Zen

Angsan’s ‘the Owner of a Mirror’ (2)

When Master Angsan was a head monk, he received a letter and a mirror delivered from his master Wisan. Angsan, showing the mirror to the assembly, said, “Tell me whether this mirror belongs to me Angsan, or my master Wisan? If you say that this is Wisan’s, this is in my hand now. If you say that this is mine, this is what Wisan had delivered to me. If you can say, I’ll leave them alone, but if you can’t, I will break it.” No one could say the answer, and Angsan broke it by throwing it on the floor.

Student: “Why did Angsan break the mirror?”

Master: “He returned it to its original owner.”

Commentary:

Each piece of the broken mirror reflects its owner.

©Boo Ahm

All writing ©Boo Ahm. All images ©Simon Hathaway

Zen

The Diamond Sutra (52)

Part 14-10

‘Therefore, Subhuti, Bodhisattvas should aspire to attain enlightenment detached from all images.

Commentary:

As mentioned repeatedly, the core of the Buddha’s teaching is not to be deluded by words and images. However, the Buddha couldn’t help but use temporal words as an expedient means so that he might explain his teaching. It might appear ironic that he used words whilst dissuading his students from being deluded by words, but indeed, everything will turn out to be the true-Self when we are altogether detached from images. This is why we should not read, or listen to the Sutras and Dharma talks in the same way we read, or listen to worldly literature, or lectures. Then, we can see the true-Self in each word and each phrase.

This is why the Buddha himself said, “Not a word have I said” and ancient masters would say that trying to attain enlightenment by following words is as futile as trying to block winds with a net.

Student: “How can we aspire to attain enlightenment with the image of enlightenment?”

Master: “Enlightenment is the state free of images.”

©Boo Ahm

All writing ©Boo Ahm. All images ©Simon Hathaway

Zen

Angsan’s ‘the Owner of a Mirror’ (1)

When Master Angsan was a head monk, he received a letter and a mirror delivered from his master Wisan. Angsan, showing the mirror to the assembly, said, “Tell me whether this mirror belongs to me Angsan, or my master Wisan? If you say that this is Wisan’s, this is in my hand now. If you say that this is mine, this is what Wisan had delivered to me. If you can say, I’ll leave them alone, but if you can’t, I will break it.” No one could say the answer, and Angsan broke it by throwing it on the floor.

Student: “Who does the mirror belong to?”

Master: “Angsan showed him.”

Commentary:

Its owner has no concerns about appearance.

©Boo Ahm

All writing ©Boo Ahm. All images ©Simon Hathaway

Zen

The Diamond Sutra (51)

Part 14-9

“Subhuti, when I also recall the past when I was a wizard of patience for five hundred lives, I had no image of self, no image of person, no image of sentient being, no image of a liver of life during all that time as well.”

Commentary:

That when the Buddha was a wizard of patience, he had no image at all means that he didn’t have a difficult time bearing any suffering whatsoever because there was nothing to endure, since everything was empty to him.

Here the Buddha is telling us how to withstand the suffering, difficulties we are faced with in our daily lives.

The mundane way to withstand suffering is to put up with it and wait until it is resolved, or fades away with time. This implies that we cannot avoid difficulties until they ease. This is why we sometimes say that time heals all wounds. However, when they happen to overwhelm us due to our failure to control them, we can be faced with a lot of unexpected side effects.

However, the Buddhist way is not to put up with suffering but to realise that there is no suffering to withstand and that there is no one to bear any suffering by seeing both as empty.

Student: “If suffering is empty, then shouldn’t we see a doctor, or take medicine when we have physical problems?”

Master: “It’s up to you because all your choices are empty when everything is empty. The Buddha had food although hunger is empty.”

©Boo Ahm

All writing ©Boo Ahm. All images ©Simon Hathaway

Zen

Q. Does Zen meditation prevent undesirable things from happening, or help people to avoid them?

A. The core of Zen is not how to change, or how to avoid what happens to you and how to wait for what is happening to you to pass, but how to enjoy it by changing your perspective. The Buddha said that we sentient beings are floundering in the ocean because we cannot see things as they are.

He said that we create illusionary images and that we spend our lives chasing, or running away from them. In short, we are being deluded by illusions created by us. Zen meditation helps people to realise that all things we pursue, or try to avoid, are not real but illusionary.

©Boo Ahm

All writing ©Boo Ahm. All images ©Simon Hathaway

Zen

Jangsa’s ‘Original Being’

Master Jangsa called a monk by name, “Sangseo.” When Sangseo answered, “Yes” Jangsa said, “Sangseo is not the original being.” Sangseo asked, “Is there any other being but the one who is responding now?” Jangsa said, “Sangseo cannot be called the most venerable one.” Sangseo said, “Then, is that which never responds to you my original being?” Jangsa said, “It has been the source of birth and death not only when you answer, or when you don’t answer but also since time immemorial.”

Student: “What is Sangseo’s original being?”

Master: “Your original being.”

Student: “What is it?”

Master: “You can’t not only speak even a word but also move a finger without depending on it.”

Commentary:

Although a king never sows and harvests in person, all servants who sow and harvest depend on him.

©Boo Ahm

All writing ©Boo Ahm. All images ©Simon Hathaway

Zen

The Diamond Sutra (50)

Part 14-8

“Subhuti, the practice of patience, the Realised One says, is not practice of patience but it is just called the practice of patience.”

“Why? Subhuti, it is like when I was dismembered by King Kali long ago. At that time I had no image of self, no image of person, no image of sentient being, and no image of a liver of life. Why? When I was being dismembered in the past, if I had had an image of self, an image of person, an image of sentient being, and an image of a liver of life, I would have become angry and spiteful.”

Commentary:

As the Buddha said in the previous part 14-7, if the uppermost practice the Realised One expounds is not the uppermost practice; this is called the uppermost practice, it is natural that the practice of patience is not practice of patience; it is just called the practice of patience. Seen from this perspective, self, a person, sentient being and a liver of life are not self, a person, sentient being and a liver of life; these are just called self, a person, sentient being and a liver of life. Seeing and hearing everything in this way is referred to as seeing everything as it is, seeing everything as empty, or seeing the true-Self.

The Buddha could rise above becoming angry and spiteful because he was aware that King Kali was not King Kali; it was just called King Kali and that ‘dismember’ is not dismember but just called dismember, and because he had no image of self. From the Buddha’s perspective, there was no King Kali to dismember the Buddha and no Buddha for King Kali to dismember.  

Furthermore, there is no difference between King Kali and the Buddha since they are oneness as emptiness when they are seen as empty. In other words, King Kali is the true-Self when we see him as he is whilst he is a kind of Mara cruel enough to dismember the Buddha when we don’t see him as he is.

This is why an ancient master said that good news is hidden in King Kali.

Student: “Who is King Kali?”

Master: “It is he who breaks Oneness into many.”

Student: “Who suffers the pain when King Kali dismembers the Buddha?”

Master: “It is King Kali because he makes the error of cutting himself.”

©Boo Ahm

All writing ©Boo Ahm. All images ©Simon Hathaway

Zen

Q. Does the Buddha forgive us karma in return for our prayers in the same way Christians believe that God saves them from sin?

A. It is true that there seem to be a lot of Buddhists who have such a belief, but such a thing never happens. According to the Buddha’s teaching, there is no one else other than ourselves who not only makes karma but also can emancipate us from karma. In other words, sentient beings are struggling with suffering they created by wrapping themselves with invisible ropes. This is why ancient masters said that even thousands of saints cannot free us from the ropes unless we stop binding ourselves with such ropes.

To conclude, Buddhism is not a religion that teaches how to get blessed by praying to the Buddha but a religion that teaches people how to escape from the ropes, that is, how to realise that we are the perfect being as the Buddha.

©Boo Ahm

All writing ©Boo Ahm. All images ©Simon Hathaway

Zen

Master Jo’s ‘Emptiness and Form’ (2)

Master Jo said, “What can be called Emptiness is not true Emptiness, and what can be called form is not true form. True form is formless, and true Emptiness is nameless. What is nameless is the father of names, and what is formless is the mother of forms, the source of all things and the beginning of Sky and Earth.”

Student: “Why is true Emptiness nameless?”

Master: “Because it is formless and beyond words.”

Student: “Isn’t true form formless as well?”

Master: “Yes, this is why form is Emptiness and vice versa.”

Commentary:

Remember that Emptiness and form are also names.

©Boo AhmAll writing ©Boo Ahm. All images ©Simon Hathaway