"Zen in its essence is the art of seeing into the nature of one´s own being, and it points the way from bondage to freedom. By making us drink right from the fountain of life it liberates us from all the yokes under which we finite beings are usually suffering in this world." D.T. Suzuki

Posts Tagged ‘Precepts’

Buddha Recognises Buddha

Book review originally published in The Middle Way, Journal of the Buddhist Society, November 2010.

BUDDHA RECOGNIZES BUDDHA, by Daishin Morgan, Throssel Hole Press, Northumberland,  2010, ISBN 0-9549139-1-4, pp 176, £8.00

“There is a profound nature at the heart of life that answers my human need to be at peace and to grow. It does not depend upon visions and great experiences, nor does it reject them. In my experience, it is found slowly and within the seemingly un-exceptional nature of the ordinary mind and heart.”

 

In this quiet way begins Buddha Recognises Buddha, an examination of how the principle of non-duality can find its expression in Buddhist practice. Written by Rev. Master Daishin Morgan, Soto Zen Abbot of Throssel Hole Buddhist Abbey, the book explicitly acknowledges the influence of Dogen Zenji, the thirteenth century founder of Soto Zen in Japan.

 

Recognising the conventional opposites, the text continues: “The isolation that comes with being an individual leads me to discover the impossibility within the interconnectedness of life, of being alone. A faith born of daily experience shows that there is a sufficiency to be found within whatever happens. The present moment contains a jewel that cannot be conceived or stored up, but one can bow and find that there is no separation. My fears and desires come to look less like obstacles and more like signposts. I grieve for loved ones when they suffer or die, and I know that without mortality there is no beauty. At times, the perfection of things as they are elicits a deep peace from within and without. It removes the fear of death and reveals a simple joy in being. I am glad to be mortal and value each moment. It may not be logical, but eternity can be in a moment, even though every moment is not like that.”

 

Over eighteen chapters, Rev master Daishin reflects on the radical implications of the simple act of sitting still, a practice he calls “radical acceptance”. The resulting deconstruction of the conventional self and our structuring of experience is pursued most vigorously in the Chapter called, “Life is not biography.” He states, “When I am asked for an account of my life, even in the most general terms, I feel uncomfortable, as whatever I say does not feel quite true. I try to be truthful, but the story I relate never reflects the reality, no matter how sincere I am in the telling.”

 

This being so, it might, nevertheless help readers unfamiliar with Rev Master Daishin to know that he became a Soto Zen monk at Throssel Hole thirty-six years ago. In the old days, Zen Masters were often referred to by their temple names and if anyone deserves this honor in the west, it is probably Rev. Master Daishin. For most of its history he has set the tone for Throssel and this tone is clearly articulated in this book. Back in the early days of Throssel, a former smallholding on a windswept hillside with views out over the vast Northumbrian moors, the community sat zazen in a draughty barn. Not long after monastic ordination, he worked at a local lead mine to bring some sorely needed income to the fledgling monastery. Later, after the temple had been running for a decade or so and a rule of celibacy had been introduced, he steered the economy of the community from charging for retreats to operating on donations, similar to the Theravadin model. Now, three and a half decades later Throssel has a community of about thirty male and female monks and a complex of temple buildings set amidst a new-growth grove of native trees.

 

Within the book, there is absolutely no mention of the day-to-day milieu from which these teachings sprang, so perhaps I can mention my own experience. For fourteen formative years I studied with Reverend Master Daishin as a Zen monk, before continuing elsewhere with Rinzai Zen study. Within Zen monastic society the hierarchy is all- pervading and rigid. The first seven years I lived in the zendo, the meditation hall, with 3 by 6 feet of space on the meditation platform and two cupboards, one for bedding and one for robes. As junior monks we were almost never alone. Every action, twenty-four hours a day, was expected to be obedient to instructions, undertaken mindfully and with consideration of others. The monastery is a pressured environment. The image used to exemplify it was the rock tumbler. The months and years of living cheek by jowl gradually smoothing-off all the rough corners so that each monk would become a polished jewel.  The non-duality espoused in this book is thus a long way from any kind of laisez-faire anything-goes attitude.  Throssel Hole also has lay adherents who seek to practice zazen and mindfulness within their daily lives.

 

Continuing his critique of personal history, he continues, “It may be an uncomfortable truth to digest, but past experiences do not, in fact, bring true comfort in the present, nor do past sufferings make us suffer in the present. It is better to have done good in the past than to have done evil, but, in the end, if we wish to be truly content, we have to let go of both. There are no experiences wonderful enough to validate the rest of our lives, nor are terrible experiences enough to prevent our knowing the truth in the present.”

 

Many Soto teachers avoid much talk of spiritual experiences and Rev. Master Daishin is no different. For many people, although by no means all, the Soto style of zazen offers few landmarks of progress or development. Its very unstructured openness can be disorientating and discouraging for some. Rather than holding out vague hopes for a future “happy ending,” he returns time and again to the present experience. Hearing his tone of voice in the text. I am reminded of walking above the monastery. For much of the year, the broad, expansive moors are almost featureless, drained of colour beneath a leaden sky.  And yet, when you look down around your feet you see a world that is vibrant with colour and vitality. In the same way, Rev. Master Daishin urges us not to wait but to look deeply at the reality of our life right now, the reality of our meditation experience. Echoing the experience of many others he says: “I used to think enlightenment was something that would come when I was good enough or had done enough training, but such a view kept me from awakening to its presence. How could enlightenment be something that comes in the future, if it is indivisible? Once I seriously began to engage with it, Dogen Zenji’s teaching that training and enlightenment are one became a great catalyst. It raised a difficult question that I had to investigate, “If training and enlightenment are one, then enlightenment must be here and now, so where is it?”

 

Rev. Master Daishin points to Dogen Zenji’s famous dictum,  “To study Buddhism is to study the self,” writing that “Zazen goes beyond intellectual understanding into the realm of faith. This is not faith in any outside thing. It is the faith to entirely trust the Buddha that one is.” This non-dualistic stance, called in the Soto School, shusho funi, (lit training-realization not-two) leaves no room for a God or an Absolute conceived as above or outside of existence.

 

Within this orientation, “Zazen is sitting and nothing more. We do not, in the end, come to an acceptance through an effort of will. Instead, we come across the unadorned actuality of our life and find that in its true nature, it is deeply sufficient.”

 

Although this is not a “how-to” book (for that, see the author’s previous Sitting Buddha), nevertheless, Rev. Master Daishin does offer some practical steps. In times of distraction or sleepiness in zazen, he suggests introducing the question, “what is this?” He cautions against a facile understanding of mindfulness as a kind of heightened self-consciousness rather than the whole-hearted immersion in the present moment. In addition he looks at the role of the will, faith, hope, cause and effect, acceptance and other subjects from the non-dual perspective.

 

The final five chapters examine some of the most important scriptures within Soto Zen. I was particularly interested in his commentary on the Hokyozamai, The Most Excellent Mirror Samadhi, a long Dharma poem written by the Soto Ancestor, Tozan Ryokai. It’s not widely known, but Hakuin Zenji, the great reformer of Rinzai Zen, spent much of his early practice life in Soto establishments and was even offered the Abbacy of a Soto monastery. In Hakuin’s time and to this day, within the Soto School, the Hokyozammai is chanted every day. The text contains an outline of a highly sophisticated analysis of the inter-relation of duality and non-duality, often called Tozan’s five ranks or five stages, which Rev. Master Daishin ably expounds. The five ranks are essential study within both the Rinzai and Soto Zen Schools. In the programmed system of koan study that Hakuin and his students established, a series of koans concerning the Hokyozammai and particularly those examining Tozan’s five ranks form some of the most advanced. For this incisive commentary, for this thorough exploration of the ramifications of non-duality and for the distilled wisdom of three and a half decades of Zen monastic practice, I feel sure that this book would be interesting and valuable for all students of Zen, whatever the perspective or lineage that they espouse.

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Full Time Zen Training

The Buddha established what have been called, “The four classes of Buddhist” – male and female monastics and male and female lay practitioners. Members of each of the four classes have realised enlightenment.,

Zenways member, Ha Jisho Tran, has left work as a city lawyer to pursue her Zen practice full time.  She is travelling to Japan to study at Gyokuryuji temple with Shinzan Roshi.  On Sunday 11th September at Yugagyo Dojo, our training hall, our sangha wished Ha every success for her practice as she took her leave.

The picture shows Ha with Shinzan Roshi at The Buddhist Society in London.

Japan Earthquake Memorial Ceremony


You are invited to a memorial ceremony for all those who have died in the earthquake and tsunami in Japan on sunday 20th April 4.30 pm at The Chinese Community Centre, 9 Tavistock Place, Bloomsbury, London. Please come if you can.

Best wishes Daizan

Zen Practice/Meditation at Zen Yoga (Yugagyo Dojo)

Sundays 4.30-6pm

Zen Practice/Meditation

at ZEN YOGA (Yugagyo Dojo), Opp 43 Camberwell Grove, Camberwell, London SE5 8RE.

Entering The Gate of the Zen Precepts

Some of our Zen students have conceived a strong desire to commit themselves to practice by recieving the Zen Precepts. This is truly a mark of deepening engagement with the Way. I have prepared this simple document for them in making their preparations. The teachings it contains reflect the work of many, many teachers and Ancestors on the Ways of Zen.

Impermanence

The Great Matter of Birth and Death, the Great Matter of swift change – unless these are reflected and pondered deeply, even though you received this valuable human birth which is so difficult to come by, you might yet end up carelessly squandering it. However, if you truly feared birth and death, would you then now eagerly seek for the way out?” Zen Master Daibai Unkan.

We come to practice Zen because something in us recognises that we can do or be better. Our life may be outwardly successful and fulfilling but nevertheless something inside is not fully satisfied. Many people learn to simply ignore this nagging sense of unease. But a few people have the courage to take it seriously and begin to consider where true fulfillment might lie.

Traditionally framed as a realization of impermanence, we see that we are in the perilous position of our life draining away day by day like sands falling through an hourglass. Naturally, this develops a great sense of urgency. We begin to seek a refuge, a safe place. This seeking mind itself is the beginning of our awakening process. Continue reading “Entering The Gate of the Zen Precepts” »

Recieving the Zen Precepts

In Zen we say the Precepts are the life of Buddha. To take the Precepts and formally become a Buddhist signifies that you wish to enter the stream of Buddhism and abandon the delusion of separated, isolated life. This one great life of the universe that is the truth of who you are can never be encompassed in something as limited as words. The Preceps are the nearest we have in human language to this boundless reality. To take the Precepts is a matter of rejoicing for the practitioner and for all beings. On Sunday March 22nd Paul Gent recieved the Zen Precepts and the name “Yudo”, gentle way.  Congratulations to Paul. May his practice bring forth excellent fruits.

               The Zen Precepts

 

Taking refuge in the Buddha

Taking refuge in the Dharma

Taking refuge in the Sangha

 

Ceasing from evil

Doing only good

Doing good for others

 

Refraining from:

1.    Taking life.

2.    Stealing

3.    Lying

4.    Indulgence in abusive or inappropriate sexuality

5.    Abuse of intoxicants.

6.    Criticism of others.

7.    Boasting of attainments and belittling others.

8.    Being mean

9.    Harbouring anger

10 Defaming one’s own or others’ teachers or spiritual paths.

 

The Two Things Necessary

Hiya, hope January is going well for you. If this year, you want things to go deeper, this is my new year’s gift: Only two things are necessary in someone who is earnestly seeking the truth of their own being and wants to experience kensho or satori, the enlightenment of Zen.

     The first thing is a determination to go for it. This isn’t a matter of screwing up the will, forcing yourself into something that you think you need to be or become. It’s simpler than that. The best measure of this determination is what you actually do. Are you friends with your meditation cushion or is it gathering dust? Do you make it to sanzen? Are you getting some retreat time in your yearly schedule? Are you doing things which move you towards your goal or not?

     The second essential is a lightness of touch, perhaps a sense of humour about this endevour, an ability to allow that which is arising to actually do so, an ability to flow rather than block.  Again, it’s easy enough to check yourself.

     If you have these two qualities and you maintain your practice for long enough, you will have the satisfaction of achieving the results you seek. It’s that simple.

      A couple of news items – The Sunday Times is reporting our Japan enlightenment trip in its Luxury Travel section – they’ve been asking for pictures too! I’ll let you know when it’s due.

      Secondly, we have an upcoming Yoga Teacher Training course in Devon, starting July 25th. Places are already getting booked and it’s not been advertised yet, so, if you’re interested, email for more details.

       Have a great week, more later.

                                                   Cheers  D

Zen Yoga at Horizons

Wednesdays, 7.30-8.30pm

Zen Yoga at Horizons
Liberty Street, Stockwell.

Zen Yoga at University College London

Wednesdays, 4.15-5.15 and 5.15-6.15pm

Zen Yoga at University College London,
Gordon Street, Euston.

Zen Yoga in Covent Garden

Tuesdays, 1-2pm

Zen Yoga at Buddha on a Bicycle
Endell Street, Covent Garden.