Hi, friends.
These days ago I see on Facebook a post where there were an animated gif, it showed someone throwing a dog on the water, and surprisingly, the dog don't get desperate or tried that "dog swimming", but instead, he just turns to his side and starts to float (he was equipped with a life jacket).
(Jakuden and the fellows here who loves animals, It doesn't seem to me like it was violence with him/her).
Well, this was very meaningful to me and "came back" someday when I was finishing my Zazen: often I found myself trying to swim, debating, shaking, moving, trying to reach a better stance. Becoming nervous for not reaching this marvelous state of balance and quietness and peace. I forgot to float!
I don't know if there is anyone here who never had the experience of floating, relaxed, free of tensions on a pool full of water.
Differently from swimming, I do not seek to reach the other "margin", I don't do much efforts, nor calculate when should I breath, after how many armful, what is the best angle, my speed... etc. Instead, I just inspired and exhale and free my body of tension and just relax... floating.
So, from this day on, when I sit Zazen and perceive tensions, I evoke that image, as if I was in a pool and floating and it seems to me and I feel that everything is resting in its right place, naturally.
This way, seems to me my Zazen is more relaxed and natural, even if it if I am agitated and this sentence from the Fukan Zazengi from Master Dogen Zenji Sama begun to make sense:
There is a Gibran Khalil phrase from one of his books, I guess it is "Sand and Foam", it marked me very much when I read it the first time:
Just to share with my brothers and sisters. Hope this can be useful.
Gassho
Marcos
#SatToday
These days ago I see on Facebook a post where there were an animated gif, it showed someone throwing a dog on the water, and surprisingly, the dog don't get desperate or tried that "dog swimming", but instead, he just turns to his side and starts to float (he was equipped with a life jacket).
(Jakuden and the fellows here who loves animals, It doesn't seem to me like it was violence with him/her).
Well, this was very meaningful to me and "came back" someday when I was finishing my Zazen: often I found myself trying to swim, debating, shaking, moving, trying to reach a better stance. Becoming nervous for not reaching this marvelous state of balance and quietness and peace. I forgot to float!
I don't know if there is anyone here who never had the experience of floating, relaxed, free of tensions on a pool full of water.
Differently from swimming, I do not seek to reach the other "margin", I don't do much efforts, nor calculate when should I breath, after how many armful, what is the best angle, my speed... etc. Instead, I just inspired and exhale and free my body of tension and just relax... floating.
So, from this day on, when I sit Zazen and perceive tensions, I evoke that image, as if I was in a pool and floating and it seems to me and I feel that everything is resting in its right place, naturally.
This way, seems to me my Zazen is more relaxed and natural, even if it if I am agitated and this sentence from the Fukan Zazengi from Master Dogen Zenji Sama begun to make sense:
"The zazen I speak of is not meditation practice. It is simply the dharma gate of joyful ease, the practice-realization of totally culminated enlightenment"
There is a Gibran Khalil phrase from one of his books, I guess it is "Sand and Foam", it marked me very much when I read it the first time:
"When God threw me, a pebble, into this wondrous lake,
I disturbed its surface with countless circles.
But when I reached the depths,
I became very still."
I disturbed its surface with countless circles.
But when I reached the depths,
I became very still."
Gassho
Marcos
#SatToday
Comment