When I read things like nothing to get, I feel that it's just being so engrossed in an activity that there really is nothing except that activity. Is that what is meant by nothing to attain? Shunryu Suzuki also states it similarly with his essay about bowing, saying that when bowing, there is just one complete bow encompassing the entire universe. At that moment, there is no you, or I, or Buddha, etc.
A literal interpretation of nothing to attain seems absolutely absurd to me. It's not literal right? In the Heart Sutra it says nothing is to be attained, but then later on it says that all Buddhas attain AnuttaraSamyak sambodhi. The mumonkan says something similar... when the world is destroyed, it is not destroyed. But this only makes sense in light of emptiness, to me at least.
Gassho,
Ben
A literal interpretation of nothing to attain seems absolutely absurd to me. It's not literal right? In the Heart Sutra it says nothing is to be attained, but then later on it says that all Buddhas attain AnuttaraSamyak sambodhi. The mumonkan says something similar... when the world is destroyed, it is not destroyed. But this only makes sense in light of emptiness, to me at least.
Gassho,
Ben
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