because it too needs it's "fix" of thoughts. Just with awareness it'll go away.

      Gassho,

      Tyler

      SatToday/LAH

      Comment

      • Kyonin
        Treeleaf Priest / Engineer
        • Oct 2010
        • 6749

        #4
        Hi Jay.

        We just sit. Whatever arises, whatever comes to mind and body... we just sit and notice how things and thoughts come and go. That's all.

        Gassho,

        Kyonin
        Sat/LAH
        Hondō Kyōnin
        奔道 協忍

        Comment

        • BadChemEng
          Member
          • Jul 2017
          • 25

          #5
          I struggled with the whole analytical part for the first few weeks. Now I am just comfortable sitting and noticing what happens.

          Gassho,
          Brad

          SatToday/LAH
          SATLAH

          Comment

          • Jay_cg14
            Member
            • Aug 2017
            • 15

            #6
            Kind of like - The sky is always there, ever present no need to try to make it present!
            You guys, thankyou again for such helpful feedback

            Gassho, Jay.

            Comment

            • Mp

              #7
              Originally posted by Jay_cg14
              Kind of like - The sky is always there, ever present no need to try to make it present!
              You guys, thankyou again for such helpful feedback

              Gassho, Jay.
              You got it. =)

              Gassho
              Shingen

              SatToday/LAH

              Comment

              • Jundo
                Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                • Apr 2006
                • 40352

                #8
                Lovely, wise advice here.

                Like the Buddha's advice on Practice on playing the loot ... strings not too lose, not too tight, to make the harmonious sound.

                Then just play, don't think about playing while playing.

                Remember that the result of this "Just Sitting" is sitting vibrantly at the center of all the world, with nothing more to attain and no other goal besides sitting. Not one other place to be or thing to do in the world during that time of sitting (no matter what in life awaits after). It is not sitting like a bump on a log, twiddling our thumbs or waiting for something to happen. Nor is it analyzing why we are sitting there, comparing our sitting to other sittings or other activities, and the like. Nor is it worry about whether thoughts are present or not present (even as we let thoughts go, don't grab on), pondering whether one is sitting right or not (if you analyze that, you are doing it wrong! ), measuring the experience. Just sitting should be beyond all human measure.

                Just Sit, letting all else fade from concern.

                Gassho, J

                SatTodayLAH
                Last edited by Jundo; 09-08-2017, 10:57 PM.
                ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

                Comment

                • Tai Shi
                  Member
                  • Oct 2014
                  • 3416

                  #9
                  Thank you Jundo, after nearly 3 years, and more, so be it, so it goes, it goes, yes going, not going, and whose counting? Thank you Richard Maxwell.

                  st/lah
                  Taishi
                  Gassho
                  Peaceful, Tai Shi. Ubasoku; calm, supportive, for positive poetry 優婆塞 台 婆

                  Comment

                  • Jay_cg14
                    Member
                    • Aug 2017
                    • 15

                    #10
                    Thanks Jundo! Yes I remember Buddha's advice on the strings now. Thanks for your wisdom ��

                    Gassho, Jay.

                    Sat.Lah

                    Comment

                    • Jakuden
                      Member
                      • Jun 2015
                      • 6141

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Jundo
                      Lovely, wise advice here.

                      Like the Buddha's advice on Practice on playing the loot ... strings not too lose, not too tight, to make the harmonious sound.

                      Then just play, don't think about playing while playing.

                      Remember that the result of this "Just Sitting" is sitting vibrantly at the center of all the world, with nothing more to attain and no other goal besides sitting. Not one other place to be or thing to do in the world during that time of sitting (no matter what in life awaits after). It is not sitting like a bump on a log, twiddling our thumbs or waiting for something to happen. Nor is it analyzing why we are sitting there, comparing our sitting to other sittings or other activities, and the like. Nor is it worry about whether thoughts are present or not present (even as we let thoughts go, don't grab on), pondering whether one is sitting right or not (if you analyze that, you are doing it wrong! ), measuring the experience. Just sitting should be beyond all human measure.

                      Just Sit, letting all else fade from concern.

                      Gassho, J

                      SatTodayLAH
                      Would it be fair to say that there is some effort involved, but the effort is more just "noticing and coming back" rather than analyzing and judging?

                      Gassho,
                      Jakuden
                      SatToday/LAH

                      Comment

                      • Myogan
                        Member
                        • Aug 2015
                        • 375

                        #12
                        Was Buddha a golfer?

                        The first time I heard the phrase "not too tight, not too loose" I was reminded of how I had been instructed to hold a golf club.

                        "Imagine you are holding a bird in your hand as you carry it from one place to another. Hold it two tight and you will suffocate it, too loose and it will hurt itself trying to get away."

                        Now while in Zazen those words mirror my intensity in how I hold the mudra. When I am overly intense I feel the tips of my thumbs flatten against each other. When my mind wanders they separate completely.

                        Don't overthink it though otherwise your Zazen will go into the bunker.

                        Gassho
                        Sat
                        Marc Connery
                        明岩
                        Myo̅ Gan - Bright Cliff

                        I put the Monkey in Monkeymind

                        Comment

                        • Jundo
                          Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                          • Apr 2006
                          • 40352

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Jakuden
                          Would it be fair to say that there is some effort involved, but the effort is more just "noticing and coming back" rather than analyzing and judging?

                          Gassho,
                          Jakuden
                          SatToday/LAH
                          Hi Jakuden,

                          Yes, but I have been asked by quite a few people over the years about this "noticing", perhaps because of the influence in the West, particularly American Buddhism, of Vipassana/Mindfulness meditation, in which one in told to notice or label various aspects of bodily or surrounding experience (e.g. "become aware of your breath" or "feel the points of contact between your body and the chair or floor" etc.). Some folks asked me if they should keep noting throughout Zazen. Just to be clear, that is not our way in Shikantaza.

                          So, just to make it clear, I would say "do not analyze and judge" and "if finding oneself caught in trains of thought, gently open the hand of thought and let it go, returning 10,000 times and 10,000 time again to the breath/posture/open spacious awareness (whichever is one's current centerpoint during Zazen)." Of course, we do have to "notice" that we are caught in thought to do so, but it takes the emphasis away from "noticing" as what we are supposed to be doing. It should be more like "notice and let go of even noticing."

                          And even when centered on the breath or posture, I would say to "stay centered, but do not overly notice or think about the breath/posture" etc. Leave the focus lightly there, or lightly adjust the posture, but do not think "breath" or about the posture more than necessary.

                          I wonder if my early morning explanation above makes my point clear, or muddles it?

                          Originally posted by Myogan
                          Now while in Zazen those words mirror my intensity in how I hold the mudra. When I am overly intense I feel the tips of my thumbs flatten against each other. When my mind wanders they separate completely.
                          Ah, you hit on a old Zen teacher's trick to "read the mind" of someone in Zazen: Looking at such things as the slump of the shoulder, the droop of the body and the slump of the hand Mudra (or overly tight aspect of all of the above too), one case tell whether the sitter's mind is drifting or getting sleepy/dull (or is overly straining).



                          Gassho, J

                          SatTodayLAH
                          Last edited by Jundo; 09-11-2017, 12:22 AM.
                          ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

                          Comment

                          • Jakuden
                            Member
                            • Jun 2015
                            • 6141

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Jundo
                            It should be more like "notice and let go of even noticing."


                            Gassho,
                            Jakuden
                            SatToday/LAH

                            Comment

                            • Shinshou
                              Member
                              • May 2017
                              • 251

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Jakuden
                              Would it be fair to say that there is some effort involved, but the effort is more just "noticing and coming back" rather than analyzing and judging?

                              Gassho,
                              Jakuden
                              SatToday/LAH

                              This was key for me. My experience is that stillness is fine. Thinking is fine. Both are dharma/reality, but grasping onto or pushing away either thoughts or stillness is not shikantaza. At least that's where my practice is right now.

                              Dan
                              Sat today/lah

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