While reading Zen literature can be helpful and discussing the Dharma is fun, the truth is always present. We don't need to go anywhere, read anything, attend any seminars or retreats--just open our eyes to our lives at this moment.
Introduction and sound engineering by Tom Eunsahn Gartland.
Perspectives on Zen Buddhism, reflections on practice, and the occasional random insight
Sunday, February 28, 2016
Sunday, February 21, 2016
OMZS Newsletter
Here is a link to the Original Mind Zen Sangha February 2016 Newsletter. Enjoy!
Special thanks to Jonson Miller for all of his hard work editing.
Special thanks to Jonson Miller for all of his hard work editing.
Thursday, February 11, 2016
Beyond the Language Game - Dharma talk
Language can trick us if we think that it objectively represents reality. Words inevitably fall short. Zen teaches us to be ever aware of language's provisional nature.
Introduction and sound engineering by Tom Eunsahn Gartland.
Introduction and sound engineering by Tom Eunsahn Gartland.
Saturday, February 6, 2016
The Dharma that is Always Transmitting Itself
The truth Zen that points to is always present, closer even than our own breath.
We don't awaken to interconnectedness, as it is sometimes named, for that leaves an intellectual gap as we think about interconnectedness. As in, "Wow, look at how the war in Antarctica affects ice prices here in America." Rather, awakening is seeing that we are that very interconnectedness.
We aren't a being connected to other beings, as much as we are the ever-fluid connection (of everything) itself.
The Buddhadharma is always transmitting itself. We and all beings are that very transmission. This is how Zen goes beyond birth-and-death, not as the realization of some metaphysical entity or soul that transcends our body and transmigrates after death. It's the recognition that our minds appear in this sea of temporary appearances, remain for a while, and then diminish. Human consciousness is not some eternal principle that is somehow more important, privileged, or even fundamental than flowers and rain and electrons. That view, in Zen terms, is picking-and-choosing.
Consciousness is the natural result of the vast matrix of interconnection. It's another feature of the universe like mountains and rivers and trees--an awesome and magnificent one at that, but then again, so too are bees, mushrooms, and black holes.
The Buddha mind isn't the discovery that we are actually immortal Consciousness, but, paradoxically, the realization that we are finite minds and bodies with expiration dates; yet because of our inseparability from everything else, we are deathless. As expressions of the totality, we cannot go anywhere because there is nowhere for us to go. There is no "I" to go anywhere.
Dharma transmission from teacher to student isn't the transference of knowledge or even the acknowledgement of special wisdom. It's more like two old friends sharing a joke. "So that's what all of the masters were about," followed by a full-bellied laugh.
Special thanks to my teacher and friend, Wonji Dharma.
We don't awaken to interconnectedness, as it is sometimes named, for that leaves an intellectual gap as we think about interconnectedness. As in, "Wow, look at how the war in Antarctica affects ice prices here in America." Rather, awakening is seeing that we are that very interconnectedness.
We aren't a being connected to other beings, as much as we are the ever-fluid connection (of everything) itself.
The Buddhadharma is always transmitting itself. We and all beings are that very transmission. This is how Zen goes beyond birth-and-death, not as the realization of some metaphysical entity or soul that transcends our body and transmigrates after death. It's the recognition that our minds appear in this sea of temporary appearances, remain for a while, and then diminish. Human consciousness is not some eternal principle that is somehow more important, privileged, or even fundamental than flowers and rain and electrons. That view, in Zen terms, is picking-and-choosing.
Consciousness is the natural result of the vast matrix of interconnection. It's another feature of the universe like mountains and rivers and trees--an awesome and magnificent one at that, but then again, so too are bees, mushrooms, and black holes.
The Buddha mind isn't the discovery that we are actually immortal Consciousness, but, paradoxically, the realization that we are finite minds and bodies with expiration dates; yet because of our inseparability from everything else, we are deathless. As expressions of the totality, we cannot go anywhere because there is nowhere for us to go. There is no "I" to go anywhere.
Dharma transmission from teacher to student isn't the transference of knowledge or even the acknowledgement of special wisdom. It's more like two old friends sharing a joke. "So that's what all of the masters were about," followed by a full-bellied laugh.
Special thanks to my teacher and friend, Wonji Dharma.
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