SUMMING UP
Over the past few months
we have discussed some of the principles of Zen. A few more need to be
addressed, and today I would like to talk about some of them.
As ever, there will be duplications,
even some contradictions in what I say. Life is full of inconsistencies and
repetition. That’s the way of life, and that’s the way of Zen.
All things change.
Security
is an invention of the human mind. Freedom from change does not exist in
nature.
When
I lived out in the country I spent many pleasant hours in the spring watching a
pair of cardinals build a nest in a dogwood tree close to my house. The two
birds carried twigs, bits of fuzz, and cedar shavings to make the nest a
comfortable and cozy home. It was sited in a place that was safe from my cat
and out of sight of crows and hawks. It seemed a perfect nest for raising a
family.
The
female laid a clutch of eggs while the male gathered food to bring home.
Eventually the eggs hatched. Both parents took turns collecting bugs and worms
to feed the babies, and they took turns keeping the chicks warm and protected.
The
hatchlings sprouted feathers, and one day they were almost ready to take their
first flight.
Then
a fierce storm—one of our typical spring gales—tore the branch that held the
nest off the dogwood. The nest was destroyed, and the infant birds were
crushed.
A sad story? Yes.
Did
the cardinal parents grieve? We don’t know.
We
can be sure that the parents did not blame anyone or anything for what
happened.
What
happened was the way of nature, and the way of nature is change.
The cardinals didn’t build another
nest that spring. It was too late in the season. But the next year the same
cardinals put up another nest and started a family all over again.
We humans feel comfortable fastening
ourselves to one thing or another. To another person, to a home, to a computer,
to a truck. In Zen talk, this is called attachment.
One
word does a fair job of describing Zen Buddhism. That word is non-attachment.
All of the Buddha’s teachings and all
of the teachings of the Buddha’s followers can be summed up in the word
non-attachment.
We have earlier mentioned the
difference between detachment and
attachment. To be detached is to get away from a problem, to escape from it. It
means that one sees a potential problem and makes an effort to cut oneself off
from it.
Life is like a flowing stream.
However, instead of allowing life to flow, we too-often align ourselves with
favorable conditions, or else we fight against unfavorable conditions.
Non-attachment is altogether
different. Non-attachment means to neither fight against nor join with a
problem but to recognize the problem and become one with it.
When
humans experience a disaster they continue to torment themselves about it.
Humans try to explain happenings—whether happy or unhappy—as the will of god,
or as the fault of someone, or as the result of a vindictive Mother Nature.
We
rant and rave that someone or something has it in for us. We think we’ve been
made a scapegoat, so we try to find a reason.
Reason
doesn’t exist in nature. Ornithologists claim that bird’s bones are hollow and
lightweight in order to allow birds to fly. Nonsense. Birds fly. Period. Birds
have hollow bones. Period. If birds had solid bones they would probably fly
anyway. There is no reason, no
purpose, at work.
In nature there is no such thing as
rationalism—that is, reliance on reason as the best guide for belief and
action. There is only empiricism—experience of the senses.
In
life, things happen, and only human beings feel the need to assign a
reason. When individuals assign a reason
they feel better because that shifts responsibility away from them. Humans
create the concepts of good and bad. If they can’t find an external reason for
a “bad” happening, they are bothered. Of course, if they experience a “good”
happening they take credit for it.
Thus
they create, and revel in, a world of good and bad. To humans, life and its
happening must be either one or the other.
However,
what is, is. And change is foremost
among what is. As much as humans like to believe they are immune from change,
it just is not so.
You
know the saying. Two things are certain in life: taxes and death. I’ll add a
third certainty: change.
Change is a transformation or transition
from one state, condition, or phase to another. Change is inevitable,
unavoidable, and inescapable.
Get
used to change. It is here to stay.
Change
does not change.
Death is the end.
Life
has a beginning and an end. The beginning is birth, the end is death.
Zen
does not have a beginning or an end. Zen is a circle. There is no start, no
finish to Zen. Like a flowing stream, Zen goes on and on.
We
get one and only one shot at this life, and as far as we know there is no
other, so we should make the very best of now.
In
Zen there is no sorrow about death. No fear of death.
A
Zen master was nearly a hundred years old and was dying. All of a sudden he sat
up in his bed and started laughing.
“Why
are you laughing?” The solemn mourners asked.
“Why
are you not laughing?” The master
answered.
When
one is empty of the judgments and assumptions that have been acquired over the
years, one comes close to original nature (sometimes called original face) and
is capable of conceiving original ideas.
One
Zen koan asks, “What was your face before you were born?” Like all koans this
is perplexing, even inexplicable. How can one possibly have a face before being
born?
Well, I’m going to cheat and partially
interpret this koan. Face-before-being-born refers to one’s true nature before
it has been altered by opinions, prejudices, judgments.
Zen is a way of life.
Zen
is not something that is turned on and turned off, like a water faucet, on a
certain day of the week or at a certain time of the day.
Zen deals with life by living it. Zen
points to the essence of life we all live. Zen is understood through one’s
experience. Zen is everyday life. To learn Zen is to learn oneself.
Finally, the last principle
of Zen.
When
we perceive the inconsistencies of life, all we can do is laugh.
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