In “To Meet The Real Dragon,” Gudo Nishijima talks about meeting his master Kodo Sawaki, he stresses that the study of Buddhist “theory” is not Buddhism itself, and that one aspect of “real” Buddhism is “personal contact with a Buddhist teacher or master.”
This resonates strongly with me as I feel that this is the correct path for me and I intend to walk it, with or without a guide. I’m in a situation (geographic isolation mainly) that makes it difficult to have any “personal contact” with Buddhists of any kind, let alone Zen Buddhists, let alone a master.
I’ve resolved to do by best to find my way without one if necessary, relying heavily on books, recordings, and of course regular Zazen. It is that need for a community and some guidance that drew me here to Treeleaf. I don’t know if the online community is what Nishijima had in mind when he talked about “personal contact,” (perhaps Jundo could shed some light on that) - but whether it hits the mark or not I’m confident that it is closer to what he intended than books and videos.
“How do we find ‘a true master of Buddhism’?”
Nishijima’s answer seems deceptively simple, but only I think because we often confuse what is simple with what is easy, when they are often not at all the same thing.
”You must look for him.”
Well, this is me proclaiming to the universe (or to the internet - which is nearly as unfathomably vast at this point I suppose) my sincere intention - I am looking.
Any helpful fingers pointed at the moon are certainly appreciated, but not at all necessary. I am grateful for this electric sangha. Thank you for allowing me a space to excrete these thoughts.
-Gassho
Erik (Snow)
This resonates strongly with me as I feel that this is the correct path for me and I intend to walk it, with or without a guide. I’m in a situation (geographic isolation mainly) that makes it difficult to have any “personal contact” with Buddhists of any kind, let alone Zen Buddhists, let alone a master.
I’ve resolved to do by best to find my way without one if necessary, relying heavily on books, recordings, and of course regular Zazen. It is that need for a community and some guidance that drew me here to Treeleaf. I don’t know if the online community is what Nishijima had in mind when he talked about “personal contact,” (perhaps Jundo could shed some light on that) - but whether it hits the mark or not I’m confident that it is closer to what he intended than books and videos.
“How do we find ‘a true master of Buddhism’?”
Nishijima’s answer seems deceptively simple, but only I think because we often confuse what is simple with what is easy, when they are often not at all the same thing.
”You must look for him.”
Well, this is me proclaiming to the universe (or to the internet - which is nearly as unfathomably vast at this point I suppose) my sincere intention - I am looking.
Any helpful fingers pointed at the moon are certainly appreciated, but not at all necessary. I am grateful for this electric sangha. Thank you for allowing me a space to excrete these thoughts.
-Gassho
Erik (Snow)
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