Hello,
I have an issue, and I would like to invite (read:beg) the community to help me figure something out.
I'm sure that we're all familiar with The Worst Horse and the catalogue of Dharma-Burgers. There are quite a few here around here that make their way into culture in ways that are slightly irritating to me: from the Laughing Buddha karaoke bar down the road to the Satori night club directly outside our apartment building (its name is very apt--it wakes us up with great vigor when we are most deeply asleep) to the Daily Show's "moment of Zen" and people saying things like "that's so Zen!" and little ashtrays sold with little rakes and little packets of kitty litter to play with. You get the idea.
So anyway, my school has a publication for students, and I'd like to take the opportunity to put something out about what exactly "satori" means and what exactly "buddha" means and what exactly "Zen" means. However, every time I start to plot out a mind map on relevant topics relating to, well, anything, it quickly becomes to large and unwieldy to be of any use.
My question, then, is this: in writing to and for the 18-22 demographic, what key points would you touch on when putting together 1500 words about Zen?
Thanks for your input.
In Gassho,
Saijun
I have an issue, and I would like to invite (read:beg) the community to help me figure something out.
I'm sure that we're all familiar with The Worst Horse and the catalogue of Dharma-Burgers. There are quite a few here around here that make their way into culture in ways that are slightly irritating to me: from the Laughing Buddha karaoke bar down the road to the Satori night club directly outside our apartment building (its name is very apt--it wakes us up with great vigor when we are most deeply asleep) to the Daily Show's "moment of Zen" and people saying things like "that's so Zen!" and little ashtrays sold with little rakes and little packets of kitty litter to play with. You get the idea.
So anyway, my school has a publication for students, and I'd like to take the opportunity to put something out about what exactly "satori" means and what exactly "buddha" means and what exactly "Zen" means. However, every time I start to plot out a mind map on relevant topics relating to, well, anything, it quickly becomes to large and unwieldy to be of any use.
My question, then, is this: in writing to and for the 18-22 demographic, what key points would you touch on when putting together 1500 words about Zen?
Thanks for your input.
In Gassho,
Saijun
Enlightenment can never be found or lost, yet we lose it all the time. That is why we Practice, and get better at seeking what cannot be sought. Kind of like your eye looking for your eye (which happens to be the Buddha's Eye too), but looking for itself over distant hills. Soon, the eye comes to realize that it was present all along, never lost or found ... and that all the eye surveys, inside and outside, beautiful and ugly, including the distant hills ... was Buddha's Eye all along too. Still, we may again lose sight of this fact from time to time, so must keep Practicing.
There are, and we can always do better ... freer of greed, anger, ignorance ... can make the world and ourself better and more Buddhalike ... even as all is free from the start, "Buddha" from the start, and nothing in need of fixing or "better". Don't see things from only one angle. 

If so, could you clear this up for me.. In the meantime I'll go paint and give it no more thought
). Still, so long as we are human beings living in this complex dusty world, I feel that we all always have the potential to stumble and fall (just ask my patient wife how I can go from "Wise Zen Guy" to "Her Ass of a Husband" in a minute!
)
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