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Thursday, April 21, 2011

A Formula for Sleeping or not Sleeping...from Ajahn Thate

Lead me from dreaming to waking. Lead me from opacity to clarity.
Lead me from the complicated to the simple. Lead me from the obscure to the obvious. Lead me from intention to attention. Lead me from what I'm told I am to what I see I am. Lead me from confrontation to wide openness. Lead me to the place I never left, Where there is peace, and peace - The Upanishads
*note* Ajahn Thate cracks the mystery of sleeping or not sleeping...lovely:)..this proves that applying the same principles,people get the same results...almost.
As a matter of fact,he explains very well also the process of astral projection,but he doesn't use those terms,maybe because he tried to not led people astray..gotta love these forest monks from the past...by the way,the word ,,bhavanga,, means subconscious(or the astral plane you travel every night you sleep)
I will quote a bit about him"This is why, for the Buddha's teachings, morality forms the beginning of the religious life. The next step is to train the mind to develop concentration (samadhi) and absorption (jhana) through the practice of tranquillity meditation. Once the mind is adept at maintaining a steady focus, we can then develop clear insight (vipassana)."

"While you are training the mind, one thing — strange and striking — may occur without your intending it. That is, the mind will withdraw from its external objects and gather into a single whole, letting go of all labels and attachments dealing with past or future. There will be just bare awareness paired with its preoccupation in the present. This is something with no sense of "inside" or "outside" — a condition whose features are peculiar to the mind itself. It is as if everything has undergone a revolution."

"The visions and signs that arise from the practice of meditation are a strange and uncanny affair. They may delude a gullible person of weak judgment into being so convinced of their truth as to lose touch with reality. For this reason, those who practice meditation should be cautious, examining and reflecting on them carefully."

"Fixed penetration is a superior human attainment. By and large, people who reach fixed penetration tend to focus on the in-and-out breath (anapana) as their object of meditation. As they focus on the breath and come to pay attention to its arising and falling away, or just to its falling away, the mind gradually becomes more and more refined until, step by step, it lets go of all its preoccupations and gathers together."

In his text Buddho Ajahn Thate describes what it is like when the mind has finally rid itself of preoccupation with sensual distractions and is able to focus on the breath, mantra, or a part of the body, in meditation: "When you first enter concentration, this is what it's like: You'll have no idea at all of what concentration or one-pointedness of mind is going to feel like. You are simply intent on keeping mindfulness firmly focused on one object – and the power of a mind focused firmly on one object is what will bring you to a state of concentration. You won't be thinking at all that concentration will be like this or like that, or that you want it to be like this or like that. It will simply take its own way, automatically. No one can force it. At that moment you will feel as if you are in another world (the world of the mind), with a sense of ease and solitude to which nothing else in the world can compare. When the mind withdraws from concentration, you will regret that that mood has passed, and you will remember it clearly. All that we say about concentration comes from the mind which has withdrawn from that state. As long as it is still gathered in that state, we aren't interested in what anyone else says or does. You have to train the mind to enter this sort of concentration often, so as to become skilled and adept, but don't try to remember your past states of concentration, and don't let yourself want your concentration to be like it was before – because it won't be that way, and you will just be making more trouble for yourself."
Be careful that these old forest monks did it the hard way..starting from zero,with no shakti(or power transmission ) and just they were trying to figure out by themselves ..the issue here is whom is trying to figure out ?..be careful that you can spend kalpas (huge amounts of time in indian mythology) playing with your consciousness,as a matter of fact..what bothers me mostly about these hardcore forest monks is that they never believe in kundalini,or the power within you,which can be ignited if you are lucky enough to meet a guy whom has it(like me,for example..)..Since the mind can do only so much..why they refuse the kundalini?..I tell you why..because they love their effort..since YOU are HERE to experience yourself..those buddhists took the original Buddha realization as a standard..the affairs of this kind of serious egotistic seeking from the grasshoppers also makes me puke..since the truth is always present,and manifesting ,and re-creating itself(how else he(the truth) could know itself other then thru us?
I have a dream..says the kripto within you...
of a yogi with the determination of those old forest monks whom dealt on the consciousness levels,and therefore they tried it by themselves...but with the shakti of mine..able to be in the second jhana all the time...I have a dream that this formidable yogi named Kripto the Mighty..with a 12 inch wisdom brain muscle..will revolutionize sahaja yoga  and purge the non-sense of Mataji serious conditionings  on her photo,and on the indian culture she has tried to implement to the whole world..you must wear saris and pijamas and sing indian songs of praising her ass(in other words..she tried her best for you to become a freak indian guy conditioned to the bone to mantras,her photo,her divinity..her pujas where you had  to pay cash(thousands for traveling to India,then her guru tribute,of course....) to worship her feet,etc..her arranged marriages..the best of India indeed..)
What was wrong with the humanity just knowing the system of opening of the real ki channels ,and feeling the cool breeze of your spiritual innate energy...I tell you what was wrong..
What was wrong was that the rest of the humanity was not indian..therefore they had to be converted to full indians in no time(Indians from India,not from america)..
This was the master-plan of Mataji, which failed miserably,indeed..so much for taking over the world.
Will I win this battle?..time will tell...but still..I have a dream...for the emancipation of humans requires they must accept their own  individualities, and their own connection as spiritual beings..so I have a dream...

And when this happens, when we allow freedom ring, when we let it ring from every village and every hamlet, from every state and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God's children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old spiritual eternal song of Kripto:
                Free at last! Free at last!
                Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!
-added by danny-
.......................

12.1 A Formula for Sleeping or not Sleeping   

At this same period, I tried to uncover and understand the condition that exists during the state of sleep. As a rule, we are never aware of the actual moment of falling asleep. It's only upon waking that we come to know that we fell asleep.
Before we fall asleep there will be the state of tiredness, weakness and drowsy dullness of body and mind. The chains of thinking processes become shorter and eventually all awareness of thought-objects is released and we quickly enter what they call sleep.
When we bring in mindfulness to focus on the current condition of that final moment before sleep, we will find that there is only the barest awareness left. It's almost impossible to fix on it, while no mental-objects are left at all. Only the most delicate mindfulness remains present to follow and watch the current condition of the mind arising in that moment. It is like when the mind drops into bhavanga. (bhavanga means subconscious realm..added by danny))
If, at this point, we don't wish to allow sleep to take over, an effort has to be made to look out for a single mental or emotional object. This can then be subjected and held to and taken up for thought-processing. As a result, the mind will brighten up and be refreshed, free from all fatigue and drowsiness. It will also have the beneficial effect equal to having slept for four or five hours.
On the other hand, if we wish to sleep, this is achieved by letting go of that final remaining trace of mindfulness and sleep will come with ease and comfort. This way is especially good because one only sleeps for a very short period, so there is no wasting of time. It won't last for more than five or ten minutes. If you have actually established and focussed mindfulness, as I have been explaining, you can rest assured that you won't be asleep for more than five minutes.
If, rather than going to sleep, you just want to rest body and mind, go and find a suitably quiet and peaceful place to rest in. It can either be somewhere completely secluded or among other people. Lie down, stretch out, relax and be comfortable without tensing any part of the body. Then settle the mind on a single object in that condition of letting go. Let it just remain alone in emptiness for a while, and, on getting up, you will feel in all respects as if you had been sleeping for four or five hours.
This word sleep. In truth, the mind doesn't sleep. It is rather that the body rests, without having to make any movements. Even those who enter the high state of meditation called the attainment of cessation[62] can't be said to have gone into a state of sleep. This is really the state where the meditator supervises the heart with mindfulness to fix it on one mental object.
That object steadily becomes ever more refined — as does mindfulness and the heart — until all feelings and thoughts completely cease due to the strength of the meditator's skilled practice. Mindfulness no longer has anything to do and so fades out completely. Although bodily breathing continues, it has become so subtle and refined that one can hardly say whether it exists or not. In fact, it does exist but it no longer appears to move through the nose. One can compare it to an external breeze that while present is not enough to manifest in the stirring and fluttering of leaves. No one could then assert that no wind/breath exists for if there is no wind/breath there's no air and then all living-breathing beings in this world would be dead.
The Lord Buddha called this 'entering the attainment of cessation', for at this point the nervous system of the six sense doors[63] will not receive any contact. This, however, is different from the state of sleep. When asleep, something may very well impinge on the senses so that one immediately wakes up. The attainment of cessation requires sufficient practice and preparation of heart so that it becomes competent and skilled. After attaining this state many wondrous things[64] can occur. It's not possible to hurt the meditator who has entered into this state — even if someone set him on fire it would never touch him. On the other hand, after entering Nibbana, the body can indeed disintegrate.
The meditator can withdraw from the attainment of cessation through the power of a previously made determination.[65] When they reach the determined time, the breath will gently start to become progressively coarser and coarser until all the bodily functions have reverted to their previously normal state.
Attainment of cessation is not Nibbana but a state of absorption.[66] This is because absorption lacks the right-view wisdom (paññaa-sammaadi.t.thi) that can investigate the root causes of the defilements, such as those of the Sense Sphere (Kaama-bhava) and the Fine-material Sphere (Ruupa-bhava). This is rather the domain of insight-knowledge (vipassanaa-ñaa.na) and right-knowledge and realization of the Path (magga ñaa.na-dassana). All the absorptions are only instruments of encouragement and support, that smooth the Way and enhance energy.
Thus, before the Lord Buddha's Final Passing Away, (Parinibbana) he entered and progressed up through the various levels of absorption. He then returned to the Fourth Absorption, which forms the foundation for insight, and entered Nibbana from there. That was between the Sense Sphere and the Fine-material Spheresupra-mundane dhamma. (lokuttara dhamma). for that forms the base for the
The question might arise here: "So! Why is this old monk going on about the attainment of cessation, about Nibbana and states of absorption? Has he reached and realized these states or not?" The doubter might answer himself with: "Can't one say that this is really a matter of boasting about attaining to supra-mundane states?".
In truth, anyone who attains to the cessation of perception and feeling, or to Path, Fruit and Nibbana, or to the absorption of the attainment of cessation,[67] does not make the assumption that, 'I have reached, entered or reside in such a state'. There is simply a proficiency with the necessary skillful means that leads to and connects with them. Just when the meditator is about to enter such a state, any remaining assumptions and suppositions about 'I' will bring him up short. Otherwise, the average sort of person everywhere, intelligent and knowledgeable about the Teachings and the Discipline, they could all go off together and attain to the Path and Fruit and Nibbana, to the absorption of the attainment of cessation. The whole town, the whole country would all be doing the same!
At the moment of realizing such states there is no hope of making up assumptions and formulations about them. Only after transcending those conditions can one recollect and systematically check back over their successive stages and development. Once having worked it out one will then be able to formulate and set out all aspects of these states.
It's not always necessary for the person who explains about these things to have actually reached those levels. When the Teachings have been set down and their essential meaning established, one has to explain about it to the best of one's own understanding. Sometimes this will be done correctly and sometimes it will be mistaken. If things had not been worked out in this way, how could the Teachings of the Lord Buddha have endured and continued down to the present day?
People listen, yet even though they all may be listening to the same theme, to the same points, many will understand in quite different ways, from different angles. Furthermore, those meditators who have attained to exactly the same stage, via an identical technique, will still find that their individual skill and ingenuity are quite different. 
This is why the Dhamma that one sees by and for oneself is so wondrous and amazing and why it's so difficult to achieve.

Emptiness is the source - The best home videos are here

To nourish the vital energy, keep watch in silence;


In order to subdue the mind, act with non-action.


Of movement and stillness, be aware of their origin;


There is no work to do, much less someone to seek.


The true and constant must respond to phenomena;


Responding to phenomena, you must be unconfused.


When unconfused, the nature will stabilize by itself;


When the nature stabilizes, energy returns by itself.


When energy returns, the elixir crystallizes by itself;


Within the pot, the trigrams of heaven and earth are joined.


Yīn and yáng arise, alternating over and over again;


Every transformation comes like a clap of thunder.


White clouds form and come to assemble at the peak;


The sweet nectar sprinkles down Mount Sumeru.


Swallow for yourself this wine of immortality;


You wander so freely—who is able to know you?


Sit and listen to the tune played without strings;


Clearly understand the mechanism of creation.


It comes entirely from these twenty lines;


A true ladder going straight to Heaven.-Daoist text -




To us all towns are one, all men our kin. Life's good comes not from others' gift, nor ill. Man's pains and pains' relief are from within. Thus have we seen in visions of the wise !." - Tamil Poem-


Hakuin does not sketch himself in the idealized form of an enlightened one, or even in the realistic image of an austere zenji, but as a bald, fat, cross-eyed and hunch-backed old man...but then he kissed you:)...Lovely story of the creation purpose...shakti means manifestation,and shiva means the origin of it..the kiss is the joy of emptiness knowing itself...kisses from the mahayogi to you,grasshoppers from heaven!

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

The Ancient Kripto Zen Master as Clown (don't take life so seriously..you'll die soon enough)

Lead me from dreaming to waking. Lead me from opacity to clarity. Lead me from the complicated to the Lead me from the obscure to the obvious. Lead me from intention to attention. Lead me from what I'm told I am to what I see I am. Lead me from confrontation to wide openness. Lead me to the place I never left, Where there is peace, and peace - The Upanishads
*note* lovely essay from "The Ancient Zen Master as Clown-Figure and Comic Midwife
By M. Conrad Hyers
Philosophy East & West
Vol. 20 (1970.10)
pp. 3-18
Copyright 1970 by University of Hawaii Press
Hawaii, USA"
This Conrad Hyers is interesting in explaining..read this essay..kisses from the mahayogi to him,and to you also,grasshoppers from heaven..
-added by danny-
..........

lyrics to Then He Kissed Me - The Crystals-
Well, he walked up to me and he asked me if I wanted to dance.
He looked kinda nice and so I said I might take a chance.
When he danced he held me tight
and when he walked me home that night
all the stars were shining bright
and then he kissed me.
Each time I saw him I couldn't wait to see him again.
I wanted to let him know that he was more than a friend.
I didn't know just what to do
so I whispered "I love you"
and he said that he loved me too
and then he kissed me.
He kissed me in a way that I've never been kissed before,
he kissed me in a way that I wanna be kissed forever more.
I knew that he was mine so I gave him all the love that I had
and one day he took me home to meet his mom and his dad.
Then he asked me to be his bride
and always be right by his side.
I felt so happy I almost cried
and then he kissed me.
Then he asked me to be his bride
and always be right by his side.
I felt so happy I almost cried
and then he kissed me.
And then he kissed me.
And then he kissed me.
...........
Among the 1700 kooans which are said to be suitable for encouraging the experience of satori, and also for providing a test of its genuineness, is the following question attributed to Kyoogen (Hsiang Yen, ninth century) and provided with commentary by Mumon Ekai (Wu Men Hui K'ai, 1183-1260):

(Zen) is like a man up a tree who hangs on a branch by his teeth with his hands and feet in the air. A man at the foot of the tree asks him, "What is the point of Bodhidharma's coming from the West?" If he does not answer he would seem to evade the question. If he answers he would fall to his death. In such a predicament what response should be given?

[Mumon's commentary and verse] : It is useless to be gifted with a flowing stream of eloquence as to discourse on the teaching in the great Tripi.taka. Whoever answers this question (correctly) can give life to the dead and take life from the living. Whoever cannot must wait for the coming of Maitreya [the future Buddha] and ask (him).

Kyoogen is really outrageous.
The poison (he brewed) spreads everywhere.
It closes the mouths of Zen monks
And makes their eyes goggle. [1]

In the dimension of humor visible in such enigmatic kooans and commentaries as this is to be found a much-neglected side of Zen, as well as of the entire Buddhist tradition -- indeed, ultimately, of religion as such. [2] Because of a long-standing prejudice against associating the comic too closely with the sacred, a prejudice which has been supported by both religious and academic taboos, the function and place of humor in religion has been almost completely ignored by phenomenologists and historians of religion. This "conspiracy of silence" is as much in evidence with respect to Buddhism as to every other tradition. It is apparent upon closer examination, nonetheless, that in Buddhism, and in Zen Buddhism in particular, as in any religious tradition, a place has been granted to the comic spirit and perspective -- a time to laugh and to dance, as well as a time to weep and to mourn (Eccles. 3:4). One very illuminating and seldom explored method, therefore, of approaching a religious tradition, and of disclosing even its innermost features, is to examine what the comic means, and in what ways it has been employed, or at least permitted, in that particular context. The experiences and expressions which we associate with the terms

1. Zenshuu mumonkan (A.D. 1229), trans. Sohaku Ogata, Zen for the West (London: Rider & Co., 1959), pp. 97-98.

2. There are numerous collections of the tales, kooans, and mondoos of the early Ch'an and Zen masters relevant to any extensive study of the role of the comic in Zen. Descriptive references concerning many of these may be found conveniently in the bibliographical appendix to Isshuu Miura and Ruth Fuller Sasaki, Zen Dust: The History of the Koan and Koan Study in Rinsai (Lin-Chi) Zen (New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1966). See especially the notations on Ch'an-tsung Wu-men-kuan (Zenshuu mumonkan), Cheng-fa-yen-tsang (Shooboogenzoo), and Ku-tsun-su (Kosonshuku).

laughter, humor, and comedy often play a far greater and more significant role in relation to religious experience and expression than scholarly inquiry has been ready to admit or careful to recognize. Human existence, in fact, as it is religiously lived and understood, is only given adequate definition in terms of a dialectical interplay between seriousness and laughter, between "holiness" and humor; and apart from an appreciation for both sides of this dialectic, the sacred and the comic, no religion is fully comprehended or interpreted. [3]

It must be acknowledged at the outset that the inclination of a religious tradition, especially insofar as it moves toward an orthodoxy, is often to squelch the comic spirit and perspective, or at least to keep it at a relatively safe and innocuous distance. It is the tendency of the sacred to push away the comic, as it is of the comic to withdraw from the sacred. Consequently specific instances of overt and legitimated comic moments or devices are usually much more difficult to obtain and document than their sacred counterparts. Zen, however, particularly in its earlier and less structured forms, is a happy exception to this rule; for more than any other religious tradition the documents of its classical period are replete with comic data. Certainly instances of the use of humor, and of various types of comic form, may be found elsewhere within the Buddhist cosmos: in the Dhammapada and its commentaries, or the Jaataka tales; in folk dramas and festivals; in popular stories, religious proverbs, and literary pieces; in certain forms of Chinese and Japanese Buddhist art; in the comic interludes (kyoogen, literally "mad words") placed between acts of the Noo plays of Japan; and in both the poetry of haiku and the epigrammatic verse of senryu. As in all cultures and religions, some play is given to the comic, and some time devoted to laughter. [4] But it is in the Zen tradition in particular that the relationship between the spirit and perspective of Buddhism and that of the comic is brought into full flower. R. H. Blyth, with his penchant for dashing comment and characterization, has defined the essence of Zen as

3. The terms comedy and humor will be used correlatively, and in the broadest sense, to refer to the same phenomenon. If a distinction is made between the terms it is that humor represents those attitudes and moods -- identified by such words as caprice, frivolity, gaiety, jest, and facetiousness -- that are expressed in or elicited by the various types of comic structure: clowning, joking, storytelling, farce, burlesque, buffoonery, etc. In the comic spirit, humor is the spirit, comedy the form.

4. According to the Buddhist scholastics there are six classes of laughter: (a) sita, a faint smile manifest in facial expression only; (b) hasita, a smile which slightly reveals the teeth; (c) vihasita, a smile accompanied by a modicum of laughter; (d) upahasita, pronounced laughter associated with a movement of head, shoulders, and arms; (e) apahasita, laughter that brings tears; and (f) atihasita, uproarious laughter accompanied by doubling over, hysterics, etc. It is understood that only the first two classes are acceptable in polite society, with the last two in particular being characteristic of the uncultured lower classes. It is interesting that, in this schematization, the Buddha is supposed to have only indulged in sita, the most serene, subtle, and refined form of laughter. Cf. Shwe Zan Aung, The Compendium of Philosophy, a translation of the Abhidhammattha-Sangaha, rev. and ed. by Mrs. Rhys Davids (London: Luzac & Co., Ltd., 1910), pp. 22-25.

humor. [5] Whether or not one might be satisfied to state the matter so bluntly, such an equation of Zen and humor nevertheless points to the possibility of interpreting Zen as that strand within Buddhism in which humor comes to be most fully developed and self-consciously employed as an integral part of both a pedagogical method and an enlightened outlook -- that is, as both one of the stratagems for precipitating enlightenment and one of the consequences of enlightenment.


THREE LEVELS OF THE COMIC IN ZEN

In Zen, as in any religious context, there are three distinguishable levels on which the comic moves in relation to the sacred, [6] three moments or moods which in mythological terms may be seen as corresponding to the laughter of Paradise, Paradise-lost and Paradise-regained. This is not intended to suggest any metaphysical commitment on the part of Zen teaching to such a mythological schema -- for example, an interpretation of maayaa and sa^msaara as a "fall" from some primordial totality that is recollected in satori and recovered in the achievement of nirvaa.na. [7] In analyzing the comic elements in Zen it will be sufficient to understand the stages of the model as a movement from pre-rationality to rationality to "supra"-rationality -- pre-rationality representing the innocence and immediacy of infancy prior to the emergence of rationality with its tendency to split up the world into knower and known, subject and object, mind and body, good and evil, etc.; and "supra"-rationality the experience of transcending the dichotomies and estrangements of rationality in a recovery on a higher plane of that freedom and spontaneity and naturalness which is the special virtue of the child. The underlying thesis of this essay is that the place and function of humor in Zen may be interpreted as corresponding to these three levels, and at the same time Zen itself may be interpreted in terms of the place and function it gives to humor vis-a-vis any of these levels. What is of particular interest in Zen, and therefore what will command the greater part of attention, is the way in which it approaches the problem of moving from the second to the third levels of experience, that is, the problem of satori, and the way in which humor in Zen is both the occasion for and the result of satori.

It will be necessary, first, to characterize briefly the three dimensions of the

5. Oriental Humour (Tokyo: Hokuseido Press, 1959), p. 87.

6. The term sacred is being used primarily in the narrower, specifically religious sense as the sphere which has its focus in ultimate concerns and the ultimate questions of meaning, value, power, and reality, though it is also applicable in the larger and derivative sense to any sphere of concern and significance which is set apart and surrounded with an atmosphere of seriousness and importance.

7. Cf. Mircea Eliade's interpretation of both Hindu and Buddhist mysticism, Myths, Dreams and Mysteries (London: Harvill Press, 1960), pp. 48 ff.; Yoga: Immortality and Freedom (New York: Harper & Row, 1963), pp. 184-185.

relationship of the comic to the sacred that will be presupposed in the ensuing analysis. At the simplest level humor is a form of playing for the sake of playing; the clown cavorts, the comedian quips, and the spectator laughs out of sheer delight in the playfulness of the game of comedy itself. As such, humor is a movement back into the playful immediacy and spontaneity of childhood, the recovery of the freedom and naturalness of innocent glee. It is the momentary recapture of that world which is prior to the distinction between self and other, subject and object, sacred and profane, prior to the "knowledge of good and evil" and the emergence of shame and guilt; in short, the world that is symbolized by the mythical picture of a primeval Paradise; the "Urzeit" that in Zen comes to be projected onto a higher plane as the "Endzeit" of religious experience.

Humor is not all innocence and play, however. At a more sophisticated and self-conscious level it stands more immediately within the sphere of duality, and in sensitivity to conflict and anxiety, tension and alienation. Here it is not a humor which leaves behind the world of duplicity and rationality in a holiday of innocent abandon, but is a humor which moves within the terms and delineations of the objectified world in comic response to them. It is, consequently, the comic mood as it corresponds to the mythical state of Paradise-lost -- the state of self-assertion, of desiring and grasping, of separation and estrangement, of rational and moral discrimination. Instead of a recapitulation of the playful immediacy and spontaneity of the child, this level of humor is more self-conscious, more reflective, more serious, more mature. In fact, it shares in the very duplicity which elicits it and to which it is an inverted response, on the one hand becoming an act of withdrawal from that which is ordinarily taken as serious and sacred (comic distance and detachment), and on the other hand becoming an act of aggression against that which is ordinarily taken as serious and sacred (comic assertion and rebellion). These two dimensions may be referred to, respectively, as the prophetic or iconoclastic and the promethean or heroic responses. In the freedom of this half-playful, half-serious profaning of the ordinary world of perception, and of its sacred, tragic, and demonic forms, lies, however, the revelatory and redemptive potentiality of humor. And it is this revelatory and redemptive potentiality that is appropriated in Zen as both a pedagogical method and a psychological mechanism for attaining enlightenment and liberation.

Once such an enlightenment and liberation takes place it then becomes possible to speak of a third level of humor in Zen, a comic spirit and perspective which, though it may include the former levels, is not identical with them but decisively transcends them. Here humor becomes the freedom to play and to laugh which is contained within the freedom of enlightenment. Each level of humor implies and realizes a certain type of freedom. Humor on this plane therefore, is distinguishable from a nostalgic humor that leaps backward into

the freedom of simple innocence and immediacy prior to rationality, or from an ambivalent humor that responds to the dichotomies and tensions of rationality in iconoclastic/heroic freedom. It is a humor that moves beyond rationality, as it were, into the freedom of a higher innocence and immediacy. The playfulness of childish spontaneity and naturalness has been recaptured on a higher level, a level which corresponds mythically to Paradise-regained. One has now become free, in the profoundest sense, to laugh.

THE ZEN MASTER AS CLOWN FIGURE

One of the first impressions that one receives in reading tales of the often unorthodox lives and ways of certain Zen masters is the peculiar correspondence between these figures and that of the clown. Regardless of the problem of authenticity, and the separation of legend from fact, this image is too common and consistent to be dismissed as simply a popular embellishment alien to the character and approach of the Zen master. Behind all the fable and fiction there is the persistent form of a personality and role to which the designation "clown" is not inappropriate. This is not to suggest a clown-figure in the sense of the playful buffoon, or of clowning for the sake of clowning -- though this may be involved -- but rather in the sense of the clown who by his queer antics and strange attire, or by his "divine madness," gives expression to the special freedom that he has attained, and who in that freedom reveals some truth through the outlandishness of his performance, or who in some bizarre way becomes the agent of redemption in a particular situation.

One of the earliest representatives of the Ch'an tradition, for example, Fu Daishi (Fu Ta Shih, 497-569), a layman, is said to have been invited by the emperor Liang Wu Ti to expound the Diamond Suutra. As soon as he had ascended the seat for exposition, the emperor listening intently, Fu Daishi rapped the table once with a stick and descended from his seat. He thereupon asked the startled emperor, "Does Your Majesty understand?" "I do not," the incredulous emperor replied. Fu Daishi said simply, "The Bodhisattva has finished expounding the sutra." [8] On a later visit it is said that he presented himself at the palace before the emperor wearing a hat, a monk's robe, and a pair of shoes, it being accepted practice that a monk wears no hat, a Taoist no shoes, and a layman no monk's robe. [9] It is apparent from the host of such anecdotes that have been preserved, and used in subsequent Zen pedagogy, that not only are the early masters depicted as commonly employing various comic techniques in their dealings with monks, laymen, and even local and

8. Lu K'uan Yu, Ch'an and Zen Teaching, 3 vols. (London: Rider & Co., 1960-62), I, 143.

9. Ibid., p. 144. Later, of course, as the consequence of the continuing coexistence of Taoism, Buddhism, and Confucianism, it comes to be said that "every Chinese wears a Confucian cap, a Taoist robe and Buddhist sandals."

imperial dignitaries, but as themselves living in the spirit and style of comic freedom. Notorious for their peculiarities and eccentricities, odd in their behavior and unorthodox in their methods, the Zen masters often suggest something of the trickster, prankster, jester, and clown all rolled into one.

This is not to imply that all Zen masters are clown figures and comic midwives, or that all who achieve enlightenment within the tradition of Zen teaching do so in the context of comic techniques. Rather attention is being called to a comic spirit and style which achieves its fullest acceptance and development, among Buddhist sects, within Zen, and to a remarkable procession of individualists -- one might even say "characters" -- who often appear to be as much at home in the comic as the sacred. In perusing their biographies, as well as their kooans and mondoos, one has the distinct impression of being witness to a Buddhist circus. There is Seppoo (Hsueh Feng, 822-908) who, like the clown that plays at juggling, used to toy with three wooden balls, and who, when a monk would come to him to learn of Zen and the Zen way, would simply begin rolling the balls about. [10] There is Sekitoo (Shih T'ou, 700-790) who, when anyone would ask him to interpret some aspect of Buddhism, would likely as not reply, "Shut your mouth! No barking like a dog, please!" [11] There is Tenryuu (T'ien Lung, d. ninth century) who when Gutei, earnestly seeking the true path of the Buddha, solicited his direction, without comment simply lifted up one of his fingers. [12] Or there is Ummon (Yun Men, 862/4-949), who would frequently respond with a meaningless exclamation, "Kan!" and Rinzai (Lin Chi, d. 866), who would shout the equally nonsensical reply, "Katsu!" [13] The motley parade of individuals with their strange antics seems to file almost endlessly through the voluminous accounts of the early Ch'an and Zen masters. Though the purpose is quite serious and the setting acutely authoritarian, nevertheless the panorama has a distinct comic quality intrinsic to it. Through riddles and insults, through laughter and scowling, through ejaculation and silence, through slapping and kicking and striking, the point is made in, to say the least, a most eccentric manner. It is almost as if one were watching the capers of a troupe of clowns in a carnival, or an ancient Oriental version of the slapstick characters in a Marx brothers' film. But as in all profound comedy one soon discovers that the object of laughter is really oneself in the larger predicament and folly of man.

The familiar self-portrait of Hakuin (1686-1769) is illustrative of the intentional projection on the part of a Zen master of the image of the clown. Hakuin does not sketch himself in the idealized form of an enlightened one, or even in the realistic image of an austere zenji, but as a bald, fat, cross-eyed and hunch-backed old man. The poem Hakuin inscribed above the portrait comments:
In the realm of the thousand buddhas
He is hated by the thousand buddhas;
Among the crowd of demons
He is detested by the crowd of demons.
He crushes the silent-illumination heretics of today,
And massacres the heterodox blind monks of this generation.
This filthy blind old shavepate
Adds more foulness [ugliness] still to foulness. [14]
A similar portrait by a disciple, bearing the same poem, depicts Hakuin as looking almost sheepishly, with pursed lips, out of the corner of his eyes -- through all of which, however, one can detect the sagacious twinkle of one who was not easily fooled by sanctimony and pretension. [15]

The figure of the clown which stands out here in relation to the person of the master emerges just as clearly in the various tales of Zen monks at the point of death. The classic instance is that of Teng Yinfeng who, when he was about to die, asked, "I have seen monks die sitting and lying, but have any died standing?" "Yes, some," was the reply. "How about upside down?" "Never have we seen such a thing!" Whereupon Teng stood on his head and died. When it was time to carry him to the funeral pyre he remained upside-down, to the wonder of those who came to view the remains, and the consternation of those who would dispose of them. Finally his younger sister, a nun, came and, grumbling at him, said, "When you were alive you took no notice of laws and customs, and even now that you are dead you are making a nuisance of yourself!" With that she poked him with her finger, felling him with a thud, and the procession carried him away to the crematorium. [16] In this way Teng, assuming what, from the remarks of his sister, was the not unfamiliar role of the clown, expressed his achievement of spiritual freedom, his liberation from a desperate clinging to life and anxiety over self, and therefore his transcendence of the problem of death. There is here an element of both a promethean laughter in the face of death and a comic freedom within the larger freedom of enlightenment. The realization of an authentic liberation, as in so much of the Zen tradition, is attested by humor, and the symbol of that liberation is the paradoxical figure of the clown.


THE ZEN MASTER AS COMIC MIDWIFE

If the Zen master occasionally assimilates himself to the figure of the clown this is not, however, simply an end in itself, or a personal actualization of spiritual freedom alone, but a means to an end. In full accord with the Mahaa-

14. Ibid., pp. 124-125 (including plate).

15. Daisetz T. Suzuki, Zen and Japanese Culture (New York: Pantheon Books, 1959), plate 40. There is a difference of opinion as to whether this is a self-portrait or a portrait by a disciple.

16. Blyth, Oriental Humour, pp. 93-94.
yaanist emphasis upon the compassionate concern of the Bodhisattva for the enlightenment of all, the truly enlightened one seeks through a variety of techniques -- including humor -- the awakening of the disciple. In a manner that is analogous to the "Holy Fool" tradition in the Greek and Russian Orthodox churches, in which the monk assumed the role of the fool, or engaged in bizarre or impious behavior, in order to reveal the folly of the people and to awaken piety, [17] the Zen master becomes a clown and behaves or instructs in unorthodox ways in order to reveal the comedy in a false view of self, and to awaken a new perspective on existence.

In this mode of relationship the master functions as a midwife of truth in the socratic sense, and often this midwifery is of a comic sort. The master does not and cannot teach the truth in the sense of indoctrination, for the truth to be realized -- an intuitive, nondiscursive truth -- cannot be dispensed in this way. It cannot, in fact, be dispensed in any way. In Kierkegaardian terms, the master is not a teacher of truths but an occasion for the truth to manifest itself within the inner being of the disciple. [18] The midwife, as it were, does not pass the baby from the stork to the mother, but assists the mother in delivering the baby. This presupposes, of course, that the truth is present already, though in an obscured form, requiring only an occasion for its realization. The type of occasion afforded by the Zen master, however, is frequently identified by the peculiarity of being a comic occasion.

Many tales have arisen in the Zen tradition illustrating such a maeutic device. A monk asked Toozan (Ts'ao Shan, 807-869), for example, "Are not monks persons of great compassion?" The master indicated approval. "Suppose the six bandits come at them. What should they do?" "Also be compassionate," the master replied. The monk pressed further, "How is one to be compassionate?" The master said, "Wipe them out with one sweep of the sword!" "What then?" asked the monk. "Then they will be harmonized." [19] (Through this wordplay the monk is supposed to come to the realization, through the incongruity of a literal interpretation, that the six bandits are the sensuous desires which must be both eradicated and at the same time harmonized.) There is a distinct element of play and game in such dialogues (mondoos) between master and disciple, many of which move back and forth at length, with each maneuver by the disciple being deftly countered in an effort to bring him to the point at which his resources are exhausted and he is opened to deeper insight. [20] Whether this is the play and game of humor or not --

 For a translation of some of the more extensive and elaborate dialogues, see Richard S.Y. Chi, The Importance of Being Intuitive (Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press, 1968), Part II

though one suspects that behind the awesome visage of the master there is a faint twinkle in his eye -- the purpose of the repartee is not to develop the dialectical abilities of the disciple, or to display those of the master, but to reveal the rational approach as a false trail. The master plays with the disciple, like a cat with a mouse, not however to destroy him but to awaken him. Rather than the mondoo being an exercise in sophistry, leading nowhere, it is really an exercise in what might fittingly be called a "comedy of errors." Once the error is revealed the disciple realizes how funny his question had been, as in the case of the monk who asked Chookei (Ch'ang Ch'ing, 854-932), "What is meant by the True Eye of the Law?" only to receive the response, "I have a favor to ask of you: don't throw sand around!" [21]

In a similar vein, there is a comic dimension to many of the paradoxical and seemingly nonsensical kooans given to the disciple to meditate upon as a means of gaining release from an unenlightened way of perceiving the self and the world. This is not accidental, for the very provenance of comedy is nonsense and absurdity. Comedy plays with absurdity, and revels in irrationality, turning it to its own ends. In the Zen use of nonsense there is considerable psychological insight. One may approach a false view of things by rationally pointing out its errors and contradictions in the grand manner of the philosopher, but often a more effective method is to do so absurdly and humorously. For once the ridiculousness of the viewpoint is revealed and appropriated comically, instead of having been driven into a corner and held at bay by the overpowering logic of the master, as in the reductio ad absurdum methodology pursued in the Maadhyamika system of Naagaarjuna [22] -- a position which may only be a position of intellectual bondage in which the rope has been pulled tighter around the neck of the disciple -- one has been freed to laugh, and is therefore truly liberated. On the other hand, there is the distinct possibility in the discursive approach that the disciple will be tempted by the very intellectualism of the approach to seek some new way of overcoming the philosophical dilemma, some nuance that has been omitted or some angle that has been overlooked by the master -- a tantalizing defeat which may only perpetuate the argument, and hence the deception, ad infinitum. Something of the spirit and wisdom of the Zen method is captured in the account of Yoogi (Yang Ch'i, 992-1049) who rose ostensibly to lecture to his monks on the path of enlightenment, but instead began laughing and exclaimed simply, "Ha! ha! ha! What's all this! Go to the back of the hall and have some tea!"

It is because of this comic/socratic character of the Zen technique that one finds such a constant stress in the kooan and mondoo upon contradiction, nonsense and absurdity, or at least apparent contradiction, nonsense, and absurdity. As in Ummon's answer to the searching question of the monk, "When all mental activity is at an end, what is it like?" -- "Bring the Buddha-hall here and we'll weigh it together!" [24] -- it is as if one were suddenly plunged into the world of Lear's nonsense rhymes or of Alice in Wonderland. It is not however, sheer nonsense; a truth is being pointed to obliquely and comically, for to point to it directly and philosophically would be both impossible and misleading. Nonsense does not mean totally without sense, but without sense in the customary view of what constitutes sense, and beyond rationality in the ordinary understanding of reason. In nonsense one refuses to take with absolute seriousness -- that is, with humorlessness -- the world of sense, whether of common sense or sophisticated reason. Nonsense is the question mark placed after the supposedly firm reality of the "real" world of intelligibility, the irrefutable logic of rationality, or the categories and dichotomies of any system. It is this maeutic play upon irrationality in order to move beyond rationality that is expressed in the familiar kooan, "What is the sound of one hand clapping?" [25] or the mondoo, "What is the essence of Buddhism?" "Three pounds of flax!"


SUDDEN ENLIGHTENMENT AND THE COMIC TWIST

In the emphasis upon "sudden awakening," particularly as found in the Southern Ch'an school and the Rinzai sect, is to be seen a further point of correspondence between humor and Zen. Common to both is the element of abruptness, in the one case an abruptness which precipitates laughter, in the other case an abruptness which precipitates enlightenment. What the Zen masters have often done is to use the one form of abruptness, that of humor, as an occasion for the other. This is by no means purely accidental, since the sudden realization of the point of a joke is directly analogous to the sudden realization of enlightenment. The point of the joke, or the humorousness in the antics of the clown, is something that is caught immediately and effortlessly, or it is not caught at all. It does, of course, require preparation in terms of setting, context, and mood -- and here the "sudden realization" school of Zen includes rather than excludes the "progressive realization" school. Nothing is more awkward and flat than an inappropriate joke, or a joke out of the context that permitted it to be funny, or a joke the surprise ending of which has not been carefully prepared. But when the comic twist comes, like the "twist" of en-

24. Blyth, Zen and Zen Classics, II, 122.

25. Attributed to Hakuin.

lightenment, it comes spontaneously and uncoerced. If it requires explanation and the effort of understanding it ceases to be funny, even when it is comprehended intellectually, and the attempt is made to force an embarrassed smile. If one does not get the point instantaneously and intuitively laughter does not follow -- that is, it is not funny -- though later one may come to comprehend the humor that was in it in a secondhand, discursive understanding. There is, of course, the case of the proverbial Englishman who gets the point and laughs a day later; nevertheless, the delayed realization of the joke comes, when it comes, abruptly and spontaneously. Explaining a joke, therefore, like explaining enlightenment, is the worst thing that could happen to it, for the rational translation of its irrationality is totally different from getting the significance immediately and naturally; that is, from actually experiencing its humorousness. In the one case it is intellectualized, and though the point may be comprehended nobody laughs; in the other case the laughter is not the result of purposively taking thought about the matter, and everybody laughs effortlessly. It is for this reason that humor and Zen are so suited to each other, and in their spheres of coincidence are often so inseparable.

There is also a further correlation to be seen in the methodology of Zen "midwifery" between the elements of suddenness, surprise, and shock in the abrupt twist of humor and the similar virtues of the abrupt blow of the kyosaku, as well as the slapping, kicking, and shouting frequently mentioned in the anecdotes of the early Zen masters. These are techniques of the same order and intent. Suddenness, surprise, and shock are the very heart of humor, and the stock-in-trade of the clown and comedian. Both the comic and the dramatic techniques (and, as has been argued, even the dramatic techniques have a comic dimension to them) are a form of spiritual "shock therapy" which can serve to break up the patterns of thought and rationality that hold the individual in bondage. At a certain juncture further words and reasonings may only bind the cords more tightly, or perpetuate the illusion that the problem is solvable in these terms. What may be required, therefore, is the sudden jolt of the kooan, the irrational turn of the humorous anecdote, or the absurdity of the comic figure. If the individual has become removed from reality, if he has lost touch with the true nature of things, if he is caught in the web of artificial constructs, the function of humor, like that of the kyosaku, can be that of snapping the bonds of his illusion, and bringing him back to reality.

Hakuin's commentary on the Hannya Shingyoo, which he entitled Dokugo (i.e., "poisonous words of") Hannya Shingyoo, is a case in point. The shock-value of this wry humor, on the surface sacrilegious, is its own justification as a device for awakening the reader to the dangers inherent in a mere intellectual and doctrinal appropriation of any religious teaching: that it may be substituted for the reality toward which it points, like the mistaking of the

pointing finger for the moon. [26] This, in Ummon's blunter way of putting it, would simply be to "swallow the saliva of other people, and succeed in memorizing and accumulating heaps and loads of curios and antiques." [27] The choice however, between a more physical form of abruptness and surprise and a more humorous form, at least in the greater flexibility of the earlier Zen tradition is a matter of accommodating the technique to the situation and individual involved. In full accord with the ancient practice of Indian and Asian spiritual masters of adjusting the approach to the specific personality and need of the individual, in some circumstances a more dramatic method might be required, and in others a more comic method.


ICONOCLASM AND THE FOLLY OF THE DESIRING SELF

There has probably never been a religious movement more sweepingly iconoclastic than Zen; idols of every sort are mercilessly smashed: scripture, doctrine, tradition, meritorious works, ritual, liturgy, ecclesiasticism, reason, self, prayer, gods, and even the Buddha. Much of the humor in Zen is therefore iconoclastic in character; before enlightenment and liberation can occur, all idols must be overturned or -- which is the same -- laughed out of existence. Anything is potentially an idol; therefore anything is a legitimate object of laughter. No aspect of one's existence is to be taken too seriously. This is precisely the function of humor; for to take things too seriously, however important and significant they might ordinarily seem, is to be dependent upon them and therefore to be caught in the wheel (the vicious circle) of attachment, desire, and anxiety. Beginning with the first Ch'an patriarch the comic/iconoclastic motif is central to Zen, as in the legend of Bodhidharma's response to the inquiry of Emperor Wu of Liang: "'Ever since the beginning of my reign I have built so many temples, copied so many sacred books, and supported so many monks and nuns; what do you think my merit might be?' 'No merit whatever, sire!' was Bodhidharma's reply." [28]

This type of humor not only turns outward in a relentless attack upon idolatry, pretension, and pride, but also is permitted to turn inward toward even the most sacred moments of Zen experience itself, as in the episode of Toozan's enlightenment. In the exuberance over his awakening, Toozan exclaimed to his master, Ummon, "From now on I will go where there is no smoke of human habitation, keep not a grain of rice, but will entertain all the people from the ten directions of the world, dissolve the glue [of their attachment] and release them from their bonds!" Ummon twitted him, "Your body is no bigger

than a cocoanut, but what a big mouth when you open it " [29] Perhaps the most sacrosanct elements in Zen, in the formal sense, are its "apostolic succession" of continuous transmission from the Buddha through Mahaakaa`syapa to the present, and the so-called Zen creed which summarizes the essential thrust of Zen teaching. [30] Yet there are instances of both of these traditions being parodied, as in Mumon's summary and commentary:

A long time ago when the World Honored One was dwelling on Vulture Peak, He picked up a flower and showed it to the congregation. They all remained unmoved, but the venerable Mahaakaa`syapa smiled. The Honored One said: "I have in my hand the doctrine of the right Dharma which is birthless and deathless, the true form of no-form and a great mystery. It is the message of non-dependence upon (words) and letters and is transmitted outside the scriptures. I now hand it to Mahaakaa`syapa."

[Mumon's commentary]: Golden-faced Gautama behaved outrageously. He reduced the sublime to the simple. He sold dog meat for mutton and thought it wonderful to do so. Had the whole congregation smiled, to whom would he have transmitted the right Dharma? Had Mahaakaa`syapa not smiled, to whom would he have transmitted it? If you say that the right Dharma can be transmitted, the golden-faced old man deceived the world. If it cannot be, how could he give the message even to Mahaakaa`syapa?

When he held up a flower
His secret was revealed.
When Mahaakaa`syapa smiled
No one in heaven or on earth knew what to make of it. [31]

The fool and his folly is commonly the subject of comedy, particularly the fool who is blissfully unaware of his folly, and, more particularly, the fool who mistakes his folly for wisdom. This, in Zen, describes the self-portrait of man. Humor is therefore not only a permissible but an especially appropriate way of getting at what in Buddhism generally has consistently been identified as the fundamental folly of ignorance, desire, and illusion of self. If the ego, for instance, is understood as one of the elements of the human problem, then humor corresponds to the realization of the comedy of the substantial ego, the refusal to take the ego seriously or absolutely in its pretension of being the one secure point of reference and consciousness -- as in Descartes' philosophy where, when all else is in doubt, one retreats to the seemingly impregnabl

30. Attributed to Bodhidharma, but undoubtedly of later formulation:

"A special transmission outside the scriptures;
No dependence upon words and letters;
Direct pointing at the soul [inner being] of man;
Seeing into one's nature and the attainment of Buddhahood."

refuge of the substantial ego: cogito ergo sum. There is no small irony in the fact that what is taken as the most fundamental axiom of Cartesian thought is the fundamental illusion of Buddhist thought. In Zen in particular it is through humor that the ego is revealed as being only the mask that the actor puts on, or holds in front of his face (as in Greek drama, and the original meaning of persona as "mask"), hiding his true identity, a mask which is both a tragic mask from the standpoint of ignorance and suffering, and a comic mask from the standpoint of enlightenment and liberation.

Similarly, if one takes the Buddhist emphasis upon the problematic of desire, there is something not only pathetic but comic about passion, greed, envy, and hatred, and one is fully liberated only when he sees both its pathetic and its comic side, both the suffering and the folly of his insatiable grasping. Likewise, an aspect of the experience of enlightenment in Zen may be seen as the realization of the forms of one's ignorance as foolish and therefore humorous, so that a part of what the liberation of the awakening may mean is the freedom to laugh at the comedy of one's blindness, and to laugh in the joy of newfound insight.


THE FREEDOM OF HUMOR AND THE FREEDOM OF ENLIGHTENMENT

As has been intimated above, humor in Zen is not only, in various ways, an aspect of the methodology of approaching enlightenment and liberation; it is also the consequence of enlightenment and liberation. To see the world and one's individuality in this new light is coincident with seeing it through the comic perspective at a profounder level, and to be liberated is coincident with experiencing the world and one's individuality in the freest sense of the comic spirit. To the degree that one is free, one is free to laugh in the fullest and most joyous sense. Humor is caught up in the joy of awakening and emancipation. At every level humor spells freedom in some sense and to some degree. Here, however, the ambiguous freedom to laugh which moves within the conflicts and tensions of existence -- the freedom, therefore, which is still within the context of bondage -- becomes the freedom to laugh on the other side of enlightenment and liberation. He who is no longer in bondage to desire, or to the self, or to the law, he who is no longer torn apart by alienation and anxiety, can now laugh, as it were, with the laughter of the gods.

Something of this spirit is captured in the account of the enlightenment of Shui-lao. Upon asking his master, Baso (Ma Tsu, 709-788), "What is the meaning of Bodhidharma's coming from the West?" Baso kicked him in the chest, knocking him to the ground. Immediately Shui-lao was enlightened, got up, and began clapping his hands and laughing. Daie (Ta Hui, 1089-1163) reports that when asked about the nature of his enlightenment, Shui-lao re-
plied, "Since the master kicked me, I have not been able to stop laughing." [32] Similarly, at the end of his life, Razan (Lo Shan, ninth century), sensing his end to be near, ascended the rostrum to speak, but instead dismissed the monks. He then remarked simply, "If you wish to show your gratitude for the Buddha's goodness to you, you should not be too earnest [anxious] about propagating the Great Teaching," after which he began laughing loudly, and died. [33] Sometimes in the Zen accounts it is the monk rather than the master who provides the humorous turn, and this is taken as a sign of his progress toward or achievement of enlightenment. There is the story, for example, of the monk who asked Ungo (Yung Cho, ninth century), "Mountains and rivers, the great earth -- where does it all come from?" "From delusive imagination," countered Ungo. To which the monk responded, "Then won't you please imagine a piece of gold for me!" Whereupon the monk was received by the master. [34]
In terms of the mythological schema with which the essay began, the achievement of the comic spirit and perspective in this sense may be interpreted as a corollary of the recovery on a higher level of the spontaneity, immediacy, and naturalness enjoyed by the child -- the freedom that is prior to the emergence of rationality and order, and the dualistic rift in experience between self and world, mind and body, good and evil, sacred and profane. This is not, however, simply a return to infancy, a regression to the primordial womb, but a return, as it were, on a higher plane. It is both identical to and radically other than the prerational plane. The experience that lies between the alpha and the omega of the spiritual pilgrimage is not simply a grand detour which counts for nought. Rather it is carried into a fuller dimension; it is transcended and brought to fulfillment. Nor is this a resolution of opposites through an uneasy compromise, like the precarious "middle way" of the tight-rope walker suspended in midair, but a genuine dialectical transcendence of the opposites. A new world of revelation and redemption has been entered. As Suzuki says of the experience of satori: "The world for those who have gained a satori is no more the old world as it used to be... Logically stated, all its opposites and contradictions are united and harmonized into a consistent organic whole." [35] The humor which corresponds to this level, therefore, is not simply reducible to the laughter of the child -- though it includes this -- but is the laughter of maturity. It is the comic spirit and perspective of one who has passed through Paradise-lost, who has known alienation and anxiety, but who has come out on the other side that is identified in myth as Paradise-regained.


Emptiness is the source - The best home videos are here
To nourish the vital energy, keep watch in silence;
In order to subdue the mind, act with non-action.
Of movement and stillness, be aware of their origin;
There is no work to do, much less someone to seek.
The true and constant must respond to phenomena;
Responding to phenomena, you must be unconfused.
When unconfused, the nature will stabilize by itself;
When the nature stabilizes, energy returns by itself.
When energy returns, the elixir crystallizes by itself;
Within the pot, the trigrams of heaven and earth are joined.
Yīn and yáng arise, alternating over and over again;
Every transformation comes like a clap of thunder.
White clouds form and come to assemble at the peak;
The sweet nectar sprinkles down Mount Sumeru.
Swallow for yourself this wine of immortality;
You wander so freely—who is able to know you?
Sit and listen to the tune played without strings;
Clearly understand the mechanism of creation.
It comes entirely from these twenty lines;
A true ladder going straight to Heaven.-Daoist text -
To us all towns are one, all men our kin. Life's good comes not from others' gift, nor ill. Man's pains and pains' relief are from within. Thus have we seen in visions of the wise !." - Tamil Poem-
Hakuin does not sketch himself in the idealized form of an enlightened one, or even in the realistic image of an austere zenji, but as a bald, fat, cross-eyed and hunch-backed old man...but then he kissed you:)...Lovely story of the creation purpose...shakti means manifestation,and shiva means the origin of it..the kiss is the joy of emptiness knowing itself...kisses from the mahayogi to you,grasshopper from heaven!

Monday, April 18, 2011

The Engagement Chicken..do this if you want marriage:)

Lead me from dreaming to waking. Lead me from opacity to clarity. Lead me from the complicated to the simple. Lead me from the obscure to the obvious. Lead me from intention to attention. Lead me from what I'm told I am to what I see I am. Lead me from confrontation to wide openness. Lead me to the place I never left, Where there is peace, and peace - The Upanishads

*note* I'll quote only this time..but try the engagement chicken muscle..do this if you want a marriage from heaven..I tried this recipe and it is delicious ..too bad I got married to my right hand afterwords..guess that was my bad karma..tell me if you had more luck then me...kisses:) -added by danny-quote"
First comes chicken, then comes marriage? Be skeptical if you must, but this recipe may be charmed. It all began 26 years ago, when then-Glamour fashion editor Kim Bonnell gave the recipe to her assistant, Kathy Suder, who made the chicken for her boyfriend, who, a month later, asked her to marry him. “It’s a meal your wife would make. It got me thinking,” says Jon Suder, who now has three children with Kathy. Details of the simple dish passed from assistant to assistant like a culinary chain letter. When Bonnell heard that her recipe had inspired three weddings, she dubbed it Engagement Chicken. Now it is linked to 72 marriages. Try the recipe, give it to a friend—oh, and let us know when it works!Engagement Chicken


Serves 2 to 4


Ingredients:


* 1 whole chicken (approximately 4 pounds)
* 1/2 cup fresh lemon juice, plus 3 whole lemons—including 1 sliced for garnish
* 1 tablespoon kosher or coarse sea salt
* 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
* Fresh herbs for garnish (4 rosemary sprigs, 4 sage sprigs, 8 thyme sprigs, and 1 bunch fl at-leaf parsley)


1. Position an oven rack in the upper third of the oven and preheat the oven to 400°F. Remove the giblets from the chicken, wash the chicken inside and out with cold water, then let the chicken drain, cavity down, in a colander for 2 minutes.


2. Pat the chicken dry with paper towels. Place the chicken breast-side down in a medium roasting pan fi tted with a rack and pour the lemon juice all over the chicken, both inside and out. Season the chicken all over with salt and pepper inside and out.


3. Prick 2 whole lemons three times each in three different places with a fork and place them deep inside the cavity. Chicken cavity size may vary, so if one lemon is partly sticking out, that’s fine. (Tip: If the lemons are stiff, roll them on the countertop with your palm before pricking to get the juices flowing.)
4. Put the chicken in the oven, lower the oven temperature to 350°F, and roast, uncovered, for 15 minutes.


5. Remove the roasting pan from the oven. Using tongs or two wooden spoons, turn the chicken breast- side up. Insert a meat thermometer in the thigh, and return the chicken to the oven and roast for about 1 hour to 1 hour and 15 minutes or until the meat thermometer reads 180°F and the juices run clear when the thigh is pricked with a fork. Continue roasting if necessary. Keep in mind that cooking times in different ovens vary; roasting a chicken at 350°F takes approximately 18-20 minutes per pound, plus an additional 15 minutes.


6. Let the chicken rest for 10 minutes before carving. And here’s the secret: Pour the juices from the roasting pan on top of the sliced chicken— this is the “marry me juice.” Garnish with fresh herbs and lemon slices."
 To nourish the vital energy, keep watch in silence;

In order to subdue the mind, act with non-action.


Of movement and stillness, be aware of their origin;


There is no work to do, much less someone to seek.


The true and constant must respond to phenomena;


Responding to phenomena, you must be unconfused.


When unconfused, the nature will stabilize by itself;


When the nature stabilizes, energy returns by itself.


When energy returns, the elixir crystallizes by itself;


Within the pot, the trigrams of heaven and earth are joined.


Yīn and yáng arise, alternating over and over again;


Every transformation comes like a clap of thunder.


White clouds form and come to assemble at the peak;


The sweet nectar sprinkles down Mount Sumeru.


Swallow for yourself this wine of immortality;


You wander so freely—who is able to know you?


Sit and listen to the tune played without strings;


Clearly understand the mechanism of creation.


It comes entirely from these twenty lines;


A true ladder going straight to Heaven.-Daoist text -




To us all towns are one, all men our kin. Life's good comes not from others' gift, nor ill. Man's pains and pains' relief are from within. Thus have we seen in visions of the wise !." - Tamil Poem-

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Questions and Answers from Huineng(the platform sutra)

Lead me from dreaming to waking. Lead me from opacity to clarity. Lead me from the complicated to the simple. Lead me from the obscure to the obvious. Lead me from intention to attention. Lead me from what I'm told I am to what I see I am. Lead me from confrontation to wide openness. Lead me to the place I never left, Where there is peace, and peace - The Upanishads
*note*..If anyone could comment on the famous Platform Sutra of Huineng..that would be..the mahayogi.In the past I tried to refrain from commenting ,but these days I feel like the grasshoppers have no idea of what the masters from the past meant..really!..therefore,me..the beloved mahayogi..loved in the 3 worlds..worshiped in 10..and celebrated in the 18th also..I'll try to explain your feeble grasshoppers minds (lacking kung fu from lack of meditation,and lacking samadhi and the pure joy and wisdom of your true self,since you are engrossed in the mind-reals like the coyotes from the Texas desert,munching on the cactus stuck to his own ass)  about what the Patriarch meant on his Platform Sutra...I recommend you read it 100 times,to grasp his superior wisdom muscle,with your wisdom teeth..and if you do..never let go!..that is the secret of life,indeed...but first you must have your wisdom teeth still there..to bite the wisdom muscle,see?..
Huineng is one of the best ,and his Platform Sutra is real...kisses to him:)
But since I don't have much time..I'll explain only the chapter 3...questions and answers.
Truth to tell..I never met anyone besides Huineng (and me..) to express the truth so directly..and with such power,that even the realm of gods trembled of his words...for the gods knew that their realms of heaven or hell would be destroyed when Huineng spoke..or when the mahayogi raised his left eyebrow,and he didn't smile at them.
May the mighty mahayogi never raise his right eyebrow toward the gods..for he always said ,,To us all towns are one, all men our kin. Life's good comes not from others' gift, nor ill. Man's pains and pains' relief are from within. Thus have we seen in visions of the wise !." - Tamil Poem-..and if the gods don't need this wisdom,and they really believe they are formidable...not only I'll destroy them all,but I will wipe my ass with them also..for they are not persons,but qualities in the realm of collective consciousness..THIS is the reason you must worship them...but a quality is not a person...for there is no GOD outside your pure spirit with,manifesting so he can experience itself..trust the mahayogi...for his wisdom muscle is superior..Halluyah..grasshoppers from heaven!!!)
Yet..he talks about the ultimate truth...this Huineng.
that was his problem..my boy lollipop named Huineng,the bodhi(or the kripto inside you spirit) wisdom muscle.
 -added by mahayogi danny-
.................
Chapter III. Questions and Answers
One day Prefect Wei entertained the Patriarch and asked him to preach to a big gathering. At the end of the feast, Prefect Wei asked him to mount the pulpit (to which the Patriarch consented). After bowing twice reverently, in company with other officials, scholars, and commoners, Prefect Wei said, "I have heard what Your Holiness preached. It is really so deep that it is beyond our mind and speech, and I have certain doubts which I hope you will clear up for me." 

"If you have any doubts," replied the Patriarch, "please ask, and I will explain."(said the Master,flexing his jaws,and knowing that the questions were so lame...added by danny)

"What you preach are the fundamental principles taught by Bodhidharma, are they not?" "Yes," replied the Patriarch. "I was told," said Prefect Wei, "that at Bodhidharma's first interview with Emperor Wu of Liang he was asked what merits the Emperor would get for the work of his life in building temples, allowing new monks to be ordained (royal consent was necessary at that time), giving alms and entertaining the Sangha; and his reply was that these would bring no merits ar all. Now, I cannot understand why he gave such an answer. Will you please explain."  

"These would bring no merits," replied the Patriarch.(he meant that no amount of mind forms trying to act,or do good would help you after you died..for they all die with your body..if your consciousness is linked to the body,and your acts ..and not to your Buddha essence (or the kripto inside) -added by danny) "Don't doubt the words of the Sage. Emperor Wu's mind was under an erroneous impression, and he did not know the orthodox teaching. Such deeds as building temples, allowing new monks to be ordained, giving alms and entertaining the Sangha will bring you only felicities, which should not be taken for merits. Merits are to be found within the Dharmakaya, and they have nothing to do with practices for attaining felicities."(he speaks about the ultimate aim..for the individual..-added by danny) The Patriarch went on, "Realization of the Essence of Mind is Kung (good deserts), and equality is Teh (good quality). When our mental activity works without any impediment, so that we are in a position to know constantly the true state and the mysterious functioning of our own mind, we are said to have acquired Kung Teh (merits).(here the Master talks about essence and function ..you won't find anyone better then him explaining,besides me,perhaps..read carefully what he says..grasshoppers from heaven!)
Within, to keep the mind in a humble mood is Kung; and without, to behave oneself according to propriety is Teh. That all things are the manifestation of the Essence of Mind is Kung, and that the quintessence of mind is free from idle thoughts is Teh. Not to go astray from the Essence of Mind is Kung, and not to pollute the mind in using it is Teh. If you seek for merits within the Dharmakaya, and do what I have just said, what you acquire will be real merits.(seek the kingdom of GOD within..as Jesus said (dharmakaya) and the function will appear(if you want any function..careful..I meant this AFTER realization,not before..do not ever think that you'll have a function after realization unless you invent one..remember Ramana Maharish?..he just stayed in his cave) added by danny..by real merits he means the actual self-knowing ,or the individual soul progressing on the infinite path of divinity,and knowing he is just the divine in action..The dharmakaya means the source within yourselves..grasshoppers from heaven)
He who works for merits does not slight others; and on all occasions he treats everybody with respect. He who is in the habit of looking down upon others has not got rid of the erroneous idea of a self, which indicates his lack of Kung. Because of his egotism and his habitual contempt for all others, he knows not the real Essence of Mind; and this shows his lack of Teh.(the Master here explains the loss of self of realized people..we become one with the essence of all the others..if you still have a self idea,you'll always blame others..not knowing you're projecting your own division to others..in other words..if you are love,you'll see only love in others,besides their faults..the same principle applies to you,or,,as you judge yourself ..you judge others,,..this is a VERY important secret the Master explains here..because actually there is no self,other then in the resonance dance with the Spirit within you..using the 4 elements..so if you don't know whom you are..you'll always judge others..on outside..as you judge yourself on inside...why is that?..is because the creation was set-up from the beginning..more then this I can't tell you(even so I know why) because it won't help you..but remember my mahayogi words..the pain you feel in your life..or in your mental stage..is the call of the ONE inside you,the real you..saying..I am here..why have you abandoned me??..the kripto inside you wants you to grow the bliss wisdom muscle,but you take the pain as your enemy..not your teacher...see what I mean?..grasshoppers from the heaven?..story of your life,indeed!)
Learned Audience, when our mental activity works without interruption, then it is Kung; and when our mind functions in a straightforward manner, then it is Teh. To train our own mind is Kung, and to train our own body is Teh.(he means the source and function ..the function is the body..the source of the mind(in action..) he means by Kung..added by danny)
Learned Audience, merits should be sought within the Essence of Mind and they cannot be acquired by almsgiving, entertaining the monks, etc. We should therefore distinguish between felicities and merits. There is nothing wrong in what our Patriarch said. It is Emperor Wu himself who did not know the true way."(emperor Wu actually did allot to save the budhist religion,by protecting the monks and helping them..the master says he did nothing to inside of HIM..and all he did was to OUTSIDE..therefore..he would NOT be helped much after his death..in other words..the emperor Wu tried to buy his enlightenment ..and he was wrong,since this is an individual process..only in the end is collective,if enough realized people wake up..and even then is just a push on the mental forms..imagine that the collective acts like a person..as me and you...but on the greater scale..this is how gods and demons are created..to give you a better analogy ..imagine all your cells in your body..they are individual,yet act ,and form YOU..see the superior life form created?..the same is with the collective consciousness ..they are the GODS you've read about in mythology ..or the various gods in all the cultures..every one has a different name,as you observe..but the common point you should look is the ,,qualities,, they express..that is the ONLY common ground,since Gods are not a person...they are collective mind-forms..believe me...that was why the Buddha tried to save them..for they act as a person,even so they are collective...)
Prefect Wei then asked the next question. "I notice that it is a common practice for monks and laymen to recite the name of Amitabha with the hope of being born in the Pure Land of the West. To clear up my doubts, will you please tell me whether it is possible for them to be born there or not." "Listen to me carefully, Sir," replied the Patriarch, "and I will explain.
According to the Sutra spoken by the Bhagavat in Shravasti City for leading people to the Pure Land of the West, it is quite clear that the Pure Land is not far from here, for the distance in mileage is 108,000, which really represents the 'ten evils' and 'eight errors' within us. 
 (he says very firmly..inside,or within ourselves are the 10 evils and eight errors..this is what was I saying by posting again and again...
"To us all towns are one, all men our kin. Life's good comes not from others' gift, nor ill. Man's pains and pains' relief are from within. Thus have we seen in visions of the wise !." - Tamil Poem-but anybody listened?..hell no..they believe that heaven and hell is outside,and some gods would save them..such moronic state of mind is difficult to address..for they always blame the others,and due to the resonance factor..they don't even know they blame themselves..because this is how the universe works,unless you have a leap of faith,or a leap of pain,or a leap of kripto joy..choose the kripto joy inside you,I truly recommend that..otherwise life itself will give you so much pain..that you'd be FORCED to look into yourself,and to admit your beliefs whom shaped your reality were wrong all the time..CHOOSE the bliss of the kripto spirit inside you,please..grasshoppers from heaven)To those of inferior mentality certainly it is far away, but to superior men we may say that it is quite near. Although the Dharma is uniform, men vary in their mentality.
Because they differ from one another in their degree of enlightenment or ignorance, therefore some understand the Dharma quicker than others.
(he means the consciousness is bound to the body,and the simple fact is that some people,even so they have the power within as pure spirit..they are so lost in their mind forms,that do NOT even imagine there could be a way out..therefore..they follow what they know,or believe..or experienced in the past...a leap of faith from them to apply(I repeat..apply,,..not read about them!!..you are what you do,not what you believe!!) the principles is the only thing which would help them.,,this is because the resonance factor of existence itself,you must do to become..then after you become,you must be...in the end..it comes down to action,or doing something different then you did in your past,and trust the process ..be careful what I explain now..for LIFE itself will force you(or the true ONE inside yourself) to act.
Happy are those whom act as I told them..for I can assimilate inside my chakras their mistakes..but I feel sorry for those whom take the ,pain,, as ,,beautiful,,..or those whom refuse to act,for since I forgive..the collective gods never forgive,since they are on the cause and affect level...and I am not...trust me:) only my material body is bound to the cause affect,yet I am not..ponder..grasshoppers from heaven)
While ignorant men recite the name of Amitabha and pray to be born in the Pure Land, the enlightened purify their mind, for, as the Buddha said, 'When the mind is pure, the Buddha Land is simultaneously pure.' "Although you are a native of the East, if your mind is pure you are sinless.
One the other hand, even if you were a native of the West an impure mind could not free you from sin, When the people of the East commit a sin, they recite the name of Amitabha and pray to be born in the West; but in the case of sinners who are natives of the West, where should they pray to be born? 
Ordinary men and ignorant people understand neither the Essence of Mind nor the Pure Land within themselves,(here the Master explains the resonator factor of existence itself..as Jesus said,,the kingdom of god is in yourself,,..and Jesus also said,,don't throw pearls to the grasshoppers,,..for they will see no value in them,and crucify your ass..and that what happened to Jesus in the end,indeed..but I am not Jesus,and I shove pearls in the grasshoppers asses..therefore..when they take a crap,they'll remember my superior wisdom muscle..life is too short to be crucified as Jesus was..trust me..a painful heart attack is just around the corner..maybe today if you are lucky like me:) why bother being crucified?..we die anyway,so why take life so seriously?..why not love each others,since we all have the same essence of kripto joy inside our hearts?..love yourself as you love your neighbor said Jesus..he didn't say hate yourself as you hate your fellow being,since he Knew we are one..this applies to the collective nations etc..one day the humanity will leave the earth and go to other planets..will we hate those aliens as you hate ourselves?..time will tell,indeed..ughhhh...I can feel the heart attack..oghh..the pain..the pain..Halleluyah!..and the mahayogi watched the pain,and laughed so hard..even the universe bended in a 12 inch black hole..and reversed the time/space to accommodate his superior wisdom muscle...)  so they wish to be born in the East or the West. But to the enlightened everywhere is the same. As the Buddha said, 'No matter where they happen to be, they are always happy and comfortable.' "Sir, if your mind is free from evil the West is not far from here; but difficult indeed it would be for one whose heart is impure to be born there by invoking Amitabha! "Now, I advise you, Learned Audience, first to do away with the 'ten evils'; then we shall have travelled one hundred thousand miles. For the next step, do away with the 'eight errors', and this will mean another eight thousand miles traversed. If we can realize the Essence of Mind at all times and behave in a straightforward manner on all occasions, in the twinkling of an eye we may reach the Pure Land and there see Amitabha.
"If you only put into practice the ten good deeds, there would be no necessity for you to be born there. On the other hand, if you do not do away with the 'ten evils' in your mind, which Buddha will take you there? If you understand the Birthless Doctrine (which puts an end to the cycle of birth and death) of the 'Sudden' School, it takes you only a moment to see the West. If you do not understand, how can you reach there by reciting the name of Amitabha, as the distance is so far? "Now, how would you like it if I were to shift the Pure Land to your presence this very moment, so that all of you might see it?"

The congregation made obeisance and replied, "If we might see the Pure Land here there would be no necessity for us to desire to be born there. Will Your Holiness kindly let us see it by having it removed here." The Patriarch said, "Sirs, this physical body of ours is a city.(the Master here really explains..listen carefully..he speaks about the means to free..by explaining the results in advance,as if you had them already-added by danny-)

Our eyes, ears, nose and tongue are the gates. There are five external gates, while the internal one is ideation. The mind is the ground. The Essence of Mind is the King who lives in the domain of the mind. While the Essence of Mind is in, the King is in, and our body and mind exist. When the Essence of Mind is out, there is no King and our body and mind decay.
We should work for Buddhahood within the Essence of Mind, and we should not look for it apart from ourselves. He who is kept in ignorance of his Essence of Mind is an ordinary being. He who is enlightened in his Essence of Mind is a Buddha. To be merciful is Avalokitesvara (one of the two principal Bodhisattvas of the Pure Land). To take pleasure in almsgiving is Mahasthama (the other Bodhisattva). Competence for a pure life is Sakyamuni (one of the titles of Gautama Buddha). Equality and straightforwardness is Amitabha. The idea of a self or that of a being is Mount Meru. A depraved mind is the ocean. Klesa (defilement) is the billow. Wickedness is the evil dragon.
Falsehood is the devil. The wearisome sense objects are the aquatic animals.
Greed and hatred are the hells. Ignorance and infatuation are the brutes.

"Learned Audience, if you constantly perform the ten good deeds, paradise will appear to you at once. When you get rid of the idea of a self and that of a being, Mount Meru will topple. When the mind is no longer depraved, the ocean (of existence) will be dried up. When you are free from klesa, billows and waves (of the ocean of existence) will calm down. When wickedness is alien to you, fish and evil dragons will die out.
"Within the domain of our mind, there is a Tathagata of Enlightenment who sends forth a powerful light which illumines externally the six gates (of sensation) and purifies them. This light is strong enough to pierce through the six Kama Heavens (heavens of desire); and when it is turned inwardly it eliminates at once the three poisonous elements, purges away our sins which might lead us to the hells or other evil realms, and enlightens us thoroughly within and without, so that we are no different from those born in the Pure Land of the West. Now, if we do not train ourselves up to this standard, how can we reach the Pure Land?" Having heard what the Patriarch said, the congregation knew their Essence of Mind very clearly. They made obeisance and exclaimed in one voice, "Well done!" They also chanted, "May all the sentient beings of this Universe who have heard this sermon at once understand it intuitively." The Patriarch added, "Learned Audience, those who wish to train themselves (spiritually) may do so at home. It is quite unnecessary for them to stay in monasteries. Those who train themselves at home may be likened unto a native of the East who is kind-hearted, while those who stay in monasteries but neglect their work differ not from a native of the West who is evil in heart. So far as the mind is pure, it is the 'Western Pure Land of one's own Essence of Mind'." Prefect Wei asked, "How should we train ourselves at home? Will you please teach us."
The Patriarch replied, "I will give you a 'formless' stanza. If you put its teaching into practice you will be in the same position as those who live with me permanently. On the other hand, if you do not practice it, what progress can you make in the spiritual path, even though you cut your hair and leave home for good (i.e., join the Sangha)? The stanza reads:
For a fair mind, observation of precepts (Sila) is unnecessary.
For straightforward behavior, practice in Dhyana (contemplation) may be dispensed with.
On the principle of righteousness, the superior and the inferior stand for each other (in time of need).
On the principle of mutual desire to please, the senior and junior are on affectionate terms.
On the principle of forbearance, we do not quarrel even in the midst of a hostile crowd.
If we can persevere till fire can be obtained through rubbing a piece of wood, Then the red lotus (the Buddha-nature) will shoot out from the black mire (the unenlightened state).
That which is of bitter taste is bound to be good medicine.
That which sounds unpleasant to the ear is certainly frank advice.
By amending our mistakes, we get wisdom.
By defending our faults, we betray an unsound mind.
In our daily life we should always practice altruism, But Buddhahood is not to be attained by giving away money as charity.
Bodhi is to be found within our own mind, And there is no necessity to look for mysticism from without.
Hearers of this stanza who put its teaching into actual practice Will find paradise in their very presence.
The Patriarch added, "Learned Audience, all of you should put into practice what is taught in this stanza, so that you can realize the Essence of Mind and attain Buddhahood directly. The Dharma waits for no one. I am going back to Ts'ao Ch'i, so the assembly may now break up. If you have any questions, you may come there to put them." At this juncture Prefect Wei, the government officials, pious men, and devout ladies who were present were all enlightened. Faithfully they accepted the teaching and put it into practice.
(what can I say more?..I''ll add later comments ..kiss)


To nourish the vital energy, keep watch in silence;
In order to subdue the mind, act with non-action.
Of movement and stillness, be aware of their origin;
There is no work to do, much less someone to seek.
The true and constant must respond to phenomena;
Responding to phenomena, you must be unconfused.
When unconfused, the nature will stabilize by itself;
When the nature stabilizes, energy returns by itself.
When energy returns, the elixir crystallizes by itself;
Within the pot, the trigrams of heaven and earth are joined.
Yīn and yáng arise, alternating over and over again;
Every transformation comes like a clap of thunder.
White clouds form and come to assemble at the peak;
The sweet nectar sprinkles down Mount Sumeru.
Swallow for yourself this wine of immortality;
You wander so freely—who is able to know you?
Sit and listen to the tune played without strings;
Clearly understand the mechanism of creation.
It comes entirely from these twenty lines;
A true ladder going straight to Heaven.-Daoist text -
To us all towns are one, all men our kin. Life's good comes not from others' gift, nor ill. Man's pains and pains' relief are from within. Thus have we seen in visions of the wise !." - Tamil Poem-