BASSUI
BASSUI
“I am the master of my fate:
“I am the captain of my soul.”
Bassui Tokushō was a Zen
practitioner who did not want to be called a master. He lived in the late 1300s
and trained in Sōtō, Rinzai, and Ch'an schools. Although he absorbed the wide-ranging
teachings of Zen, Bassui was irritated with the state of the practice in Japan.
To him there was too much attachment by some monks and masters to ritual and
dogma, as well as too much attachment to freedom and informality.
That
dissatisfaction bloomed at an early age. When Bassui was seven years old he
asked a Zen priest, who was preparing food for a funeral ritual, who was going
to eat the food.
“The
soul of the dead person, of course,” said the priest.
“What
is this thing you call the soul?” the boy asked.
The priest didn’t respond.
Over
the following years Bassui stopped wondering about soul, deciding the notion
was too vague to have an answer. Instead he pondered about who it was that
sees, hears, eats, and wonders at this very moment.
That
set him off on a journey from temple to temple asking learned priest after
learned priest about one’s true self. Still, there were no answers, which exasperated
him even more.
Though Bassui thought
of himself as a Zen Buddhist he did not align himself with any temple or
monastery. He diligently sat in zazen, but he did not shave his head, and he
wore ordinary clothing. Nor did he recite sutras or chanted. Uninterested in
the trimmings of Zen, he was absorbed in knowing he who really was master.
When Bassui was asked why he didn’t dress
like a practicing monk he said he became a monk to understand life, not to wear
robes,
When asked if he studied koans he
said, “How can I appreciate the words of other men when I don’t even know my
own mind?”
Even though Bassui avoided being given
any sort of title, at age thirty-one he reluctantly accepted ordination as a
Zen master. Even then he was mistrustful of what he considered the too-easy confirmation,
and he remained unimpressed by the prominent abbots and the proclaimed leaders
of the times.
For several years Bassui lived a
wanderer’s life, sometimes staying in Zen temples, sometimes living alone as a
hermit. When he re-visited the hermit monk Tokukei, the man realized Bassui was
neither a follower nor a leader. He suggested he construct his own place of
retreat and simply teach whoever might listen.
Bassui built a hermitage, but whenever
too many disciples gathered around him he would wander off.
Bassui urged students to avoid koans
until they had seen into their own nature. Unlike Zen masters of old, he
neither ranted nor raved. Instead he spoke calmly of Dogen and other free-thinking
teachers, He recounted stories of the ancients, and used folklore and legend,
but he always returned to the question “Who is the one that is hearing at this
very moment?”
If a student asked him what to do
about random thoughts that came up during zazen, Bassui said to acknowledge
them and to ask “Who is it that is having these thoughts?” He encouraged
emptiness, but at the same time he claimed emptiness was not self-realization.
“If you catch a glimpse of your self-nature, Bassui
insisted, “It is the same as reading all of the sutras without holding one in
your hand and reading a word.”
He said that the act of bowing before
the Buddha was merely a physical exercise in horizontaling the mass of ego.
That term “horizontaling” may not be a
real word in either English or Japanese, but it makes the point.
According to Bassui, wanting to be
different from so-called ordinary people was the same as any other distracting
thought. “Who is the one who sees all this?” was his favorite saying.
Bassui was
reported never to have written anything. A disciple of his named Myodo compiled
a short biography that included several of Bassui’s talks. When Bassui was
requested to give the collection a title, he said, “This was not my idea. What
name can I consider for such a coarse mixture of mud and water?”
The present-day book titled Mud and Water: The Teachings of Zen Master
Bassui, is available on Amazon. It contains such chapters as Outside the
Scriptures and Not through Words; The Sole Practice of Zazen; The Wordless
Sermon.
Another book (Zen Radicals, Rebels, Reformers, authors Besserman and Steger) mentions
that Bassui was an encouraging Zen teacher who did not browbeat his students
but led them. He inspired them to have faith in themselves rather than in
shrines or in question-and-answer contests. He constantly advised against
becoming obsessed with koans. And he warned about fanatics, saying “Look into
your own nature and sit in zazen.”
Bassui may not have been a rebel, a
radical, or a reformer. He was a Zen individual who taught what he believed.
In his life Bassui exemplified the
words of British poet William Henley:
“I am the master of my fate; I am the
captain of my soul.”
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