In Shōbōgenzō Genjōkoan, Dōgen says the following:
“When dharma does not fill your whole body and mind, you may assume that it is already sufficient. When dharma fills your body and mind, you understand that something is missing.” (Kazuaki Tanahashi translation)
I must admit this confuses me a little (okay, more than a little). I imagine that most of us have had experiences in zazen when (as Dōgen expresses it) body and mind drop away (shinjin datsuraku) and there is an immediacy of experience in which there is no separation between us and experience. Things just are as they are and experience arises and falls away until a sense of self reaffirms itself.
When I have experienced this state, it doesn’t feel like there is anything missing, so what does he mean by “you understand that something is missing”?
Reflecting on this, I have come up with a few answers but none of them feel sufficient (perhaps 3 comes the closest). These are:
1. Even when body and mind have dropped away, suffering remains in the world and we feel this both as the suffering of others and our own nagging sense of the unsatisfactory nature of life (dukkha).
2. Our view of the world can only be partial and subjective. Even if we feel experience deeply and directly, there are missing elements of the experience. However, although this may be theoretically the case, there are times when experience feels whole and all-encompassing. Are we missing the experience of others which we can never grasp? I can never experience how the world feels to Jundo or Jika just as they can never know how I see the world.
3. In the bodhisattva vows we vow to attain the way that is unattainable. Is the way always incomplete and moving? Whenever we think we have got it, we haven’t. The moment we say “this is it!” life has moved on. It is a constantly moving target and what is missing is some kind of solidity or firm ground to rest on.
Anyway, if anyone has any thoughts on this I would be grateful to hear them. This is not meant as a theoretical analysis of Dōgen but rather comparing what he says with how I and others experience zazen. Do you have this experience of something missing?
Gassho
Kokuu
#sattoday
“When dharma does not fill your whole body and mind, you may assume that it is already sufficient. When dharma fills your body and mind, you understand that something is missing.” (Kazuaki Tanahashi translation)
I must admit this confuses me a little (okay, more than a little). I imagine that most of us have had experiences in zazen when (as Dōgen expresses it) body and mind drop away (shinjin datsuraku) and there is an immediacy of experience in which there is no separation between us and experience. Things just are as they are and experience arises and falls away until a sense of self reaffirms itself.
When I have experienced this state, it doesn’t feel like there is anything missing, so what does he mean by “you understand that something is missing”?
Reflecting on this, I have come up with a few answers but none of them feel sufficient (perhaps 3 comes the closest). These are:
1. Even when body and mind have dropped away, suffering remains in the world and we feel this both as the suffering of others and our own nagging sense of the unsatisfactory nature of life (dukkha).
2. Our view of the world can only be partial and subjective. Even if we feel experience deeply and directly, there are missing elements of the experience. However, although this may be theoretically the case, there are times when experience feels whole and all-encompassing. Are we missing the experience of others which we can never grasp? I can never experience how the world feels to Jundo or Jika just as they can never know how I see the world.
3. In the bodhisattva vows we vow to attain the way that is unattainable. Is the way always incomplete and moving? Whenever we think we have got it, we haven’t. The moment we say “this is it!” life has moved on. It is a constantly moving target and what is missing is some kind of solidity or firm ground to rest on.
Anyway, if anyone has any thoughts on this I would be grateful to hear them. This is not meant as a theoretical analysis of Dōgen but rather comparing what he says with how I and others experience zazen. Do you have this experience of something missing?
Gassho
Kokuu
#sattoday
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