Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Tuesday, March 24, 2020
Yuanwu (1063-1135)
Fundamentally,
this great light is there with each and every person right where they stand –
empty clear through, spiritually aware, all-pervasive, it is called the scenery of the fundamental ground.
Sentient
beings and buddhas are both inherently equipped with it. It is perfectly fluid
and boundless, fusing everything within it. It is within your own heart and is
the basis of your physical body and of the five clusters of form, sensation,
conception, motivational synthesis, and consciousness. It has never been defiled or stained,
and its fundamental nature is still and silent.
False
thoughts suddenly arise and cover it over and block it off and confine it
within the six sense faculties and sense objects. Sense faculties and sense
objects are paired off, and you get stuck and begin clinging and getting
attached. You grasp at all the various objects and scenes, and produce all
sorts of false thoughts, and sink down into the toils of birth and death,
unable to gain liberation.
All the
buddhas and ancestral teachers awakened to this true source and penetrated
clear through to the fundamental basis. They took pity on all the sentient
beings sunk in the cycle of birth and death and were inspired by great
compassion, so they appeared in the world precisely for this reason. It was
also for this reason that Bodhidharma came from the West with the special
practice outside of doctrine.
The most
important thing is for people of great faculties and sharp wisdom to turn the
light of mind around and shine back and clearly awaken to this mind before a single thought is born. This
mind can produce all world-transcending and worldly phenomena. When it is
forever stamped with enlightenment, your inner heart is independent and
transcendent and brimming over with life. As soon as you rouse your conditioned
mind and set errant thoughts moving, then you have obscured this fundamental
clarity.
If you want
to pass through easily and directly right now, just
let your body and mind become thoroughly empty, so it is vacant and silent yet
aware and luminous. Inwardly, forget
all your conceptions of self, and outwardly, cut off all sensory defilements. When
inside and outside are clear all the way through, there is just one true
reality. Then eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body, and conceptual mind, form, sound,
smell, flavor, touch, and conceptualized phenomena – all of these are
established based on that one reality. This one reality stands free of and
transcends all the myriad entangling phenomena. The myriad phenomena have never
had any fixed characteristics – they are all transformations based on this
light.
If you can
trust in this oneness, then with one comprehended, and with one illuminated,
all are illuminated. Then in whatever you do, it can all be the indestructible
true essence of great liberation from top to bottom.
You must awaken to this mind first, and afterward
cultivate all forms of good. Haven’t you seen this
story? The renowned poet Bo Juyi asked the Bird’s Nest Monk, “What is the Way?”
The Bird’s Nest Monk said “Don’t do any evils, do all forms of good.” Bo Juyi
said “Even a three-year-old could say this.” The Bird’s Nest Monk said, “Though
a three-year-old might be able to say it, an eighty-year-old might not be able
to carry it out.”
Thus we must search out our faults and cultivate practice; this is like
the eyes and the feet depending on each other. If you are able to refrain from
doing any evil and refine your practice of the many forms of good, even if you
only uphold the elementary forms of discipline and virtue, you will be
able to avoid sinking down to the levels of animals, hungry ghosts and hell-beings.
This is even more the case if you first
awaken to the indestructible essence of the wondrous, illuminated true mind and
after that cultivate practice to the best of your ability and carry out all
forms of virtuous conduct.
Let no one be deluded about cause and effect. You must realize that the
causal basis of the hells and the heavens is all formed by your own inherent
mind. You must keep this mind balanced and in equanimity, without deluded
ideas of self and others, without arbitrary loves and hates, without grasping
and rejecting, without notions of gain and loss. Go on
gradually nurturing this for a long time, perhaps twenty or thirty years. Whether
you encounter favourable or adverse conditions, do not retreat or regress—then
when you come to the juncture between life and death [the last moment of your
life], you will naturally be set free and not be afraid. As the saying
goes “Truth requires sudden awakening, but
the phenomenal level calls for gradual cultivation”.
I often see those who are trying to study Buddhism just use their
worldly intelligence to sift among the verbal teachings of the buddhas and
ancestral teachers, trying to pick out especially wondrous sayings to use as
conversation pieces to display their ability and understanding. This is not the
correct view of the matter. You
must abandon your worldly mentality and sit quietly with mind silent. Forget
entangling causes and investigate with your whole being. When you are
thoroughly clear then whatever you bring forth from your own inexhaustible
treasury of priceless jewels is sure to be genuine and real.
So first you must awaken to the Fundamental and clearly see the true essence where mind equals Buddha. Detach
from all false entanglements and become free and clean. After that, respectfully practice all
forms of good, and arouse great compassion to bring benefits to all
sentient beings. In all that you do, be even and balanced and attuned to the
inherent equality of all things – be
selfless and have no attachments. When wondrous wisdom manifests itself
and you penetrate through to the basic essence, all your deeds will be
wonder-working. Thus it is said, ‘Just manage to accept the truth – you won’t
be deceived.”
Make
enlightenment your standard, and don’t feel bad if it is slow in coming. Take
care!
Shunryu Suzuki
“When we practice zazen (Zen meditation) our mind always follows our breathing. When we inhale, the air comes into the inner world. When we exhale, the air goes out to the outer world. the inner world is limitless, and the outer world is also limitless. We say ‘inner world’ or ‘outer world,’ but actually there is just one whole world. In this limitless world, our throat is like a swinging door. The air comes in and goes out like someone passing through a swinging door. If you think, ‘I breathe,’ the ‘I’ is extra. There is no you to say ‘I.’ What we call ‘I’ is just a swinging door which moves when we inhale and when we exhale. It just moves; that is all. When your mind is pure and calm enough to follow this movement, there is nothing: no ‘I,’ no world, no mind nor body; just a swinging door.”
From Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind
Thursday, March 5, 2020
BODHISATTVA'S VOW
LEADER: I am only a simple disciple,
but I offer these respectful words:
ASSEMBLY: When I regard the true nature
of the many dharmas, I find them all to be sacred forms of the Tathagata's
never- failing essence. Each particle of matter, each moment, is no other than
the Tathagata's inexpressible radiance.
With this realization, our virtuous
ancestors gave tender care to beasts and birds with compassionate minds and
hearts. Among us, in our own daily lives, who is not reverently grateful for
the protections of life: food, drink, and clothing! Though they are inanimate
things, they are nonetheless the warm flesh and blood, the merciful incarnations
of Buddha.
All the more, we can be especially
sympathetic and affectionate with foolish people, particularly with someone who
becomes a sworn enemy and persecutes us with abusive language. That very abuse
conveys the Buddha's boundless loving-kindness. It is a compassionate device to
liberate us entirely from the mean-spirited delusions we have built up with our
wrongful conduct from the beginningless past.
With our open response to such abuse we
completely relinquish ourselves, and the most profound and pure faith arises.
At the peak of each thought a lotus flower opens, and on each flower there is
revealed a Buddha. Everywhere is the Pure Land in its beauty. We see fully the
Tathagata's radiant light right where we are.
May we retain this mind and extend it
throughout the world so that we and all beings become mature in Buddha's
wisdom.
(Honolulu Diamond Sangha)
Sunday, March 1, 2020
Loving-kindness Meditation
- Jack Kornfield
This meditation uses
words, images, and feelings to evoke a loving-kindness and friendliness toward
oneself and others. With each recitation of the phrases, we are expressing an
intention, planting the seeds of loving wishes over and over in our heart. With
a loving heart as the background, all that we attempt, all that we encounter
will open and flow more easily. You can begin the practice of loving-kindness by
meditating for fifteen or twenty minutes in a quiet place.
Let yourself sit in a comfortable fashion. Let
your body rest and be relaxed. Let your heart be soft. Let go of any plans or
preoccupations.
Begin with yourself. Breathe gently, and recite inwardly the
following traditional phrases directed toward our own well-being. You being
with yourself because without loving yourself it is almost impossible to love
others:
May I be filled with
loving-kindness.
May I be safe from inner and
outer dangers.
May I be well in body and mind.
May I be at ease and happy.
As you repeat these phrases, picture yourself as you are now,
and hold that image in a heart of loving-kindness. Or perhaps you will find it
easier to picture yourself as a young and beloved child. Adjust the words and
images in any way you wish. Create the exact phrases that best open your heart
of kindness. Repeat these phrases over and over again, letting the feelings
permeate your body and mind. Practice this meditation for a number of weeks,
until the sense of loving-kindness for yourself grows.
Be aware that this meditation may at times feel mechanical or
awkward. It can also bring up feelings contrary to loving-kindness, feelings of
irritation and anger. If this happens, it is especially important to be patient
and kind toward yourself, allowing whatever arises to be received in a spirit
of friendliness and kind affection. When you feel you have established some
stronger sense of loving-kindness for yourself, you can then expand your
meditation to include others. After focusing on yourself for five or ten
minutes, choose a benefactor, someone in your life who has loved and truly
cared for you. Picture this person and carefully recite the same phrases:
May you be filled with loving-kindness.
May you be safe from inner and
outer dangers.
May you be well in body and
mind.
May you be at ease and happy.
Let the image and feelings you have for your benefactor support
the meditation. Whether the image or feelings are clear or not does not matter.
In meditation they will be subject to change. Simply continue to plant the
seeds of loving wishes, repeating the phrases gently no matter what arises.
Expressing gratitude to our benefactors is a natural form of
love. In fact, some people find loving-kindness for themselves so hard, they
begin their practice with a benefactor. This too is fine. The rule in loving-kindness practice is to follow the way that most easily opens your heart.
When loving-kindness for your benefactor has developed, you can
gradually begin to include other people in your meditation. Picturing each
beloved person, recite inwardly the same phrases, evoking a sense of loving-kindness for each person in turn.
After this you can include others: Spend some time wishing well
to a wider circle of friends. Then gradually extend your meditation to picture
and include community members, neighbors, people everywhere, animals, all
beings, the whole earth. Finally, include the difficult people in your life,
even your enemies, wishing that they too may be filled with loving-kindness and
peace. This will take practice. But as your heart opens, first to loved ones
and friends, you will find that in the end you won’t want to close it anymore. Loving-kindness can be practiced anywhere. You can use this meditation in traffic jams, in
buses, and on airplanes. As you silently practice this meditation among people,
you will come to feel a wonderful connection with them – the power of loving-kindness. It will calm your mind and keep you connected to your heart.
Saturday, February 29, 2020
Zen master Sixin Wuxin:
"While still alive, be therefore assiduous in practising Dhyāna. The practice consists in abandonments. ‘The abandonment of what?’ you may ask. Abandon your four elements (bhuta), abandon your five aggregates (skandha), abandon all the workings of your relative consciousness (karmavijnana), which you have been cherishing since eternity; retire within your inner being and see into the reason of it. As your self-reflection grows deeper and deeper, the moment will surely come upon you when the spiritual flower will suddenly burst into bloom, illuminating the entire universe. The experience is incommunicable, though you yourselves know perfectly well what it is."
Friday, February 28, 2020
Robert Aitken Roshi — A Personal & Biographical Reflection by Alan Senauke
Robert Baker Aitken — Dairyu Chotan/Great Dragon (of the) Clear Pool — died on August 5, 2010 in Honolulu at the age of 93. He was the “dean” of Western Zen teachers, a great light of dharma. Aitken Roshi was a prophetic and inconvenient voice right to the end. I have a picture of him from a year or two back, smiling impishly, holding up a hand-lettered sign that reads: “The System Stinks.”
Over the last twenty years I was privileged to collaborate with Aitken Roshi at Buddhist Peace Fellowship, to study with him at the Honolulu Diamond Sangha, and to help with editorial tasks on one of his books. As thousands of readers found, his books are treasures — deep in dharma, crisp and vivid in voice, and ringing with the sound of justice.
Robert Aitken spent childhood years in Honolulu, not far from the Palolo Zendo he built later in life. When I practiced with him at Palolo in 1996, he took me for a walk through his old neighborhood, pointing out the parks and houses, strolling along the beach at Waikiki and through the grand old parlors of the Royal Hawaiian Hotel. He loved the air and sea. The sounds of birds and geckos punctuated his lectures, calling him to attention.
During World War II, as a construction worker on Guam, young Robert Aitken was interned by invading Japanese troops and sent to a camp in Kobe, Japan for the rest of the war. A sympathetic guard gave him a copy of R.H. Blyth’s Zen in English Literature and Oriental Classics which he read over and over. In 1944, by chance, Aitken and Blyth, who also been interned in Japan, were transferred to the same camp. They became close friends, and Aitken determined he would study Zen with a true master on his release.
He returned to Hawaii and earned a bachelor’s degree in literature and a master’s degree in Japanese language. A thesis on the great Zen poet Bassho became his first book, A Zen Wave. In the late 1940s he began Zen studies in Los Angeles with the pioneering teacher Nyogen Senzaki. He went to Japan in the early 50s to practice with Nakagawa Soen Roshi, one of the 20th century’s most original Rinzai monks, who invited him to lead a sitting group in 1959, placing Robert Aitken among the very first western Buddhist teachers.
From 1962 on, Aitken organized sesshins for Yasutani Roshi, whose Sanbo Kyodan (Three Treasures) school merged the shikantaza emphasis of Soto with rigorous koan work of the Rinzai school. Studying with Yasutani, and with his successor Yamada Koun Roshi, Robert Aitken was authorized to teach independently, and became known as Aitken Roshi. The Diamond Sangha arose from his travels and teachings. It now has more than twenty affiliates around the world, and a cadre of accomplished and transmitted dharma heirs.
Aitken Roshi, his wife Anne, and Nelson Foster founded the Buddhist Peace Fellowship on the back porch of the Maui Zendo in 1978. The idea was to further the interdependent practice of awakening and social justice. The spark for BPF was struck from Roshi’s in depth study of 19th and 20th century anarchism, and his long experience as an anti-war and anti-military activist. BPF continues to this day with the same mission. In a later book, Encouraging Words, Aitken Roshi wrote that “monastery walls have broken down and the old teaching and practice of wisdom, love and responsibility are freed for the widest applications in the domain of social affairs.”
I was drawn to Aitken Roshi’s books in the 1980s, first reading his classic Taking the Path of Zen (1982), a primer on Zen practice. I have a copy of The Mind of Clover (1984) signed at a reading at Black Oak Books in early 1985. In my reckoning this is still the best book around on practical Buddhist ethics. But among his thirteen published books (with more to come, I hope), I would also point out The Gateless Barrier — Roshi’s translation of the Mumonkan koan collection — and The Practice of Perfection, his commentary on the paramitas or Mahayana “perfections.”
Aitken Roshi was a disciplined writer. That was an essential part of his daily practice, writing for several hours each morning, trying to avoid interruptions and distractions. Several times I found him reading aloud to himself, polishing the language and voice until it sounded right to his ears. You can hear that distinct voice in every page he wrote.
There is an image near the end of the Avatamsaka Sutra, the pinnacle of early Chinese Hua-Yen Buddhism, that Aitken Roshi often cited. Similar to the interdependent reality of Indra’s Net, he delighted in the idea of Maitreya’s tower, extending into and throughout space, encompassing an infinite number of towers, one as brilliant and astonishing as the next. And somehow these towers co-exist in space without conflict or contradiction. I think this dazzling vision is how Roshi saw the world. It is also how we can see his mind and work.
Aitken Roshi never found an inch of separation between his vision of justice and the Zen teachings of complete interdependence. The vast universe, with all its joys and sorrows was his true dwelling place. It still is. Robert Aitken Roshi, presente!
Over the last twenty years I was privileged to collaborate with Aitken Roshi at Buddhist Peace Fellowship, to study with him at the Honolulu Diamond Sangha, and to help with editorial tasks on one of his books. As thousands of readers found, his books are treasures — deep in dharma, crisp and vivid in voice, and ringing with the sound of justice.
Robert Aitken spent childhood years in Honolulu, not far from the Palolo Zendo he built later in life. When I practiced with him at Palolo in 1996, he took me for a walk through his old neighborhood, pointing out the parks and houses, strolling along the beach at Waikiki and through the grand old parlors of the Royal Hawaiian Hotel. He loved the air and sea. The sounds of birds and geckos punctuated his lectures, calling him to attention.
During World War II, as a construction worker on Guam, young Robert Aitken was interned by invading Japanese troops and sent to a camp in Kobe, Japan for the rest of the war. A sympathetic guard gave him a copy of R.H. Blyth’s Zen in English Literature and Oriental Classics which he read over and over. In 1944, by chance, Aitken and Blyth, who also been interned in Japan, were transferred to the same camp. They became close friends, and Aitken determined he would study Zen with a true master on his release.
He returned to Hawaii and earned a bachelor’s degree in literature and a master’s degree in Japanese language. A thesis on the great Zen poet Bassho became his first book, A Zen Wave. In the late 1940s he began Zen studies in Los Angeles with the pioneering teacher Nyogen Senzaki. He went to Japan in the early 50s to practice with Nakagawa Soen Roshi, one of the 20th century’s most original Rinzai monks, who invited him to lead a sitting group in 1959, placing Robert Aitken among the very first western Buddhist teachers.
From 1962 on, Aitken organized sesshins for Yasutani Roshi, whose Sanbo Kyodan (Three Treasures) school merged the shikantaza emphasis of Soto with rigorous koan work of the Rinzai school. Studying with Yasutani, and with his successor Yamada Koun Roshi, Robert Aitken was authorized to teach independently, and became known as Aitken Roshi. The Diamond Sangha arose from his travels and teachings. It now has more than twenty affiliates around the world, and a cadre of accomplished and transmitted dharma heirs.
Aitken Roshi, his wife Anne, and Nelson Foster founded the Buddhist Peace Fellowship on the back porch of the Maui Zendo in 1978. The idea was to further the interdependent practice of awakening and social justice. The spark for BPF was struck from Roshi’s in depth study of 19th and 20th century anarchism, and his long experience as an anti-war and anti-military activist. BPF continues to this day with the same mission. In a later book, Encouraging Words, Aitken Roshi wrote that “monastery walls have broken down and the old teaching and practice of wisdom, love and responsibility are freed for the widest applications in the domain of social affairs.”
I was drawn to Aitken Roshi’s books in the 1980s, first reading his classic Taking the Path of Zen (1982), a primer on Zen practice. I have a copy of The Mind of Clover (1984) signed at a reading at Black Oak Books in early 1985. In my reckoning this is still the best book around on practical Buddhist ethics. But among his thirteen published books (with more to come, I hope), I would also point out The Gateless Barrier — Roshi’s translation of the Mumonkan koan collection — and The Practice of Perfection, his commentary on the paramitas or Mahayana “perfections.”
Aitken Roshi was a disciplined writer. That was an essential part of his daily practice, writing for several hours each morning, trying to avoid interruptions and distractions. Several times I found him reading aloud to himself, polishing the language and voice until it sounded right to his ears. You can hear that distinct voice in every page he wrote.
There is an image near the end of the Avatamsaka Sutra, the pinnacle of early Chinese Hua-Yen Buddhism, that Aitken Roshi often cited. Similar to the interdependent reality of Indra’s Net, he delighted in the idea of Maitreya’s tower, extending into and throughout space, encompassing an infinite number of towers, one as brilliant and astonishing as the next. And somehow these towers co-exist in space without conflict or contradiction. I think this dazzling vision is how Roshi saw the world. It is also how we can see his mind and work.
Aitken Roshi never found an inch of separation between his vision of justice and the Zen teachings of complete interdependence. The vast universe, with all its joys and sorrows was his true dwelling place. It still is. Robert Aitken Roshi, presente!
Wednesday, February 26, 2020
SONG OF THE GRASS ROOF HERMITAGE
by Shih-t'ou, 700-790.
I've built a grass hut where
there's nothing of value.
After eating, I relax and enjoy a nap. When it was completed, fresh weeds appeared. Now it's been lived in - covered by weeds. The person in the hut lives here calmly, Not stuck to inside, outside, or in between. Places worldly people live, he doesn't live. Realms worldly people love, he doesn't love. Though the hut is small, it includes the whole world. In ten feet square, an old man illumines forms and their nature. A Mahayana bodhisattva trusts without doubt. The middling or lowly can't help wondering, Will this hut perish or not? Perishable or not, the original master is present, Not dwelling south or north, east or west. Firmly based on steadiness, it can't be surpassed. A shining window below the green pines - Jade palaces or vermilion towers can't compare with it. Just sitting with head covered, all things are at rest. Thus this mountain monk doesn't understand at all. Living here he no longer works to get free. Who would proudly arrange seats, trying to entice guests? Turn around the light to shine within, then just return. The vast inconceivable source can't be faced or turned away from. Meet the ancestral teachers, be familiar with their instruction, Bind grasses to build a hut, and don't give up. Let go of hundreds of years and relax completely. Open your hands and walk innocent. Thousands of words, myriad interpretations, Are only to free you from obstructions. If you want to know the undying person in the hut, Don't separate from this skin bag here and now.
- Translated by Daniel Leighton
with Yi Wu
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