Hah! Don't blame us, for ancient Indian people invented all this non-dualistic logic and language!
But in seriousness, the strange language of Zen (not only here, but in Koans and Shobogenzo and much of the strange acts and words of the old Zen Masters) is an attempt to express in ordinary grammar and words (i.e., ordinary grammar that is subject/verb/object dualistic) this other way of experiencing the world.
Usually, a tea drinker, drinking tea from a cup while looking at a mountain, involves 4 or 5 separate things ... drinker, cup, tea, mountain ... and the act of drinking. However, Zen folks can experience everything flowing into everything else, and being the faces of everything else (I like to say that "Paris is the capital of England in France, London is the capital of France located in England, Prashanth is Jundo who was born in India and lives in Germany with your life, Jundo is Prashanth who was born in New York and lives in Japan with my life.) So, in my book, I described Master Dogen's vision of tea drinking this way ...
Now, this is not something that is merely to be thought about and approached intellectually ... but it is something to be tasted, experienced, on (and off) the Zazen cushion as the hard borders of the self/other divide soften or drop away, and all phenomena of the universe are felt to embody all phenomena of the universe. The parts of the brain that make hard divisions between me/not me and between all individual "things, people, moments in time" of reality are softened or shut down in the meditation process. All the separate stuff gets mushed together, swirled around, and pops up again as each other.
Why is this important? As ancient Indian people discovered, the self/other divide is the cause of friction, conflict, suffering. In the dropping of this division, there can be no friction, conflict, suffering.
Yes, it takes time to experience. It is worth it.
Gassho, J
STLah
Sorry to run long
PS - Everyone, don't just think about this intellectually, it is only valuable if one actually gets a feel in the bones for such a reality going on.
But in seriousness, the strange language of Zen (not only here, but in Koans and Shobogenzo and much of the strange acts and words of the old Zen Masters) is an attempt to express in ordinary grammar and words (i.e., ordinary grammar that is subject/verb/object dualistic) this other way of experiencing the world.
Usually, a tea drinker, drinking tea from a cup while looking at a mountain, involves 4 or 5 separate things ... drinker, cup, tea, mountain ... and the act of drinking. However, Zen folks can experience everything flowing into everything else, and being the faces of everything else (I like to say that "Paris is the capital of England in France, London is the capital of France located in England, Prashanth is Jundo who was born in India and lives in Germany with your life, Jundo is Prashanth who was born in New York and lives in Japan with my life.) So, in my book, I described Master Dogen's vision of tea drinking this way ...
For example, in our ordinary experience of life, a mountain is not a cup of tea, and neither a mountain nor a cup of tea are you or me. A is not B, and neither one is C nor D. However, for Mahayana teachers like Dōgen, mountains are mountains and also cups of tea. Tiny teacups hold great mountains within, as well as the whole world and all of time. Mountains quench our thirst, mountains walk and preach the Dharma, and mountains are also other faces of you and me. It is not merely that our ordinary eyes might see a nearby mountain reflected on the liquid inside a cup, or painted on its side, or reflected like a kaleidoscope in each poured drop, but that the mountain and the whole universe is truly poured and held in every drop of tea to be tasted, and is contained in the cup itself. The teacup, though held in our hands, is also huge, boundless, as big as a mountain and the whole universe. The whole universe is just a great vessel which is also the vessel in our hands—a vessel that cradles our hands as we cradle it.
(If this is hard to get your mind around, it is fine to approach it in a poetic sense until, on the zazen cushion, one can actually realize such truths.)
When we drink tea, as it enters our mouth and we taste it on our tongue and it merges with our body, we too enter the tea, are tasted by and merge with it. Likewise, in drinking tea we enter the mountains and the whole universe. The tea swallows us as we swallow the tea, and the mountain/universe drinks us as we drink the mountain/universe— all in the simple action of tasting a cup of tea. The tea steeps all time and space as you steep tea; the mountain pours the universe as the universe moves with your hands when pouring a cup. Each drop of tea, each inch of the mountain or atom of the universe glitters as a unique and precious jewel, each unique and whole unto itself, yet each is also the all. That is the kind of world vision that Dōgen is usually expressing
(If this is hard to get your mind around, it is fine to approach it in a poetic sense until, on the zazen cushion, one can actually realize such truths.)
When we drink tea, as it enters our mouth and we taste it on our tongue and it merges with our body, we too enter the tea, are tasted by and merge with it. Likewise, in drinking tea we enter the mountains and the whole universe. The tea swallows us as we swallow the tea, and the mountain/universe drinks us as we drink the mountain/universe— all in the simple action of tasting a cup of tea. The tea steeps all time and space as you steep tea; the mountain pours the universe as the universe moves with your hands when pouring a cup. Each drop of tea, each inch of the mountain or atom of the universe glitters as a unique and precious jewel, each unique and whole unto itself, yet each is also the all. That is the kind of world vision that Dōgen is usually expressing
Why is this important? As ancient Indian people discovered, the self/other divide is the cause of friction, conflict, suffering. In the dropping of this division, there can be no friction, conflict, suffering.
Yes, it takes time to experience. It is worth it.
Gassho, J
STLah
Sorry to run long
PS - Everyone, don't just think about this intellectually, it is only valuable if one actually gets a feel in the bones for such a reality going on.
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