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Joko Beck and the precious jewel

“…(T)he “path” of practice is not a smooth road.  It is littered with sharp rocks that can make us stumble or that can cut right through our shoes.  Life itself is hazardous.  Encountering the hazards is usually what brings people into Zen centers.  The path of life seems to be mostly difficulties, things that give trouble Yet the longer we practice, the more we begin to understand that those sharp rocks on the road are in fact like precious jewels; they help us prepare the proper conditions for our lives.”  (Nothing Special, Preparing the Ground by Charlotte Joko Beck)

Eddies2

Joko Beck’s Nothing Special was one of the first two books I read completely on Zen.  It grabbed me in a way that nothing had before.  There is a freshness and  simplicity in her teachings that makes the title so authentic: nothing special, just live well.  Picking it up tonight, I’m fascinated by two things in the passage above.  First, I’m struck by how complex I’ve made things in the 14 years since I first opened the book.  Talk about tripping up – or even throwing myself – on those sharp rocks!

Second, it’s interesting that my dharma name is “Genju” which is translated as “Precious Jewel”.  A dharma name is a gift a student receives from her teacher when she makes a formal commitment to practice as a Zen student.  To backtrack a moment, the teacher-student relationship is in itself an complicated gift – not just one that keeps on giving but one that is intricately packaged and a bear to unwrap!

The dharma name is like a reflection you’d see in one of those carefully placed mirrors where the reflection itself is reflected ad infinitum – student to teacher to student to teacher.  It can be a statement of one’s practice, a confirmation of what has been cultivated.  I particularly liked “True Joy of the Sangha” for a dharma friend who embodied that in every session.  It can be a challenge, a kind of raising of the bar.  That being said, I often thought a name like “True Thoughtful Silence” would have been a very useful gift for me.

Or a dharma name can be simply what it is: a reflection of what is true and transparent in one’s self.  Of course, as I read JB’s chapter on preparing the ground, I am filled with questions and self-doubt about Genju: cultivated skills? a higher bar to transcend? just me?  What does it mean to be the sharp rock or a precious jewel in cultivating my practice?  I find myself rejecting one, clinging to the other.

And I’m remembering an email from my dear roshi:

you are YOU.

Genju

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Feeding the turtles: Daido Loori and the cultivator of cultivators

An Evening at the Monastery (from The Heart of Being: Moral and Ethical Teachings of Zen Buddhism by John Daido Loori):

Q.  Why are so many people these days becoming Buddhists?

A. I don’t know.  I know why I did but I don’t know about anyone else…

My earliest memories of Buddhist practice are of my grandmother and I feeding turtles at the Botataung Pagoda pond.  For a few coins, you could buy a huge ball of popcorn that was fused together.  Breaking off a chunk at a time, I would throw it into the pond and watch the thrashing of the turtles as they decimated the food.  They seemed always hungry which was strange because in a day hundreds of people would feed them.  To us, it was a meritorious deed to feed the turtles especially since turtles and tortoises represented good fortune and wealth.  After the feeding of the turtles, we would sit at the base of the pagoda and listen to the monastics chanting the sutras.  We rarely chanted along.  My grandmother said it was because women were not pure enough to speak the sacred words.  I don’t think she really believed it because I would hear her muted accompaniment to the cadence of the monks.

Many decades later, after journeying with various teachers and through their traditions, I noticed that when under stress I would recite what seemed like meaningless phrases.  For the longest time I thought they were Burmese words to a nursery rhyme.

bo-tan-thatagan gai-ccami

I would repeat it over and over until the crisis passed or some other shiny thing took hold of my attention.  It never occurred to me to investigate it until I came across an audio tape of monastics chanting the Three Refuges.

Buddham saranam gacchami.

I take refuge in the Buddha

By then I was committed to the Zen path taught by Thich Nhat Hanh and fending off queries about when I had decided to become a Buddhist.  When did you take refuge? The answer seemed too hokey so I dodged the question: I’m an immigrant, not a refugee.

The truth is I don’t know when, where or how I came to this spot in my life.  I definitely don’t know who has arrived here.  And as much as I hate the why of any inquiry, it’s more likely to be the better question.

To me the “cultivator of cultivators” is zazen.  I trust zazen.  I trust zazen because I was probably the most deluded, confused, angry, antireligious person you could ever meet….  All I know is I found out about zazen.  In the beginning I did very little sitting.  Every time I finished a period of zazen, I cursed it.  I said it was stupid, a waste of time.  My legs hurt, yet the next day I would find myself sitting again.  The more I sat, the deeper I went.

Perhaps I sat zazen to connect with the lost container that was my family, my home, my culture.  Perhaps I sat zazen because it set me apart from the crowd.  Or maybe I sat zazen because it was an escape from the confusion of relationships and the consequences of my seemingly constant unskillfulness.  Perhaps I sat zazen because it was just there.

Perhaps it was all of the above.

And one day I saw a zen teacher’s assistant very gently arrange the teacher’s robes just before a dharma talk.  I knew I had sat long into that seeing.  And on another day many years later, someone said to me, How do you do that?  See things that way?

Initially I was practicing because I wanted to take pictures.  At that time I was a professional photographer, and my photography teacher, Minor White, told me that meditation helped him to “see” more clearly.  I wanted to “see” like Minor White saw, and if he had stood on his head, I would have stood on my head!  Fortunately, he did meditation.  So that is what I took up.  And it took me to the next step, and that took me to the next step, and finally I reached a point where, instead of fighting every step, I just relaxed into it and allowed it to unfold.  Zazen cultivates itself; that is why it is the cultivator of cultivators.

Now, I notice that when I arrange the robe of the Buddha’s teachings, even the turtles don’t seem to feed as frenetically.

Genju

Buddha