Hi Daijo,
Good question, so let me try a fair answer.
In life, getting up from Zafu, we have 24 hours filled with things we do ... work, taking care of the kids, playing sports, hobbies, going to the doctor, thinking about which can of peaches to buy in the store, just goofing off, watching movies. That is life! That is also the reason that some of our members can combine Zazen with their other personal beliefs and practices ... no problem! So, some can also go to their Catholic Church on Sunday, chant to Amida if they wish, read Camus, go to their "Atheists of America" meeting, practice Tai Chi or Yoga ... no problem! All is "Zazen" in its wider meaning when known as such ... all expressions of the Wholeness of Emptiness!
However, here in this Dojo (Practice Place) we are trying to Teach and Practice a few special skills (or "non-skills" as I like to say). Basically, this is the art of Shikantaza, something very subtle because it is perhaps one of the few actions (or "non-actions") in which the goal ("non-goal") is to be for a time sitting beyond gain and goal, beyond judgments, in the complete Wholeness and non-seeking of just this moment, merging into all conditions yet free of such, "just sitting" as Buddha sitting Buddha .... Buddha Buddhaing Buddha.
So many forms of "Eastern" or "Buddhist" Meditation are based on some "gaining" idea ... gaining some "special state", gaining "perpetual joy joy bliss bliss", gaining some power, gaining "Enlightenment". Shikantaza is quite unique in that regard (though I just posted some Tibetan Dzogchen teachings on another thread that are like this too http://www.treeleaf.org/forums/showt...gchen-Teaching). In Shikantaza, one encounters "Special States" that are sometimes very unusual yet frequently tediously ordinary, a "Bliss" so "Blissful" that it holds both happy times and sad and one need not even feel "blissful" much of the time, an "Enlightenment gained" in the radical releasing of all "gaining".
It is an art to focus on, and is the same reason that we focus on but a few core practices related to such (Although "Aikido" and "Karate" may both be wondrous arts suited to different people, nonetheless one does not teach "Karate" when teaching "Aikido" in the "Aikido" Dojo.)
To the extent that "8 Form Moving Meditation" as taught Master Sheng Yen is focused on feeling special states of bliss and such, well, it is Karate in our Aikido Dojo. (It is the same reason we do not Practice "Koan Centered Zazen" in the Rinzai way in our little Dojo) To the extent "8 Form Moving Meditation" is just a stretching exercise, we might show a bit how to do it. It is then much like Yoga in the West: If it is basically just a way to stretch and move the body in order to loosen up for sitting, I am fine with it. If the Yoga is taught in a traditional Indian form with Chakras, Gurus and Vishnu ... well, it may be a lovely Practice for some, but it is Karate in our Aikido Dojo.
It is also the reason that Taigu told me last night that, while he encourages people to look into "Alexander Technique" as good to "loosen up" the body and help balance and flexibility, he will not teach it here in detail. It would be distracting from our core Art.
And before you ask: I probably could change the "8 Form Moving Meditation" into a flavor of "Shikantaza", making it a way of moving with a sense of non-moving and non-gaining. Likewise, I can change "football" into Shikantaza by giving up all idea of "winning vs. losing" and any score to attain! However, it might not then be "football", and trying to play football here might just be distracting! **
Does that make sense?
Gassho, J
** By the way, in fact, if one masters Shikantaza, one can come to play Football (Big "F") that holds and embodies "football" (little "f"). What is that? It is "winning or losing" all while simultaneously dropping all measurements of "win" or "loss", scoring points even while knowing there is "nothing ultimately to gain". Nonetheless, we do not practice our football passes and field goals here because this is an Aikido Dojo, and putting Goal Posts in the middle of our Tatami Mats could be dangerous.
Good question, so let me try a fair answer.
In life, getting up from Zafu, we have 24 hours filled with things we do ... work, taking care of the kids, playing sports, hobbies, going to the doctor, thinking about which can of peaches to buy in the store, just goofing off, watching movies. That is life! That is also the reason that some of our members can combine Zazen with their other personal beliefs and practices ... no problem! So, some can also go to their Catholic Church on Sunday, chant to Amida if they wish, read Camus, go to their "Atheists of America" meeting, practice Tai Chi or Yoga ... no problem! All is "Zazen" in its wider meaning when known as such ... all expressions of the Wholeness of Emptiness!
However, here in this Dojo (Practice Place) we are trying to Teach and Practice a few special skills (or "non-skills" as I like to say). Basically, this is the art of Shikantaza, something very subtle because it is perhaps one of the few actions (or "non-actions") in which the goal ("non-goal") is to be for a time sitting beyond gain and goal, beyond judgments, in the complete Wholeness and non-seeking of just this moment, merging into all conditions yet free of such, "just sitting" as Buddha sitting Buddha .... Buddha Buddhaing Buddha.
So many forms of "Eastern" or "Buddhist" Meditation are based on some "gaining" idea ... gaining some "special state", gaining "perpetual joy joy bliss bliss", gaining some power, gaining "Enlightenment". Shikantaza is quite unique in that regard (though I just posted some Tibetan Dzogchen teachings on another thread that are like this too http://www.treeleaf.org/forums/showt...gchen-Teaching). In Shikantaza, one encounters "Special States" that are sometimes very unusual yet frequently tediously ordinary, a "Bliss" so "Blissful" that it holds both happy times and sad and one need not even feel "blissful" much of the time, an "Enlightenment gained" in the radical releasing of all "gaining".
It is an art to focus on, and is the same reason that we focus on but a few core practices related to such (Although "Aikido" and "Karate" may both be wondrous arts suited to different people, nonetheless one does not teach "Karate" when teaching "Aikido" in the "Aikido" Dojo.)
To the extent that "8 Form Moving Meditation" as taught Master Sheng Yen is focused on feeling special states of bliss and such, well, it is Karate in our Aikido Dojo. (It is the same reason we do not Practice "Koan Centered Zazen" in the Rinzai way in our little Dojo) To the extent "8 Form Moving Meditation" is just a stretching exercise, we might show a bit how to do it. It is then much like Yoga in the West: If it is basically just a way to stretch and move the body in order to loosen up for sitting, I am fine with it. If the Yoga is taught in a traditional Indian form with Chakras, Gurus and Vishnu ... well, it may be a lovely Practice for some, but it is Karate in our Aikido Dojo.
It is also the reason that Taigu told me last night that, while he encourages people to look into "Alexander Technique" as good to "loosen up" the body and help balance and flexibility, he will not teach it here in detail. It would be distracting from our core Art.
And before you ask: I probably could change the "8 Form Moving Meditation" into a flavor of "Shikantaza", making it a way of moving with a sense of non-moving and non-gaining. Likewise, I can change "football" into Shikantaza by giving up all idea of "winning vs. losing" and any score to attain! However, it might not then be "football", and trying to play football here might just be distracting! **
Does that make sense?
Gassho, J
** By the way, in fact, if one masters Shikantaza, one can come to play Football (Big "F") that holds and embodies "football" (little "f"). What is that? It is "winning or losing" all while simultaneously dropping all measurements of "win" or "loss", scoring points even while knowing there is "nothing ultimately to gain". Nonetheless, we do not practice our football passes and field goals here because this is an Aikido Dojo, and putting Goal Posts in the middle of our Tatami Mats could be dangerous.
Comment