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Sunday, September 28, 2008

Bodhi is far beyond all notions of good and evil



*note*..nice collection of buddhist style links..I do have an advantage I can speed read(this means I can read one page a second) otherwise reading all the links here would take you forever.
But I like this ,,

Bodhi is far beyond all notions of good and evil,
beyond all the pairs of opposites.
Daydreams are illusions and flowers in the sky never bloom.
They are figments of the imagination
and not worth your consideration.
- Seng T'san, Third Chan Patriarch

-added by danny-

............

Emptiness
in
Full Bloom

A Compendium of Quotes, Poetry, and Notes about "Flowers in the Sky."


Starting From Poetic Reflections
On Zen Master Eihei Dogen's
Flowers in the Sky
and other essays from
The Treasury of the Eye of True Teaching

By

Michael P. Garofalo

July 15, 2005

In a flaming burst,
they kiss the earth,
shout to the sky:
"White! Pink! Yellow!"
Orchards of plums and peaches,
Acres of mustard-greens.
From the Ten Directions:
"Spring brings on flowers,
Flowers bring on Spring."
(1)

Coming, here, gone:
Flowers in the Sky. (2)
In the blink of one false eye,
In the blink of One True Eye, (3)
Flowers in the empty sky;
Shimmering, scented ... gone,
Gone, gone, gone far beyond (4)
Their seeds of arising.
But, staying, Here-Now,
A Great Marvel of Manifestation. (5)
Bodhisvattas - for the bees.

Soil, sun, rain, sky ...
Four Elements embracing,
Intertwined in mind.
Unfathomable Matrix;
Scaffolds on scaffolds
Grounded in Otherness.
Below seeds, flowers, leaves,
stems, roots ...
Below wet cells embraced,
Below atoms dancing on Energy ...
Deeper and deeper below into
What? A Plenitude, sacredness.
Emptiness in full bloom.
Above seeds, flowers, leaves,
stems, roots ...
Above water, soil, air, sunlight ...
Above sensing, feeling, working, thinking ...
Higher and higher out towards
What? "Vast emptiness, nothing holy." (6)
Flowers in the sky.

Leaping from the Ledge of Infinite Regress,
The Unmoved Mover fell into Formlessness:
Pure silence echoed between the galaxies,
Eons of eons vanished in a second,
Withered trees bloomed in fires,
Polar mountains melted, rivers went dry,
Thusness scattered in sixty directions,
Space became Time, time became things,
Black Holes filled with Nirvana,
A billion samadhi mirrors shattered, (7)
Galaxies snuggled within a single skull,
Many became One, One only, only One. (8)
Then, the Divine Illuminatrix in All Beings
Opened Her clouded Eye, to see:
Flowers in the Sky.

He sat for weeks under the Bodhi Tree
Before the morning sun Opened his Eyes;
Lotus blossoms fell from the sky. (9)
She walked through the Gateless Gate,
Upright, staff in hand;
Plum blossoms opened across the land.
Gnawing on his koan bone,
Suddenly, the taste of insight--
Blue flowers amidst the gravesites.
She sat and sat,
Till yea was nay, and nay was yea;
While roses bloomed on day by day.

Illusions, delusions, foolishness:
Those flowers falling from the sky.
Only the Mind's Eyes
Wishing for otherwise;
As always, embracing fertile lies.
Spinning fictions over facts;
Mythmaking, playful, eager to act,
Seeing what we want to see,
Seeking, yeasaying, seeding, giving it a try.
Having faith in Flowers in the Sky.

These yellow poppies are time,
These green fruits of white flowers are time,
These brown seeds of orange fruits are time,
These gray leafless trees are time.
And the five fingers of one black hand are time,
And the blinking of two blue eyes are time.
The dirty garden hoe and hoses are time,
And greasy tractor gears are time. (10)


The snows on Mt. Shasta melt time,
Moving Mojave sand dunes cover time,
Cold ocean waves at Gold Bluffs cut time,
The onion seedlings in Salinas sweeten time,
The roaring Feather River rapids erode time;
Ventura flower fields color time. (11)

Remembering is time, forgetting is time.
Black lines of scripture are time,
Great and small doubts are time,
Hungry ghosts and naked demons are time,
Newborn Gods are time.
Death is time, and conception is time.
Vulgar time, broken time,
Our time, space-time, in time,
The Right time, before time, sublime time,
Standard time, beyond time, past time ...
Time and time again, (12)
Explaining All and not explaining any-thing.
From Being-Lost, with no abode, selfless, bone dry;
Comes the time-Now for the enlightened cry:
"Flowers in the Sky!"

Imagine what the Will can Do,
cannot do, will not do. Imagine more.
Please,
remove the offered flowers

from the great stone Buddha's hands,
before he's blown up at Bamiyan;
and the dust and stones flying high,
hide the flowers in the sky. (13)

The Buddha raised one flower
Sharing a silent sign;
Maha-Kasyapa smiled,
Keeping an open mind.
Truly eye to eye, free and kind,
Outside any scriptures, beyond the lies;
Fresh flowers in a sunny sky. (14)

To dance at the still point of the Time beyond time,
Beyond pasts, within futures, this Moment
Now and forever, beyond minds.
Not knowing of Who or why,
We stroll in rose gardens, and Love.
Precious flowers in the sky. (15)

Speechless, Dogen stared,
Shivering in a turning white world
Raising cold dawn moons.
Bright white millions on millions
Of drifting flowery flakes
Fell fast from the Echizen sky.
Ice pure, elemental, quintessential
Wet, imperfect, flowing time
Packed by the hour, deeper
Deeper down to Winter's core.
The Temple of Eternal Peace creaked,
Snowflakes gathered on Dogen's robe,
One icy crystal streaked the True Eye
Glimpsing into Itself;
Another transmission:
Frozen flowers in the sky.

To be continued ....

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Footnotes for Emptiness in Full Bloom


1. "Flowers in the Sky," Cleary, p. 71.

Where can you read Flowers in the Sky (Kuge) by Zen Master Dogen?

According to Yasuda Joshu and Anzan Hoshin, the lecture 'Flowers of Space'
was "presented to the assembly at Kannondori-Koshohorin-ji on May 10th, 1243.
Recopied by Ejo on January 27th, 1244 at the head monk's quarters in Kippo-ji;
copied again on August 28th, 1318 at the Guest Quarters of Eihei-ji."


Shobogenzo: Zen Essays by Dogen
. Translated by Thomas F. Cleary.
Honolulu, University of Hawaii Press, 1986. The short essay, Flowers in the Sky,
is found on pages 64-75. Shobogenzo means "Treasury of the Eye of True Teaching."
Zen Master Eihei Dogen lived from 1200 - 1253.

There is an on-line version of "Kuge: Flowers of Space" (33K) by Eihei Dogen zenji.
It is translated by Yasuda Joshu roshi and Anzan Hoshin sensei. Excerpted from the
forthcoming book Dogen: Zen Writings on the Practice of Realization.

Master Dogen's Shobogenzo. Translated by Gudo Nishijima and Chodo Cross
(Mike Cross). Windbell Publications Ltd., 1994-1999. 1st Edition. Four Volumes.
Volume 3. 1997. 306 pages. Contains: Chapters 42 to 72 of Shobogenzo.
Includes: The Moon, Flowers in Space, All Things and Phenomena Preach
Dharma, Daily Life, and Samadhi.

If the reader knows of other translations of "Flowers in the Sky," please send me the information.


2. The phrase "Flowers in the Sky" is most often italicized in the Cleary translation.
Dogen considers the use and meaning of the phrase by various Zen adepts. The phrase
flowers in the sky is variously interpreted to mean: Buddhist scriptures and teachings (p.67),
enlightenment (p. 68), "the ineffable mind of nirvana" (p. 68), all phenomena (p. 69),
beyond birth and death (p.69), visual disturbances caused by illness (p. 69),
emptiness, illusions, non-substantiality.


"Nirvana and life-death are flowers in the sky."
"Flowers in the Sky," Cleary, p. 72.

"Enlightenment, nirvana, the body of reality, inherent nature, and so on are a
few petals of the opening five petals of flowers in the sky."
"Flowers in the Sky," Cleary, p. 68.


3. "Flowers in the Sky," Cleary, p 75.


4. "Gaté, Gaté, Paragaté, Parasumgaté Bodhi Svaha!"

The Prajnaparamita is a great spiritual mantra,
a great wisdom mantra,
a supreme mantra,
an unequalled mantra.
It destroys all suffering,
because it is the incorruptible truth.
Hereafter, proclaim the great Prajnaparamita mantra:
"Gate, gate, paragate, Parasumgate bodhi, svaha."

- The Heart Sutra

5. "Flowers in the Sky," Cleary, p. 74.


6. "Vast emptiness, nothing holy" is a phrase attributed to the Bodhidharma (circa 525).
Refer to the Theosophy Library Notes on Bodhidrarma.

Originally, I came to this land
To rescue deluded people by transmitting the Dharma.
One flower will open with five petals
And the fruit will ripen by itself.
- Bodhidharma
"The Roaring Stream: A New Zen Reader," p. 9.

In the "Platform Stura of the Sixth Patriarch," by Huineng (638-713),
translated and edited by Philip Yampolsky (Columbia University Press, 1967),
Huineng says:

If evil flowers bloom in the mind-ground,
Five blossoms flower from the stem.
Together they will create the karma of ignorance;
Now the mind-ground is blown by the winds of karma.

If correct flowers bloom in the mind ground,
Five blossoms flower from the stem.
Together they practice the prajna wisdom;
In the future this will be the enlightement of the Buddha.


7. Enlightenment is basically not a tree,
And the clear mirror is not a stand.
Fundamentally there is not a single thing -
Where can dust collect.

- Huineng, Sixth Zen Patriarch in China, 638-713
Transmission of Light, Thomas Cleary, p. 140


8. The fundamental reality is one, undifferentiated, empty, beyond words, free, pure,
uncorrupted, non-dual.

"You should know that the sky is one plant."
"Flowers in the Sky," Cleary, p. 70.

9. The skillful teacher uses a variety of methods to bring the seeker's spirit into full
blossom. No one method works for everyone. Zazen, koans, chanting, prayer,
good works, pilgrimages, accidents, morality, love, a kick in the butt, church/sangha
participation, fainting spells, baptism ... whatever. All can cultivate a healthy soul;
all can rain flowers, all are flowers.


"At that moment of the fourth watch when the dawn came up and all that moves
was not stilled, the great seer reached the stage that knows no alteration, the
sovereign leader, the state of omniscience. When as the Buddha he knew this
truth the earth swayed like a person drunk with wine. The four quarters shone
bright with crowds of siddhas and mighty drums resounded in the sky. Pleasant

breezes blew softly and heaven rained moisture from a cloudless sky and from
the trees there dropped flowers and fruit out of due season as if to do him honor.
At that time, just as in paradise, the mandarala flowers, lotuses and water lilies of
gold and beryl fell from the sky and bestrewed the place of the Shakya sage."
- Ashvaghosa, Sanskrit poet
Quoted by Zoketsu Norman Fischer in his Talk Six

"All that is said about the Buddha Way is spoken for ordinary people, and if there
were not any ordinary people, then the Buddha Way would not be of any use.
Thus it is called unconditioned. Unconditioned dharmas neither arise nor are
extinguished. They neither come into being nor disappear. They are not real
and actual; they are unreal, like a vision of flowers in space. Thus the Buddha
sees the Buddha Way as being like flowers in space. "

- Source Lost

10. "There should be no inanity about existence or nonexistence confusing the
context of the time of the flowers. It is like flowers always being imbued
with colors: the colors are not necessarily limited to flowers, and the times
also have colors such as green, yellow, red and white. Spring brings on
flowers, flowers bring on spring."

"Flowers in the Sky," Cleary, p. 70.

Refer to 11 below, for more about Dogen's views on being-time.

"The roots and stems, branches and leaves, blossoms and fruits, luster and color
of the flowers in the sky are all the blooming of the flowers in the sky. Sky flowers
also produce sky fruits and give out sky seeds. ... It is this true characteristic
of all things. It is this flower characteristic of all things. All things, ultimately
unfathomable, are flowers and fruits in the sky."

"Flowers in the Sky," Cleary, p. 72.

Attention to detail, full awareness, and properly caring for the "things" of our world
(i.e., our bodies, clothing, food, tools, gardens, home, music, books, motorcycles,
tea utensils, etc.) is at the core of the fine and applied arts infused with the Zen spirit.

11. The magnificient scenery of California has been a source for inspiration for
many modern poets: Robert Creeley, Robert Haas, Robinson Jeffers, Kenneth
Rexroth, Adrienne Rich, Gary Snyder, Gary Soto, etc..
For example, in the vein
of a California and Zen influenced work, how about
Gary Snyder's fine "Mountains and
Rivers Without End":

"crows whuff over almond blossoms
beehives sit tight between fruit tree ranks
eucalyptus boughs shimmer in the wind--- a pale blue hip-roof
house behind a weathered fence---
crows in the almonds
trucks on the freeways,
Kenworth, Peterbilt, Mack,
rumble diesel depths,
like boulders bumping in an outwash glacial river

drumming to a not-so-ancient text"

- Gary Snyder, "Mountains and Rivers Without End," p. 66
(Washington, D.C., Counterpoint, 1996).

This collection of poems will inspire a good deal of commentary.
For example, "Gary Snyder, Dogen, and 'The Canyon Wren.'"

See also: The Geography of Home: California's Poetry of Place.
Selected and edited by Christopher Buckley and Gary Young.
Berkeley, Heyday Books, 1999.

12. Dogen's views on being and time are found in his seminal essay "The Time-Being" or
or "Existence-Time" or "Uji."


"So the pine tree is time, the bamboo is time."
- Dogen's Being-Time from a translation at Zen in Daily Life. Translation by Professor Masunaga Reiho
(1901-1981)


"The way the self arrays itself is the form of the entire world. See each thing in
this entire world as a moment of time. ... Grass-being, form-being are both time. "
- "Moon in a Dewdrop," p. 77. Translated by Dan Welch and Kazuaki Tanahashi.


"The rat is time, the tiger is time too. Living beings are time. Buddhas are time too.
This time witnesses the whole world with three heads and eight arms, it witnesses
the whole world with the sixteen fooot tall golden body."
- Shobogenzo: Zen Essays by Dogen, p. 106. Translated by Thomas Cleary.

"... because self and other are already time. Practice-enlightenment is time. Being
splattered with mud and getting wet with water is time."
- "Moon in a Dewdrop," p. 78. Translated by Dan Welch and Kazuaki Tanahashi.


"Being and time are the Activity of Aware Space.
Time is Activity: the radiance of Knowing expressing itself as spaces which are active as
forms, as beings, as knowns."
- Wild Time: Commentaries on Dogen zenji's Being Time. By Ven. Anzan Hoshin.

"Mind is the moment of actualizing the fundamental point; words are the moment
of going beyond, unlocking the barrier. Arriving is the moment of casting off
the body; not-arriving is the moment of being one with just this, while being free
from just this. In this way you must endeavor to actualize the time-being."
- "Moon in a Dewdrop," p. 82. Translated by Dan Welch and Kazuaki Tanahashi.

"So the real time human beings can live is only the moment at the present moment.
Therefore Master Dogen insisted the third principle, action at the present moment.
His expression is 'Instantaneousness of this world'. So the idea that our life is just
action at the present moment means also, the world where we live is existence at
the present moment. So the 'World' or 'Universe' or 'Dharma' is also instantaneous,
it is not eternal. It exists at the present moment, now, now, now."
- Nishijima Roshi, Lecture 2, 1996

Readings on Existence-Time:


Concrescence and Pratityasamutpada A comparsion of A.N. Whitehead and Dogen's views on time. 12K.


Dogen's Ideas of Time. 56K


Enlightenment and Time: An examination of Nagarjuna's Concept of Time. By Anthony Birch. 32K.


Existential and Ontological Dimensions of Time in Heidegger and Dogen. By Steven Heine.
State University of New York Press, 1985. 202 pages.


B-Series Temporal Order in Dogen's Theory of Time. By Dirck Vorenkamp. 75K


Moon in a Dewdrop: Writings of Zen Master Dogen
. Edited by Kazuaki Tanahashi. North Point
Press, 1995. 356 pages. Uji is on pp. 76-83.


Temporality of Hermeneutics in Dogen's Shobogenzo. By Steven Heine. 33K


Shobogenzo: Zen Essays by Dogen
. Translated with commentary by Thomas Cleary.
University of Hawaii Press, 1992. 132 pages. Being-Time, pp. 104-109.


Uji,l'être-temps selon Dogen, traduction et commentaires Luc Boussard.
Deux versants: Zen and Art. 25K


Uji. Ser-tiempo (Uji) del maestro zen Dogen. raducción española por Francisco José Ramos.


Wild Time: Commentary on Dogen zenji's Being Time. By Anzan Hoshin sensei. 21K.


Zen in Daily Life. Includes a translation of Uji.

O joy!
Winter's gone;
The blooming peach tree
Sends me confetti.

- Albert de Neuville
Haikais et Tankas, Epigrammes a la Japonaise, 1908

13. In March 2001, a few Islamic Taliban leaders in Afghanistan ordered their soldiers
to blow up the huge ancient stone statues of the "infidel" Buddha at Bamiyan. This
artless act of purification was reported in the press, e.g., Newslook. Some troubled
men want everyone to believe in only one kind of flower in the sky.

14. The following story is widely told in Zen circles:

"The Zen legend of the beginning of the Zen transmission is that once
before an assembly Shakyamuni Buddha said nothing but held up a flower
and winked -- no one understood but the chief disciple
Maha-Kasyapa, who smiled. Buddha said,
"I have the treasury of the eye of true teaching,
the ineffable mind of nirvana, the true form, which is formless -
this I hand on to Maha-Kasyapa."

- Thomas Cleary, Shobogenzo: Zen Essays by Dogen, p. 75.

"Once when the World-Honoured One, in ancient times, was upon
Mount Grdhrakuta, he held up a flower before the congregation of
monks. At this time all were silent, but the Venerable Kasyapa only
smiled. The World-Honoured One said, "I have the Eye of the True
Law, the Secret Essence of Nirvana, the Formless Form, the Mysterious
Law-Gate. Without relying upon words and letters, beyond all
teaching as a special transmission, I pass this all on to Mahakasyapa."

- Translation by R. H. Blyth, Mumonkan, Zen and Zen Classics, Volume Four, p. 76.

15. T. S. Eliot, Four Quartets. New York, Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1943.
See "Burnt Norton, " I -III.

Additional Research Notes

Flowers in the Sky or Flowers Falling from the Sky


Guatama Siddhahartha, The Buddha, upon his enlightenment.
See writing by Ashvaghosa, the Sanskrit poet. Quoted by Zoketsu Norman Fischer in his Talk Six.

Orgyen Trinley, the 17th Tibetan Buddhist Karmapa. A reported miracle of flowers falling from the sky.

Numerous references in Hindu scriptures to flowers falling from the sky.
Rudradvipa 1

Customs and celebrations including throwing flowers up into the sky. Consider confetti falling.
"Apsaras are the most popular heavenly beings in the Dunhuang caves. They play music or
throw flowers in the sky when the Buddha gives sermon to believers. In ancient Buddhist
texts, they were named Kinnara and Gandharva. They are now commonly called Feitian
(Flying Beings) in Chinese literature." Dunhuang Art, by Ning Qiang.

Flowers in the Sky: Illusory images seen by those with eye-diseases; metaphorically, all that
are perceived and conceived by unenlightened people are delusory phantoms like flowers in the sky.
Glossary of Buddhist Terms

"Strictly speaking, there should be no worship involved at all because all Buddhist deities are only
symbolic personifications of the all-embracing Truth. They are just as illusionary as you or I, like
flowers in the sky, or the moon in the lake. Like a mirage, a dream, an echo or lightning, they
possess no real natures of their own. Why worship something that is not real? Therefore know
that Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara cannot be found anywhere except in the Lotus of Compassion
within our Hearts." Hall of Fire

"Devas, on seeing this display of the three perfections, namely, grace, glory and wealth,
showered down a rain of flowers." Atisha's Journey to Suvarnadvipa

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Links and Bibliography

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Zen Master Eihei Dogen
January 12, 1200 - September 29, 1253

About Dogen Zenji. By Professor Masunaga. 20K. Key Dates Portrait A


Actualizing the Fundamental Point. (Genjo Koan) 1233. Translated by Robert Aitken
and Kazuaki Tanahashi. 10K.


All Things Zen. Useful for comments on Nagarjuna and Hui-neng. 200K+


Beyond Sanity and Madness: The Way of Zen Master Dogen. By Dennis Genpo Merzel.
Charles E. Tuttle Co., 1994. 276 pages.


Bibliography 14K.


The Bodymind Experience in Dogen's Shobogenzo: A Phenomenological Perspective.
By David E. Shaner. 74K.


B-Series Temporal Order in Dogen's Theory of Time. By Dirck Vorenkamp. 75K


Buddha Nature, Buddha Practice: Reflections on Dogen's Shobogenzo. By Carl Bielefeldt. 46K.


Buddhism - Glossary


Chan and Zen References and Links


Cold Mountain Buddhas


Dead Words, Living Words, and Healing Words The Disseminations of Dogen and Eckhart.
By David R. Loy. 50K.


Dogen Portraits of Dogen; and a Dogen bibliography linked to booksellers. 28K.


Dogen and the Meaning of Zen. 22K


Dogen Cubed. Dharma Talk by Bonnie Myotai Treace Sensei. 17K.


Dogen on Dream-Making Within Dreams By Robert L. Seltman. 4K.


Dogen's Ideas of Time. From the book "The Soto Approach to Zen." 56K


Dogen - Portrait, Bibliography and Links


Dogen's "Ceaseless Practice." By Daniel Zelinski. 44K.


Dogen's Reflecting Pool 17K


Dogen's Seven Principles. Based upon comments by Taisen Deshimaru Roshi. 11K.


Dogen Studies. Translations of 5 essays by Dogen.


Dogen Studies. Edited by William R. LaFleur. Honolulu, 1985.


Dogen Studies - A Bibliography


Dogen Zen and Soto Zen Links and references. 44K


Dogen Zenji's Genjo-koan Lecture By Shohaku Okumura. 24K.


Dogen Zen Papers Nine papers were presented to the symposium "Dogen Zen and
Its Relevance for Our Time", Stanford University, October 23-24, 1999. Summary of
the symposium.


Eiheiji Temple. Founded by Dogen Zenji in 1244. "Eiheiji ,the "temple of eterneal peace," is one the Soto Zen's
two head temples. It is located deep in the mountains near the rugged west coast of Japan, not far from Fukui City."


Emptiness in Buddhism and Theosophy. 14K.


Emptiness - Links 27K


Emptiness in Full Bloom. A metaphysical poem stemming from reflections on Zen Master Dogen's "Flowers of Space." Includes detailed notes. By Michael P. Garofalo. 2001.


Enlightenment Unfolds: The Essential Teachings of Zen Master Dogen. Edited by Kazuaki Tanahashi.
Shambhala Publications, 1999. 368 pages.


Existence
. Based on Master Dogen's Shobogenzo, Book 2, "Bussho," translated by Gudo Nishijima
and Chodo Cross. 52K.


Existential and Ontological Dimensions of Time in Heidegger and Dogen. By Steven Heine.
State University of New York Press, 1985. 202 pages.


Face to Face: The Meaning Comes Alive. By Jiko Linda Cutts. 20K.


Flowers in the Sky "Emptiness in Full Bloom" by Michael P. Garofalo. Poetic reflections on
Zen Master Dogen's "Flowers of Space." Includes notes, bibliography, related quotations,
references, links and metaphysical poem. 2001. 120K+.


Flowers of Emptiness: Selections from Dogen's Shobogenzo. Translated with essay by
Hee-Jin Kim. Edwin Mellen Press, 1985. 350 pages. This is volume 2 of a three volume edition by
Hee-Jin Kim.


From the Zen Kitchen to Enlightenment - Refining You Life
. By Zen Master Dogen. Translated by
Kosho Uchiyama and Thomas Wright. Weatherhill. 122 pages.


Flowers of Space: Kuge


Fukanzazengi. 9K.


Genjo Koan: Actualizing the Fundamental Point. 10K.


Glossary. The Whole Aoinagi Glossary. 102K

Hokke-ten-Hokke By Dogen, 1241, 36K.


How to Raise and Ox: Zen Practice as Taught in Master Dogen's Shobogenzo.
By Francis Dojun Cook.
Boston, Wisdom Publications, 2002. 180 pages.


Intellectualizing Buddhism. By John Dwyer. 20K.


Introduction to the Shobogenzo. By Gudo Wafu Nishijima. In French. 101K.


Katagiri Dharma Talks. Talks by Dainin Katagiri Roshi. 41K.


Kego Arrays "We use the word "kego", a Japanese word used by Eihei Dogen to
denote phenomena that appear. Kego is also translated as "sky flowers" or "space flowers".


Kuge: Flowers of Space. By Eihei Dogen zenji. Translated by Yasuda Joshu roshi and Anzan Hoshin
sensei. Excerpted from the forthcoming book "Dogen: Zen Writings on the Practice of Realization." 33K.


Lectures and Articles by Nishijima Roshi 300K+


Living with Dôgen: Thoughts on the Relevance of His Thought By Carl Bielefeldt. 6K.


Mahayana Buddhism versus Materialism


Master Dogen's Shobogenzo. Translated by Gudo Nishijima and Chodo Cross (Mike Cross).
Windbell Publications Ltd., 1994-1999. 1st Edition. Four Volumes.
Book 1. 1994. 376 pages. Contains: Chapters 1 to 21 of Shobogenzo. Including: Being-Time,
Sutra of Mountains and Waters, The Realized Universe, Mind Here and Now is Buddha.
Book 2. 1996. 320 pages. Contains: Chapters 22 to 41 of Shobogenzo. Including: Buddha Nature,
Great Realization, This, Conduct and Observance.
Book 3. 1997. 306 pages. Contains: Chapters 42 to 72 of Shobogenzo. Including: The Moon,
Flowers in Space, All Things and Phenomena Preach Dharma, Daily Life, and Samadhi.
Book 4. 1999. 280 pages. Contains: Chapters 73 to 95 of Shobogenzo. Including: Great Practice,
Life and Death, Transcending Family Life.


The Mind of Dogen 18K.


Moon in a Dewdrop: Writings of Zen Master Dogen. Edited by Kazuaki Tanahashi. North Point
Press, 1995. 356 pages.


The Notion of Emptiness in Early Buddhism. By Choong Mun-keat (Wei-keat). 2nd revised edition.
Vedams eBooks, India, 1999. 132 pages.


One Bright Pearl By Dogen. Translated by Francis H. Cook. 13K. Mirror Version (Ikka Myoju)


On Zen Language and Zen Paradoxes By John King-Farlow. 41K.


The Path of No-Path: Sankara and Dogen on the Paradox of Practice. By David Loy. 81K.


Philosophical Terms in Dogen By Mark Unno. 13K


A Portrait of Dogen Zenji


The Postmodern: Tracy, Taylor and Dogen. By Charl le Roux. 58K.


The Practice of Zazen. By Dogen. 40K.


Primer of Soto Zen. Dogen's Shobogenzo Zuimonki translated by Reiho Masumaga.
University of Hawaii Press, 1975. 128 pages.


Pure Land Buddhism and Dogen's Zen Buddhism. By Mark Unno. 14K.

Rational Zen: The Mind of Dogen Zenji. Translated with commentary by Thomas Cleary.
Shambhala Publications, 1992. 236 pages.


Remarks on the 800th Anniversary of Dogen Zenji's Birth. By Abbess Zenkei Blanche Hartman. 22K.


Rock Samadhi. By John McClellan. See also: Nondual Ecology. 350K+.


Green Way Blog by Michael P. Garofalo

Shasta Abbey - California


Shobogenzo: Zen Essays by Dogen. Translated with commentary by Thomas Cleary.
University of Hawaii Press, 1992. 132 pages.


Shobogenzo Zuimonki: Sayings of Eihei Dogen Zenji. Translated and commentary by Koun Ejo
and Okumara. Wisdom Books, 1987. 236 pages.


Shurangama Sutra. Translated during the Tang Dynasty by Shramana Paramiti from central India.
Reviewed by Shramana Meghashika from Uddiyana 110K+


Shurangama Sutra, Volume Four Translated by the Buddhist Text Translation Society. 31K


Study of Dogen: His Philosophy and Religion. By Masao Abe. Wisdom Books, 1992. 252 pages.


Sunyata: The Emptiness of All Things


Time in Madhyamika Buddhism and Modern Physics. By Victor Mansfield. 51K. Version2.


To Transmit Dogen Zenji's Dharma. By Otani Tetsuo. 26K.


Truth and Zen. By T. P. Kasulis. 47K.


Uji. L'être-temps selon Dogen. Traduction et commentaire Luc Boussard. 25K


Wild Time: Commentary on Dogen zenji's Being Time. By Anzan Hoshin sensei. 21K.


Zen in Daily Life. Zen teacher Dogen and the Soto Approach to Zen. A extensive website about
Dogen with many essays, commentaries, links, and text translations. Dedicated to the work of
Professor Masunaga Reiho (1901-1981), and Dan Waxman.


Zen is Eternal Life. By Roshi Jiyu-Kennet. Wisdom Books, 2000. 376 pages.


Zen Master Dôgen: An Introduction with Selected Writings. By Yuho Yokoi.
New York, Weatherhill, 1976.


The Zen Philosopher A review article on Dogen scholarship in English. By T. P. Kasulis. 80K.


Zen Poetry. Compiled by Michael P. Garofalo. 300K+

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Relevant Quotations

This "wanting to know" and "are not" are manifestations
of the wondorous, they are great wonders. The meaning of
"sky flowers" and "earth flowers" spoken of by the
Buddhas and Ancestors is "graceful play."

- Dogen, "Flowers of Space"
Translated by Yasuda Joshu and Anzan Hoshin

Want to know and are not are the marvel of manifestation,
are a great marvel. The doctrine of sky flowers and earth
flowers spoken by all the Buddhas and Zen Adepts is such
a flashing of style.

- Dogen, Flowers in the Sky, p. 75
Translated by Thomas Cleary

Flowers - Selected Quotations

Everything
just as it is,
as it is,
as is.
Flowers in bloom.
Nothing to add.

- Robert Aitken, Roshi, As it Is

The Oak Tree in the Courtyard

"If you rub your eyelids with your fingers, then stare towards a
light with your eyes closed, great splotches of colour will change
shape, and if you let your imagination work on them, they will
turn into almost anything you want. Poetry aims at the same
sort of effect; so does music."

- Colin Wilson
Poetry and Mysticism, 1970, p. 49

Bodhi is far beyond all notions of good and evil,
beyond all the pairs of opposites.
Daydreams are illusions and flowers in the sky never bloom.
They are figments of the imagination
and not worth your consideration.
- Seng T'san, Third Chan Patriarch
Hsin-hsin-ming

Vegetable Nirvana

"In truth, all objects exist only as sets of relationships or dependencies--
between various objects and between the object and the knower who
mentally designates them. No core of self-nature or intrinsic essence
supports our names, linguistic conventions, and projections. Nothing
exists "underneath" our imputations or mental designations. Objects
are none other than dependency relationships and names. In other
words, all phenomena exist as a species of dependent arising--
dependent upon causes and conditions,
whole and part, and mental designation."

- Time in Madhyamika Buddhism and Modern Physics. By Victor Mansfield.

Spirituality in the Garden

Ku means "the sky," or "space," and ge means "flowers." What are flowers in
space? Master Dogen uses the words "flowers in space" to express all phenomena
in this world. According to the ideas of the German philosopher Immanuel Kant,
we cannot be sure whether things really exist in this world, but we can be sure
that there are phenomena which we can perceive with our senses. Therefore, for
him, phenomena are not necessarily identified with reality although they do
actually appear in this world. He refused to discuss the metaphysical problem of
"real existence" and based his philosophy on human reason. The same idea was
present in ancient Buddhism. Master Dogen thought that this skeptical attitude was
important in considering the meaning of our life, and so in this chapter he
explains the meaning of "flowers in space," which in Buddhism expresses real
phenomena.

- Kuge: Flowers in Space Shobogenzo, Book 3
Lectures and Articles by Nishijima Roshi

Well versed in the Buddha way,
I go the non-Way
Without abandoning my
Ordinary person’s affairs.

The conditioned and
Name-and-form,
All are flowers in the sky.

Nameless and formless,
I leave birth-and-death.

- Layman P’ang (740-808), Zen Poems

Zen Poetry: Links, Bibliography, Studies, Selected Quotations

Only insentient beings hear the sermon of insentient beings;
Walls and fences cannot instruct the grasses and trees to
actualize spring,
Yet they reveal the spiritual without intention, just by being
what they are,
So too with mountains, rivers, sun, moon, and stars.

- Dogen,
Translated by Steven Heine
The Zen Poetry of Dogen, 1997, p. 141

Out the tap, from a source
three hundreed feet down, so close
I feel the shudder of the earth, water
spills over my hands, over the scallions
still bound in a bunch from the store.
I had thought to make salad, each element
cut to precision, tossed at random
in the turning bowl. Now I lay my knife
aside. I consider the scallions. I consider
the invisible field. Emptiness is bound
to bloom-- the whole earth, a single flower.

- Margaret Gibson
"Making Salad"
Out in the Open (LSU Press, 1989)

Consider the person who, because of cataracts, saw flowers in space.
Once the cataracts were removed, the flowers in space disappeared.
Were he to rush to the spot where the flowers disappeared
and wait for them to reappear,
would you consider that person to be stupid or wise?"
Purna said, "Originally there weren’t any flowers in space.

It was through a seeing disability that they appeared and disappeared.
To see the disappearance of the flowers in space is already a distortion.
To wait for them to reappear is sheer madness.
Why bother to determine further if such a person is stupid or wise?"
The Buddha said, "Since you explain it that way,

why do you ask if the clear emptiness of wonderful enlightenment
can once again give rise to the mountains, the rivers, and the great earth? "

- Shurangama Sutra, Volume Four
Translated by the Buddhist Text Translation Society, 1998. 31K

Shariputra,
Form does not differ from emptiness;
Emptiness does not differ from form.
Form itself is emptiness;
Emptiness itself is form.
So too are feeling, cognition, formation, and consciousness.

- Heart Sutra

Form is form. Emptiness is emptiness.
- Dogen Zenji, Shobogenzo: Makahannya-Haramitsu

Ananda, suppose a person with clear vision were to gaze at clear bright space.
His gaze would perceive only clear emptiness devoid of anything else.
Then if that person for no particular reason fixed his gaze, the staring would cause fatigue.
Thus in empty space he would see illusory flowers and other illusory and disordered unreal appearances.

- Shurangama Sutra, Volume Three
Translated by the Buddhist Text Translation Society

The Buddha told Manjushri and the great assembly, "To the Tathagatas and the great Bodhisattvas of the ten directions, who dwell in this samadhi, seeing and the conditions of seeing, as well as thoughts regarding seeing, are like flowers in space—fundamentally
non-existent. This seeing and its conditions are originally the wonderful pure bright substance of Bodhi. How could one inquire into its existence or non-existence?

- Shurangama Sutra.
Translated during the Tang Dynasty by Shramana Paramiti from central India.

By this glass filled with darkness to the brim
and this heart that's never full,
let us praise the Lord, maker of Nothingness,
who carved our reason out of faith.

- Antonio Machado
Siesta: In Memory of Abel Martin

fluttering down
mulch for the garden...
cherry blossoms

- Kobayashi Issa
Translated by David G. Lanoue

"Shariputra, All Things Are
Empty Appearances
.....

It's like rubbing your eyes to make yourself see flowers in the air.
If all things don't exist to begin with, what do we want with
'empty appearances'? He is defecating and spraying pee
all over a clean yard.

The earth, its rivers and hills, are castles in the air;
Heaven and hell are bogey bazaars atop the ocean waves.
The 'pure' land and 'impure' world are brushes of turtle hair,
Nirvana and samsara, riding whips carved from rabbit horn."

- Zen Words for the Heart; Hakuin's Commentary on the Heart Sutra, p. 37
Translated by Norman Waddell.


By "mystical" I mean here a view of the natural world that sees it
not simply as empty dharmas but as the expression, or embodiment
of a sacred order, that sees the mountains and rivers of this apparent
world as participating in, or communicating with, higher realms hidden
from view, in the heavens and beyond. Here, the dharmas come
together in a cosmic whole; here, emptiness comes alive as Vairocana,
whose body, speech, and thought generate and enliven all things. As
conscious processes of the living cosmic body, the walking and talking
of mountains and rivers become more than metaphors, and "grasses
and trees become buddhas".
- Carl Bielefeldt, Buddha Nature, Buddha Practice

Like the Chinese masters before him, he singles out discursive thought
as a series of empty reflexes, “flowers in the sky,” comprised of reflection (gigi)
and deliberation (shoryo). These flowers are to be discarded, not just because
they are the knee-jerk mechanisms that Wilson claims they are, but because
they serve as an obstacle to the moonlike vision mentioned before, the “original
face,” or “honrai menmoku”.
- The Mind of Dogen

Two come about because of One,
but don't cling to the One either!
So long as the mind does not stir,
the ten thousand things stay blameless;
no blame, no phenomena,
no stirring, no mind.

The viewer disappears along with the scene,
the scene follows the viewer into oblivion,
for scene becomes scene only through the viewer,
viewer becomes viewer because of the scene.

- Seng-ts'an, 600
Hsin-Hsin-Ming: Inscription on Trust in the Mind
Translated by Burton Watson
Found in Entering the Stream, p. 149

Enlightenment, nirvana, the body of reality, inherent nature,
and so on are a few petals of the opening five petals of
flowers in the sky.

- Dogen, Flowers in the Sky, p. 68
Translated by Thomas Cleary


Is there no change of death in paradise?
Does ripe fruit never fall? Or do the boughs
Hang always heavy in that perfect sky,
Unchanging, yet so like our perishing earth,
With rivers like our own that seek for seas
They never find, the same receding shores
That never touch with inarticulate pang?
Why set the pear upon those river-banks
Or spice the shores with odors of the plum?

- Wallace Stevens, Sunday Morning, 1915

For thirty years I have been in search of the swordsman;
Many a time have I watched the leaves decay
and the branches shoot!
Ever since I saw for once the peaches in bloom,
Not a shadow of doubt do I cherish.

- Ling-Yün and the Peach Blossoms
D.T. Suzuki, Essays in Zen Buddhism, 1953, 2nd Series, p. 145,

Cherry trees will blossom every year;
But I'll disappear for good,
One of these days.

- Philip Whalen, 1923 - June 26, 2002
Zen priest, Abbot of San Francisco Hartfort Street Zen Center
Beat poet

Shakyamuni held up a lotus
so Kashyapa smiled.
Not at all.
The lotus smiled
so Kashyapa smiled.

Nowhere was Shakyamuni!

- Beyond the Self: A Smile, Ko Un

Subhuti was Buddha's disciple. He was able to understand the potency of emptiness,
the viewpoint that nothing exists except in its relationship to subjectivity and objectivity.

One day Subhuti, in a mood of sublime emptiness, was sitting under a tree. Flowers
began to fall about him.

"We are praising you for your discourse on emptiness," the gods whispered to him.

"But I have not spoken of emptiness," said Subhuti.

"You have not spoken of emptiness, we have not heard of emptiness," responded the
gods. "This is the true emptiness." And blossoms showered upon Subhuti as rain.

- Zen Flesh, Zen Bones, Compiled by Paul Reps, 1957, p. 63

"[After Llew is slain]...The Welsh myth concludes with Gwydion pursuing the faithless
Blodeuwedd through the night sky, and a path of white flowers springs up in the wake
of her passing, which we today know as the Milky Way. When Gwydion catches her, he
transforms her into an owl, a fitting symbol of autumn, just as her earlier association with
flowers (she was made from them) equates her with spring. Thus, while Llew and Goronwy
represent summer and winter, Blodeuwedd herself represents both spring and fall, as patron
goddess of flowers and owls, respectively."

- The Death of Lllew - A Seasonal Interpretation
Mike Nichols

How joyful it is! From kalpa to kalpa is the Flower of Dharma, and from noon
to night, even though our own body-and-mind grows strong and grows weak,
it is just the Flower of Dharma itself. The reality that exists as it is is a treasure,
is brightness, is a seat of truth, is wide, great, profound, and eternal, is profound,
great, and everlasting, is mind in delusion, the Flower of Dharma turning, and is
mind in realization, turning the Flower of Dharma, which is really just the
Flower of Dharma turning the Flower of Dharma.

When the mind is in the state of delusion, the Flower of Dharma turns.
When the mind is in the state of realization, we turn the Flower of Dharma.
If perfect realization can be like this,
If perfect realization can be like this,
The Flower of Dharma turns the Flower of Dharma.

- Zen Master Dogen, 1241, Hokke-ten-Hokke

The wonderful Universe which is like flowers
Is moving the wonderful Universe
Which is like flowers itself.

In the real world, it is impossible to attain true happiness, final and eternal contentment. For
these are visionary flowers in the air; mere fantasies. In truth, they can never be actualized.
In fact, they must not be actualized. Why? If such ideas were actualized, the search for the
real meaning of our existence would cease. If that happened, it would be the spiritual end
of our being, and life would seem too foolish to live.
- Arthur Schopenhauer

Well versed in the Buddha Way,
I go the non-Way
Without abandoning my
Ordinary person's affairs.
The conditioned and
Name-and-Form,
All are flowers in the sky.
Nameless and formless,
I leave birth-and death.
- Pang Yun, Two Zen Classics, p.263

All beings are flowers
Blooming
In a blooming universe.
- Nakagawa Soen Roshi

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Haiku Poetry
Links, Bibliography, Guides, Poems

Cuttings
Short Poems by Michael P. Garofalo
Haiku, Couplets, Free Verse, Senryu, Quatrains, Fragments
One to Ten Line Poems

Comments About the Poetry Webpages of Mike Garofalo



Zen Poetry

Quotes for Gardeners
and Lovers of the Green Way

Quotes, Sayings, Proverbs, Poetry, Maxims, Quips, Clichés, Adages, Wisdom
A Collection Growing to Over 2,700 Quotes Arranged by Over 130 Topics
Over 6 Megabytes of Text

Many of the Documents Include Recommended Readings and Internet Links.
Compiled by Michael P. Garofalo

The Spirit of Gardening




Copyrighted © 2002 - 2003 by Michael P. Garofalo. All rights reserved.

I Welcome Your Comments, Ideas, Contributions, and Suggestions
E-mail Mike Garofalo in Red Bluff, California


A Short Biography of Michael P. Garofalo


Poetry Notebook III of Michael P. Garofalo
Zen Poetry: Emptiness in Full Bloom
143K, 12 May 2003, Version 1.4

Parts of this document have been published at:

NonDuality Salon Highlights, 2002

The Spirit of Gardening

Quotes for Gardeners

The History of Gardening Timeline

Haiku and Zen Poetry: Links, References, Guides, Studies, Selections

Haiku and Short Poems by Michael P. Garofalo

Zen Poetry

Main Menu
Emptiness in Full Bloom

Flowers in the Sky (Kuge) by Dogen

Links and Bibliography

Emptiness in Full Bloom: A Metaphysical Poem

Footnotes for Emptiness in Full Bloom

Related Information

Zen Poetry: Links, Bibliography, Studies, and Selected Verses

Being -Time



Thursday, September 25, 2008

I'll tell you something true


*note*..this is the , "bare necessities" song from Disney Jungle Book..lol...
-added by danny-
.................



.............
Look for the bare necessities
The simple bare necessities
Forget about your worries and your strife
I mean the bare necessities
Old Mother Nature's recipes
That brings the bare necessities of life

Wherever I wander, wherever I roam
I couldn't be fonder of my big home
The bees are buzzin' in the tree
To make some honey just for me
When you look under the rocks and plants
And take a glance at the fancy ants
Then maybe try a few

The bare necessities of life will come to you
They'll come to you!

Look for the bare necessities
The simple bare necessities
Forget about your worries and your strife
I mean the bare necessities
That's why a bear can rest at ease
With just the bare necessities of life

Now when you pick a pawpaw
Or a prickly pear
And you prick a raw paw
Next time beware
Don't pick the prickly pear by the paw
When you pick a pear
Try to use the claw
But you don't need to use the claw
When you pick a pear of the big pawpaw
Have I given you a clue ?

The bare necessities of life will come to you
They'll come to you!

So just try and relax, yeah cool it
Fall apart in my backyard
'Cause let me tell you something little britches
If you act like that bee acts, uh uh
You're working too hard

And don't spend your time lookin' around
For something you want that can't be found
When you find out you can live without it
And go along not thinkin' about it
I'll tell you something true

The bare necessities of life will come to you..will come to you..will come to you..hahahahaha

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Psychic Sleep


*note* more wisdom from Vernon Howard..about psychic sleep..read it,and wake up those wisdom muscles,please...I quote from him.." Have you ever noticed how nervous people get when their pet ideas are challenged? Let this be a clue for you"..hmm?..any wisdom muscles growing?..I can hear them growing...one more quote from him" The fire cast strange shadows against the wall of the cave, frightening the prisoners. So the men sat there in terror and confusion."..hmm?..sounds familiar?..the fire is good,but your idea that he is evil(due to your wrong sense of self) makes you protect the illusion.
A true psychic sleep,indeed..story of the humankind.
-added by danny-
................................

Psychic Sleep

Psychic sleep is the cause of every human problem and disaster. It is sleeping people who suffer from heartache and loneliness, from fear and violence. Only self-awakening can end these sorrows. However — and please emphasize this point in your mind — man does not know he is asleep. So deep is his immersion in psychic hypnosis, that he instantly denies his actual condition. In other words, he does not know that he does not know. He spends his entire life under the gigantic illusion of being happy and productive, never once facing the terror in which he lives. Man huddles fearfully in a haunted house which he calls a castle.
Have you ever been in a room full of people when someone behaved foolishly or childishly? You sensed that he did not know how he appeared to others. In fact, he may have believed he was behaving cleverly or courageously. Everyone in the room saw him as he really was, except the man himself. That is a perfect example of human hypnosis, of psychic unawareness.
The ancient philosopher, Socrates, provided a classic illustration of man’s mental sleep. He told about a group of men who were huddled together in a deep cave. Their only light was a fire that blazed in the center of the cavern. The fire cast strange shadows against the wall of the cave, frightening the prisoners. So the men sat there in terror and confusion.
One of the prisoners made up his mind to explore the cave. When doing so, he found a secret tunnel. Following it all the way, he finally found himself in the outer world of sunshine and beauty.
We will now look at a chief characteristic of spiritual sleep. When this is understood, all the pieces of life fall into place, revealing the whole picture. Man has a false idea of who he is. He has an illusory sense of identity. This false self is manufactured out of self-flattering imaginations and out of self-pleasing labels. He labels himself as a successful man, or as an intelligent thinker, or as a human being with lofty motives. But these are mere ideas he has about himself and he is not these ideas. We can easily prove this.
Whenever a man feels depressed or irritated, it is simply because his false identity seems not to be confirmed. Both these reactions are false, so man is their slave.
Have you ever noticed how nervous people get when their pet ideas are challenged? Let this be a clue for you. By patient self-investigation we discover who we are not, and that ends the anxiety of not knowing who we are.
To summarize this vital point, man wrongly believes that he possesses a separate self, an individual ego. This false idea causes fear, loneliness, neurosis. It throws him into conflict with other people who are also under the illusion of having separate selves. No man is apart from the whole, from the all. Man is one with the universe. Human beings are like dozens of ponds, each reflecting the light from the same moon
. This is not philosophy, this is fact.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Awareness and Consciousness



*note* nice explaining from Subramuniyaswami about awareness and consciousness,and the difference between them.
-added by danny-
........................................


Coursing the shakti kundalini, transcend the successive gates of awareness. Reduce the perishable body to its elemental constituents and then discard them. Then do you enter the grace of the Holy One, and there you abide and adore. That, indeed, is the fitting worship of Sadasiva.

Tirumantiram 1854

Awareness, a Ball of Light

The average person who is not a mystic lives two-thirds in the external area of the mind and one-third within himself. The within of himself can be, and sometimes is, very foreboding. He doesn't understand it. He is a little afraid of it and prefers to involve himself with external things. Possibly he's had some inner experiences, some emotional unhappinesses, and he shuns anything that is inner. The mystic lives, and is taught to live, two-thirds within himself and only one-third in the external. In learning how to do this, the mystic is taught to become consciously conscious, or aware that he is aware. He learns to separate awareness from that which he is aware of. The person who is not a mystic, living two-thirds in the external mind, says, "I am happy," meaning, "I am aware of a state of mind called happiness, and I am in that state, so that is me." Or, "I am unhappy. Unhappiness is me." The mystic living two-thirds within says to himself, "I am flowing through the area of the mind that's always unhappy." He doesn't change; he is a pure state of awareness.

Visualize a little ball of light. We'll call that man's individual awareness, and that light is shining right out from his eyes, and this little ball of light is going through the mind. It's going through the area of the mind that's always unhappy. It's going through the area of the mind that's always dreaming, the area of the mind that's delightfully happy, the area of the mind that's in absolute bliss, the area of the mind that's absolutely in jealousy all the time, the area that's in fear all the time -- many people live in this area of the mind; it's quite crowded with lots of balls of light there. This ball of light flows through the area of the mind that's in resentment. It's like a churning ocean. It's a delightful place to be in, especially if you're a little ball. You get bounced all around. Then there's the area of the mind that is completely peaceful and has always been peaceful. No mood or emotion has ever been in it to ruffle it, because that's the peaceful area of the mind. The one who meditates seeks out this area to become aware in. Man's individual awareness is just like this little ball of light, and it's like a camera. It photographs. It registers. It understands. It is pure intelligence. Man knows where he is in the mind, but the first step in awakening on the path of enlightenment is to separate awareness from that which it is aware of.

Tuesday
LESSON 30
Claim the Being Of Yourself

We say, "I am sick," and in the English language that means my body is sick, or I am aware of this body not being in a perfect state of health. The mystic knows he is not this body. He can even remember dropping off the body many, many different times, getting new bodies through the process of reincarnation. We are not what we are aware of. We are separate from that which we are aware of. We are only flowing through these areas of the mind. If we live in San Francisco, we are not San Francisco. If we live in unhappiness, we are not unhappiness. That's only one of the cities of the mind. This is a great meditation. You can grasp this awakening in thirty seconds. You can grasp this awakening in thirty hours, or thirty minutes. You can grasp this awakening and have it come to you vibrantly in thirty weeks, thirty months, or thirty years or thirty lifetimes. It just depends upon your willpower.

As soon as we can understand awareness detached from that which it is aware of, we have a vibrant energy, a tremendous drive. A tremendous willpower is released from within us, and we live with the feeling that we can do anything that we want to do, almost as quickly as we want to do it. We want things to happen now, for we vividly see the area where they already exist within the force fields of the mind itself.

How do we live our life from this point? We begin to apply this philosophy in every department of our life. There are some habit patterns in our subconscious mind that have not caught up with this new perspective as yet, and you'll be running up against them. As soon as you find awareness totally identified with a subconscious area that has become conscious, immediately turn inward, detach awareness from that which it is aware of and just be pure energy.

You can expect a beautiful life, a beautiful relationship with the being of yourself. Claim the being of yourself as you. You have enough knowledge now. You don't have to discover the being of yourself and keep looking for it. Just be the being of yourself and travel through the mind as the traveler travels around the globe. The wonderful story of awareness, I could go on and on talking about it, because it is so very basic and so very, very important. This then makes an infinite intelligence and everyone the same. Only, they are living in different areas of the mind, or different houses.

Wednesday
LESSON 31
The Mechanics Of Attachment

Have you ever had people come to you and tell you all of their problems? What did they do? As a pure state of awareness, they came to you as a pure state of awareness. You were not identified in the area of the mind that they are living in. So, they came to you, because they want to get out of the area of the mind that they're living in. They've been living in it so long, they think they are that area of the mind, like somebody that has lived in a house so long and is so attached to it that they would rather die than move from the house. So then, they come to you and start telling all the problems. First they start with the little ones, and then they start with the big ones, and all their complaints, heartaches and everything that that area of the mind involves. Now, you can do one of two things. You can gently talk with them and bring them out of that area of the mind into your area of the mind, or they can move your awareness right into that area of the mind, too. And when they go away, you are feeling terrible. You're feeling just awful.

You've gone to a movie. The movie screen is just a screen. The film is just film. And the light is just light. And yet the combination of the three can move your awareness into areas of the mind that can upset your nerve system, make you cry, make you laugh, make you have bad dreams for a week, change your whole, entire perspective of life -- the combination of these three physical elements can do this, if it can attract your attention.

Now, if we are sitting in a movie, and we are realizing that we are going through moods and emotions but we are not the moods and emotions that we are going through -- all we are doing is being entertained by our senses -- then that's the mystic. He is enjoying life and what life has to offer. He is even remembering in past lives when he had similar experiences that the players are portraying on the screen, and he has empathy with them. He is living a full and a vibrant life, and yet when he walks out of the movie house, or walks away from the TV, he has forgotten the whole thing. He doesn't carry it with him. His awareness is immediately right where he is currently. That's the power of the great eternity of the moment.

Thursday
LESSON 32
Living Two-Thirds Within

Living two-thirds within oneself and one-third in the external world -- how do we do it? As soon as we live within ourselves, we become conscious of all of our various secret thoughts, all of our various emotions, that we would just as soon be without. Therefore, we distract ourselves and endeavor to live two-thirds in the external world and only one-third within ourselves. As aspirants on the path, you have to live your life two-thirds within yourself. When you are conscious of the thoughts that you don't want to think, the emotions that you don't want to feel, go deep within where they don't exist. Take awareness to the central source of energy, right within the spine itself. Feel that energy flowing through the body, moving the muscles, enlivening the cells. Then you are two-thirds within yourself, and the world looks bright and cheery all the time; the sun is always shining. Immediately, when we begin to identify totally with our thoughts as being reality, then we begin to make mistakes. We are living two-thirds in the external world.

How to strike the balance? Regulate the breath throughout the day. Keep the spine always straight. Always sit up straight. As soon as the spine is bent, awareness is externalized. We are living two-thirds in the external area of the mind and only one-third within. As soon as the spine is straight, our awareness is internalized. We are living two-thirds within and only one-third out.

What's the biggest barrier? Fear. Afraid of our secret thoughts, afraid of our secret feelings. What's the biggest escape from fear? Go to the center, where energy exists, the energy that moves the life through the body. The simplest way is move your spine back and forth. Feel the power that moves that spine. Feel the power that moves that spine back and forth. Feel that energy going out through the physical body. Open your eyes and look at the world again, and you will see it bright and shiny. You're two-thirds in and one-third out in awareness. You're balanced. "Be renewed by a change of your mind." Be renewed by releasing awareness from one area of the vast universe of the mind, drawing it back into its source and releasing it again, sending it to another of the vast areas of the mind.

Friday
LESSON 33
The Great Study Of Awareness

The study of awareness is a great study. "I am aware." The key to this entire study is the discovery of who or what is the "I am." It is the key to the totality of your progress on the path of enlightenment. What is awareness? As you open your physical eyes, what is it that is aware of what you see? When you look within, deep within, and feel energy, you almost begin to see energy. A little more perception comes, and you do actually see energy, as clearly as you see chairs and tables with your physical eyes open.

But what is it that is aware? When awareness moves through superconsciousness, it seems to expand, for it looks out into the vastness of superconsciousness from within and identifies with that vastness. This is what is meant by an expanded state of awareness. What is awareness? Discover that. Go deep within it. Make it a great study. You have to discover what awareness is before you can realize the Self God. Otherwise, realization of the Self God is only a philosophy to you. It is a good philosophy, however, a satisfying and stable philosophy. But philosophies of life are not to be intellectually learned, memorized and repeated and nothing more. They are to be experienced, step by step by step. Get acquainted with yourself as being awareness. Say to yourself, "I am awareness. I am aware. I am not the body. I am not the emotions. I am not the thinking mind. I am pure awareness."

It will help for us to make a mental picture. Let us now try to visualize awareness as a round, white ball of light, like one single eye. This ball is being propelled through many areas of the mind, inner and outer, and it is registering all the various pictures. It has, in fact, four eyes, one on each side of it. It is not reacting. The reaction comes when awareness is aware of the astral body and the physical body. It is in those bodies that reaction occurs. We are aware of the reactions in these bodies, for the physical body and the astral body are also part of the vast, vast universe of the mind.

Each individual awareness, ball of light, is encased in many bodies. The first and nearest encasement is the body of the soul. The second encasement is the astral, or intellectual-emotional, body. The third encasement is the physical body. The radiation from awareness, this ball of light, is the aura. Awareness is an extension of prana from the central source, issuing energy.

Energy goes where awareness flows. When awareness focuses on relationships, relationships flow. When awareness focuses on philosophy, that unfolds itself. Ultimately, when awareness focuses on itself, it dissolves into its own essence. Energy flows where awareness goes. I was always taught that if one foot was injured, for example, to focus on the other foot and transfer the healthy prana from that foot to the ailing foot.

Saturday
LESSON 34
Awareness and Consciousness

Consciousness and awareness are the same when awareness is totally identified with and attached to that which it is aware of. To separate the two is the artful practice of yoga. Naturally, the Shum-Tyeif language is needed to accomplish this. When awareness is detached from that which it is aware of, it flows freely in consciousness. A tree has consciousness. Awareness can flow into the tree and become aware of the consciousness of the tree. Consciousness and mind are totally equated as a one thing when awareness and consciousness are a one thing to the individual. But when awareness is detached from that which it is aware of, it can flow freely through all five states of mind and all areas of consciousness, such as plants and the Earth itself, elements and various other aspects of matter. Here we find awareness separate from consciousness and consciousness separate from the five states of mind attributed to the human being. In Sanskrit we have the word chaitanya for consciousness, and for awareness it is sakshin, meaning witness, and for mind the word is chitta. Consciousness, mind, matter and awareness experience a oneness in being for those who think that they are their physical body, who are convinced that when the body ends, they end and are no more.

We have three eyes. We see with our physical eyes and then we think about what we have seen. Going into meditation, we see with our third eye our thoughts. Then we choose one or two of them and think about them and lose the value of the meditation. It is the control of the breath that controls the thoughts that emerge from the subconscious memory patterns. Once this is accomplished, and the ida, pingala and sushumna merge, we are seeing with the third eye, which is the eye of awareness, wherever we travel through the mind, inside or outside of our own self.

The minute awareness is attached to that which it is aware of, we begin thinking about what we were aware of. Controlling the breath again detaches awareness, and it flows to another area of the mind, as directed by our innate intelligence, this intangible superconscious, intelligent being of ourselves that looks out through the eye of awareness in a similar way as do the two eyes of the physical body. This then divides what we are aware of and thinking of what we were aware of, or distinguishes the process of thinking from that of seeing during meditation.

Awareness travels into the wonderful strata of thought, where thought actually exists in all of its refined states. First in these strata of thought is an area where ideas are only in a partial, overall, conceptual stage. Deeper into this stratum, they, as concepts, become stronger and stronger until finally they almost take physical form. Finally, they do take physical form. But you are the pure, individual awareness, the ball of seeing light that is seeing all of this occur within these strata of mind and not identifying too closely with them. The quest is to keep traveling through the mind to the ultimate goal, merging with Siva. When you are conscious that you are awareness, you are a free awareness, a liberated soul. You can go anyplace in the mind that you wish.

The mission is: don't go anyplace. Turn awareness back in on itself and simply be aware that you are aware. Try to penetrate the core of existence. Become conscious of energy within the physical body and the inner bodies, flowing out through the nerve system and drawing forth energy from the central source of the universe itself. Now try to throw awareness into this central source of energy and dive deeper and deeper in. Each time you become aware of something in the energy realm, be aware of being aware. Finally, you go beyond light. Finally, you go into the core of existence itself, the Self God, beyond the stillness of the inner areas of mind. That is the mission and that is what humanity is seeking -- total Self-God Realization.

Sunday
LESSON 35
Awareness Finds A New Home

Needless to say, the Self does not mean the realization of your personality. Some people think that this is what Self Realization means. "I want Self Realization," they say, thinking all the time it means, "I want to realize that I am an individual and not dependent upon my parents. I want Self Realization." Other people feel it means, "I want to realize my artistic abilities and be able to create." It does not mean that at all. All this is of external consciousness, the intellectual area of the mind. It is a lesser form of self realization. Self Realization is finding That which is beyond even superconsciousness itself, beyond the mind -- timeless, causeless, spaceless.

After Self Realization, awareness has a new home. It does not relate to the external mind anymore in the same way. It relates to the Self God, Parasiva, as home base and flows out into the various layers of the mind, and in again. Before Self Realization, awareness was in the external mind trying to penetrate the inner depths. Then it would return to the external mind and again try to penetrate the within through the processes of meditation. After Self Realization, the whole process of the flow of awareness is reversed.

Mind and consciousness are synonymous. Awareness is man's individual spiritual being, the pure intelligence of his spiritual body, flowing through this vast universe of the mind. We want to be able to flow awareness through any area of the mind consciously, at will, as we go in and in and in toward our great realization of the Self God, which is beyond mind, beyond time, beyond consciousness, beyond all form. Yet, it is not an unconscious state. It is the essence of all being, the power which makes the electricity that flows through the wire that lights the light that illumines the room. When we sit, simply being aware of being aware, the currents of the body harmonized, the aura turns to streaks of light dashing out into the room, and we are sitting in our own perfect bliss, simply aware, intensely aware, of being aware. Awareness itself then turns in on itself enough to experience, to become, the Self God -- That which everyone is seeking.

That is the sum total of the path. That is the path that you are on. That is the experience that if you keep striving you will have in this life, even if it is at the point of death. It is then you will reincarnate as a great teacher on the planet and help many others through to the same goal. For there is no death and there is no birth for the immortal body of the soul that you are, that pure intelligence that goes on and on and on and on and on and on. So go in and in and in and in and in and in. Arrive at the ultimate goal. Make it your journey, your quest. Want it more than life itself.

Generally our greatest fear is death. Why? Because it is the most dramatic experience we have ever had in any one lifetime. Therefore we fear it. We are in awe of death. It is so dramatic that we do not remember, really, what happened during part of the experience, though occasionally some people do. However, the body of the soul knows no birth, knows no death. It goes on and on and on, and its awareness goes in and in and in to its ultimate goal -- awareness of itself turned so much in on itself that it dissolves in the very essence of Being, as it merges in Siva. You cannot say anything more about the Self, because to describe the Self adequately there are no words. It is beyond time, form, cause, mind. And words only describe time, cause and mind consciousness, which is form. You have to experience It to know It. And by experiencing It, you do know It.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Why I won't release you?



*note* I will release you when you sing with me...not when you think,but when you wake up.
Otherwise I won't.
-added by Danny--
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