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fluid wisdom

I’m enjoying reading Steve Hagen’s Buddhism Plain & Simple.  Part of my final project for the Chaplaincy program is an exploration of different perspectives of the Four Noble Truths and his book was the only one in the Zen tradition I’ve read so far that takes an organized approach to teaching these fundamentals of the buddha-dharma.  (It’s an approach more typical of the Theravadin teachers.  But I’m sure it’s not the only Zen perspective to do so.  If you have any suggestions please let me know.) 

After a very compelling explanation of the first three Noble Truths, he begins to work on the Eight-fold Path with Right View.  By describing it as a fluid process, something constantly in motion, he opens the way to clearly see how we facilitate our mind of suffering through a false certainty about our reality. 

Take the banner picture of this post.  If asked, I would say, “Oh, that’s my apple tree in bloom.”  Actually, I did say that and watched my “are-you-sure-mind” kick in.  Well, it’s not really MY apple tree.  If it were I should be arrested for floral neglect given the minimal attention it’s received from me.  And actually, it’s not in bloom but perhaps blooming because even as I was playing around it, the sun was warming the buds coaxing them open.  Or maybe it wasn’t really blooming but dying because the wind was lifting petals off the stems and depositing them on the lawn. 

And all that would be wrong too.  It’s not an apple tree in bloom at all.  It’s a picture, a two-dimensional representation of a slice of time and space.  It’s a bracketed moment holding sensations of eyes, nose, hand, and desire.

Not too many books take me into these treacherous philosophical waters.  But I like it.

This is how we commonly deal with the world.  By our very attempt to grasp an explanation, we leave things out.  In just such a manner, to take any frozen view is to leave out a piece of Reality.  What we repeatedly fail to notice is that there is never a static object to observe – nor, for that matter, a static, clearly-defined observer.

Hagen goes on to point out the fallacy of a fixed identity and the pitfalls of latching onto it.  Frozen in static awareness, we become fearful and, through that fear, we adopt a rigid stance to our experience.  “I am” becomes the separator, the device to keep us from truly connecting with the world, relating to it in skillful ways.

It doesn’t have to be this way.  The fact is, I’m not anything in particular.  Nor are you. Nor is anyone.

Unknown's avatar

nectar

One of my favourite personages in Buddhist practice is Kuan Yin.  I love the idea of a drop of nectar that has the power to take away profound suffering.

Your pity is a shield from lightening,
Your compassion forms a wondrous cloud
Which, raining down the Dharma-nectar,
Extinguishes the flames of woe.

Lotus Sutra, translated by John Blofeld in Bodhisattva of Compassion: The mystical tradition of Kuan Yin

Some of you reading the post, “something about a goose” have been incredibly sweet in offering sips of nectar on the blog and back channel.  I’m so touched by your advice and sharing of your own process with anger and hurt.  What always impresses me is the way in which we find each other and touch this common humanity.  The first step with anger is to feel the underlying pain, the hurt, sadness, loss, and even death – be it of persons, objects or concepts.  And then the healing begins with the recognition that nothing is truly lost and, even if something disappears, relinquishes its current form, its true essence is never gone.

Martin Palmer and Jay Ramsay (with Man-Ho Kwok) wrote a fascinating book: Kuan Yin: Myths and prophecies of the Chinese Goddess of Compassion.  I read it a long time ago, so long that I’d forgotten they included a section on The 100 Quatrains of Kuan Yin.  Like the I Ching, the verses are used to guide us through whatever “flames of woe” we may be experiencing.  Quatrain 83 reminds me that there are things visible and things invisible in every moment.  More than that, the growth of light is inexorable.  We have to do nothing more than simply sit – and wait.

You can’t see the moon in its early new days
But isn’t it radiant, gold and round nevertheless?
Wait until mid-month for the Lighting of the Night –
And then its brightness fills the whole circle of the sky.

Taoism’s Wu Wei and I Ching’s Double Mountain point to the same truth.  There is deep and quiet power in stillness.  And, in the dissolution of the constructed self, the loss of ground is not the same as the loss of groundedness.

Thank you for your compassion and your faith in my capacity to restore myself to well-being.