a few more twigs 5

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  • Taigu
    Blue Mountain White Clouds Hermitage Priest
    • Aug 2008
    • 2710

    a few more twigs 5

    Thus, this mountain monk doesn?t understand at all.
    Living here he no longer works to get free.
    Who would proudly arrange seats, trying to entice guests?



    Mountain monk sounds great. What is it to be a mountain monk? Do you have to live in the mountains? In a way mountains have always captured the imagination of early Chinese ancestors and Dogen had a great like for them, seing them as the ideal place to practice Dharma as well as a great escape form the busy and political Kyoto. In mountains in established the community of Eiheiji. Wanshi means a person that belong to mountain, and this mountain is the shape and essence of sitting itself. By now, you would have understood that this poem provides a collection of guidelines for zazen. In sitting, ome relinquishes under-standing, one does not support anymore the vision and structure that makes the world looks like this or that. As you all know, we live in very different worlds and we all have a different perception of things. We all feed a distinct fiction that we call reality and that has nothing to do with reality. This fiction is possible because of a collection of habits and thoughts that we cling to and believe in, one of the most pernicious and tricky one is the illusion of understanding, of knowing it all. That is why not knowing is the essence of our path, not knowing is not just to be an empty idiot (although, it is not excluded :wink: ), it is the release of any attempt to size, control and manipulate reality. Not to be attached to our belief system and see through the constant attempt to make reality our own, to make it fit the pre-conceived ideas and follow the plans we made. Ad Will says: the thruth is that we haven't a clue, we don't know" (I am quoting from memory). That's it. So acting from that space of not knowing is our way. Sitting not as doing something we know. Zazen should always being practiced as a beginner likewise and life met as a beginner. When one listens to teenagers, they sound so blase, being cool for them is pretending you know. As we grow up, we shed a few skins, a lot of beliefs, peeling away stuff endlessly. What makes this metamorphosis possible, what allows impermanence to just be is beginner's mind. Suzuki roshi loved that so much that teaching of Dogen. Beginner's mind is another name of not knowing. So, we should be careful not to sit with this body and mind as we sat yesterday. Why should we wish for another copycat experience? We could allow a lot of playtime, exploration and be really flexible with the way we sit. Otherwise, our sitting is going to be a another dogmatic statement, a desperate attempt to freeze the flowing nature of this. I would like my first video to be about that, hopefully next week when I can make the d.... thing work :roll: .

    Another common misunderstanding and practice is the excess will to free oneself from bondage, illusion and suffering. The idea that we have to work hard to get out of this confusion is only adding to the confusion. One could almost say that the way out is the way in: meeting the mess, getting to know the shadow better and really get to see that it is ok and just fine as it is. Getting to be a close friend of what we don't want to see until these flowers in space become real clear blue, until we enjoy a bite of the painted rice cake. Enlightened activity is found in being happy with what is available now. The hut is poverty but not in the romantic and quite childish understanding, poverty is not about the absence of extras, it is the cessation of gaining and the endless gratitude to be just alive. A king can act in a very poor and humble way, a proud and dogmatic hermit can be a real wealthy individual, too rich to be open to all things passing and vanishing. The hut could be a palace. The cave a golden cage.


    As I wrote in a previous post: "What Wanshi says could be something like this: no need to invite thoughts or feed our personnal fantaisies anymore including the so called spiritual ones: the guests he is talking about are not the mates, the friends; they are the old stories and patterns we play endlessly in our mind, the things we entertain ourselves with, the miseries and dramas we enjoy...these guests are also all the fake indentities we have: father, husband, wife, male, female, sucker, saint, junkie, Zen teacher...Ego voices are but illusions. You see, you don't have to get rid of the ego, for it has never ever existed. All you have to do is to open your eyes on the room, the space and understand that the clinging is the issue. The activity of clinging exists but there is nothing to cling to. No guests. Nobody".
  • Tb
    Member
    • Jan 2008
    • 3186

    #2
    Re: a few more twigs 5

    Hi.

    _/_

    Do you have an link to where these lovely poems come from?

    Mtfbwy
    Fugen
    Life is our temple and its all good practice
    Blog: http://fugenblog.blogspot.com/

    Comment

    • Taigu
      Blue Mountain White Clouds Hermitage Priest
      • Aug 2008
      • 2710

      #3
      Re: a few more twigs 5

      Hi Fugen,

      You'll find this poem of Wanshi with many others and a great poetic prose about zazen in a great book: Cultivating the Empty Field of leighton the Silent Illumination of Zen Master Hongzhi translated by Taigen Daniel Leighton.
      You'll find an amazing collection of major Zen poems (shin jin mei, Hokyo zanmai, Sandokai with chinese texts, notes and sometimes various translations) at http://www.sacred-texts.com/bud/zen/index.htm

      Gassho


      Taigu

      Comment

      • Shugen
        Treeleaf Unsui
        • Nov 2007
        • 4535

        #4
        Re: a few more twigs 5

        So, we should be careful not to sit with this body and mind as we sat yesterday. Why should we wish for another copycat experience? We could allow a lot of playtime, exploration and be really flexible with the way we sit. Otherwise, our sitting is going to be a another dogmatic statement, a desperate attempt to freeze the flowing nature of this.
        Nice!

        Ron
        Meido Shugen
        明道 修眼

        Comment

        • Tobiishi
          Member
          • Jan 2009
          • 461

          #5
          Re: a few more twigs 5

          stumbling into trees
          I know trees exist.
          watching from a distance,
          I know the tree more intimately.

          gasso
          tobiishi
          It occurs to me that my attachment to this body is entirely arbitrary. All the evidence is subjective.

          Comment

          • StephanCOH
            Member
            • Apr 2009
            • 67

            #6
            Re: a few more twigs 5

            Originally posted by Taigu
            So, we should be careful not to sit with this body and mind as we sat yesterday. Why should we wish for another copycat experience? We could allow a lot of playtime, exploration and be really flexible with the way we sit. Otherwise, our sitting is going to be a another dogmatic statement, a desperate attempt to freeze the flowing nature of this.
            Thanks for the reminder. Had some pretty relaxed sittings last week, but the last days it switched to be that way more thoughts are popping up. And probably next week will be whole lot different again.

            Comment

            • Taigu
              Blue Mountain White Clouds Hermitage Priest
              • Aug 2008
              • 2710

              #7
              Re: a few more twigs 5

              Thanks Ron. Yes, shikantaza is alive. It is you.

              Good one Tobiishi, very good one.

              Indeed StephanCOH, everyday is different.


              gassho


              Taigu

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