Page 1 of Zen 96


Zen 96

  by Alex Stone

  Copyright 2016 Alex Stone

  All rights reserved

  License Notes

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with other persons, please refer them to the link you have used for picking it up. No part of this publication may be reproduced, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or otherwise, without written permission from the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other non-commercial uses permitted by copyright law. Thank you for respecting the creative work of this author.

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  Contents

  Author's Note

  My Zen Poems:

  The Bodhi Tree

  Continuity of Purification

  Internal Light

  Interference

  Insight

  Virtue's Colour

  Innate Elegance

  Influence

  In the Steel-plant Smoking-room

  In the Dark as in the Light

  In the Autumn Rain

  Second Youth

  Implements

  Hence the Chaos

  A Trance

  Heaven's Operation

  Plum Stone of Mind

  Karma Cycling

  Agents of Sacredness

  Harmonization of 6:9

  Light of Changes

  Delimitations

  Amenity of Life

  The Vital Tree

  Is Life a Dream?

  The Planet of Plants

  Filial Piety

  Diplomacy

  An Envoy and Duty

  A Tutor's Prediction

  Survival of Virtue

  Mahayana Blues

  My Orchard

  Pains and Penalties

  Cultivation

  General Sherman

  An Ugly Man's Charm

  Man of the Future

  Forefathers

  Thing-in-Itself

  A Palindrome

  I Guess

  Water Drinking Effect

  The Spots of Power

  The Tea Ceremony

  Drinking the Spring Water

  On the Cliff

  The Bodily Mystery

  The Puppet World

  The Small Man of Great Heaven

  Transfiguration

  In the Field of Good Management

  The Governor

  A Willing Horse

  Benevolence

  The Campaign Trail

  A State of Harmony

  The Close Terms

  Timeserving

  At the Dawn of Humanity

  A Robber or a Benefactor

  Saints and Thieves

  Blinded by Science

  The Knowledge

  Doomed HD & Hi-Fi

  Letting Go

  Opening and Closing

  Words

  The Human Nature

  What If

  The Old Hand at Governing

  Rewards and Punishments

  The Human Mind

  Phrases and Faces

  Trees, Tears, Trees

  A Bear's Affection

  Heaven's Layout

  The Sabbath

  High Peaks

  The Bamboo Grove

  Still Stands Up and How!

  Among the Thickets

  Patrimony

  Springtime

  Overlapped Manifestations

  A Settled Abode

  When It Goes to Imbalance

  Good Old Times Blossoming

  A Clear View

  We All Are Like Trees

  Routine

  The Guardians

  The Celestial Office

  Final Realization

  A Song of Contemplation

  It Takes Time

  About the Author

  Endnote

  Author's Note

  Today, more and more people want to know what Zen is. The problem is that it is not an easy task to describe it, as Zen is beyond wording. It is something that cannot be talked about nor expressed in written form. The moment language is used we are no longer dealing with the spirit of Zen. However, Zen cannot be left unexpressed. In order to introduce the reader to the world of Zen, there is no alternative but to resort to the use of language; and that language is poetry. That's why there are so many poems written by the numerous adepts of Zen.

  So, what is Zen? This question can be answered in a number of ways, with each definition being correct within the context being explained. For example, Zen is the Japanese pronunciation of 'Chan,' the abbreviated form of the Chinese translation of the Sanskrit term "dhyana"; it's a type of Indian Buddhism transplanted into China. Better known to the West by its Japanese pronunciation, it is translated as "quiet contemplation." Paradoxically, but Zen/Chan has almost nothing to do with the practice of 'dhyana' (meditation) either. Yes, it is rather difficult to describe what Zen is through the medium of words, so long as it is an anti-logic school of Buddhist thought that applies illogicality to free the mind.

  Within the Chinese school of Chan, there is macrostructure that carries the tradition from one generation to the next; there also exists a microstructure of antithesis. This creates what might be described as a post-modern state that is comprised of a ‘certainty’ (macrostructure) that is in continuous communication with an ‘uncertainty’ (microstructure), with both ultimately canceling one another out. This is in accordance with Nagarjuna’s tetralemma, or ‘four-sided logic,’ which can be simply stated as follows: either (1) objects are themselves, or (2) they are not themselves, or (3) they are both themselves and not themselves(simultaneously), or (4) they are neither themselves nor are they not themselves (simultaneously).

  It would seem to common sense that at least the first statement ought to hold true, and thus offer some explanation of experience. But, none of the four options does. None does—yet experience remains. Nagarjuna (c. 150 – c. 250 CE) is widely considered one of the most important Buddhist philosophers after Gautama Buddha, read through the Buddha’s teachings contained in the sutras, and formulated that the Buddha’s logic comprised of the above four assertions. Therefore, it can be said that (a) Zen exists; (b) Zen does not exist; (c) Zen exists and does not exist (simultaneously); (d) Zen neither exists nor does not exist (simultaneously).

  The point here is that the ordinary intellect is unable to function on this frequency of interpretation, and in its unenlightened or unevolved state, views the Buddha’s logic as gibberish, or ‘mystical’ inspired nonsense, when in fact, the Buddha’s logic has more in common with higher science (i.e. quantum theory), than it does with theistic religion or the imaginations of superstitious based thinking.

  If Zen could be presented to another, men would all present it to their superiors; if it could be served up to others, men would all serve it up to their parents; if it could be told to others, men would all tell it to their brothers; if it could be given to others, men would all give it to their sons and grandsons. The reason why it cannot be transmitted is no other but this: that 'if,' within, there be not the presiding principle, it will not remain there, and if, outwardly, there be not the correct obedience, it will not be carried out. When that which is given out from the mind in possession of it is not received by the mind without, the sagely minded man will not give it out; and when, entering in from without, there is no power in the receiving mind to entertain it, the sagely minded man will not permit it to lie hidden there.

  Therefore, better known in the West as Zen, it is a Western art-based movement that serves as the antithesis to established norms and conventions. It is a vague sense of performing a function, skill or art in the secular form that is devoid of strenuou
s effort, or somehow new or unexpected. In fact, Zen is not the experience, nor the realm, less still any heretical forms of Buddhist practice that ignores Buddhist conventions. Zen is just Zen, and that's it.

  Attachment to Zen (regardless of how dedicated or expert the attachment might be) is still only ever attachment to delusion. Being 'exact' in enlightened function is not the same as being 'precise' through attachment to terminology, ritual and procedure. Those attached to Zen carry with them the stench of Dharma contradiction and mistake the dream world for the living. Like a vicious whirlpool -- these people drag everyone into their orbit through impressing others with their certificates and experiences. However, no matter how many times they have visited China or Japan and sat in a temple, as long as they have not realised the empty mind ground, they are simply placing a head upon head and mistaking the delusion it casts as truth.

  Bare awareness that instantaneously reconciles the subject-object dichotomy is a true enlightenment. This is not 'mystical' or 'religious,' but can be defined as 'spiritual' if by spirituality is meant 'consciousness.' Conscious thought, conscious awareness and conscious being. Consciousness does not only exist 'in the mind' or it risks falling into the realms of 'imagined' understanding and progression. When you look at a picture the picture looks at you; when the contact is achieved, there is no more confusion.

  Realizing the real essence of Zen, one can attain it as the enlightened mind of Buddhahood. It means the extensive realization of Lord Buddha Sakyamuni, of perfect mind and pure feeling, who, at thirty-five years of age, sitting quietly under a Bodhi tree, realized that the way to release oneself from the chain of rebirth and death lay not in asceticism but in moral purity.

  Still, most people think that Zen is something subtle and mysterious, that it is so profound that it cannot be measured and is too high to be reached. These are the feelings of those who observe Zen from outside. But Zen can be found within each and every one of us; however, an unenlightened intellect has no capacity to perceive that which lies beyond the borders of its limited vision. Zen enlightenment is not freedom from discipline or convention, and cannot be equated with any form of anarchy as such. It is not nature’s unfolding, as nature unfolds quite happily regardless of whether the perceiver
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