MAZU DAOYI
MAZU
DAOYI
Mind is
the Way
"However eloquently I may talk about
all kinds of things as innumerable as the sands of the Ganges, the mind shows
no increase. You may talk ever so much about it, and it is still your mind; you
may not at all talk about it, and it is just the same your own mind. Let each
of you see into his own mind.”
Those are
the words of Mazu Daoyi.
Mazu
Daoyi was a Chinese Zen master who lived from 709 to 788. He is celebrated for initiating
Rinzai Zen and championing instant awakening. According to Mazu, seeing into
one’s nature meant understanding who you are and what you are, and that
realization comes not gradually but suddenly. He declared there was no one way of
teaching this truth, and whatever method seemed appropriate at a given moment
was the best method.
According to Mazu, anything was fair in
love, in war, and in Zen study. He expressed his Chan not in lofty philosophical
terms and foggy wisdom, but in simple, everyday language. He believed there was
nothing that could be done to speed up the occurrence of sudden enlightenment,
other than use traditional practices to make the psyche as uncomplicated as
possible and then wait for the moment to strike. Interestingly, he did not encourage
meditation. Instead, he declared the grasping of truth was the function of
everyday mindedness.
Everyday
mindedness is free from intentional action, free from concepts of right-and
wrong, free from taking and giving, and free from the finite or the infinite.
All daily activities—walking,
standing, sitting, lying down—response to circumstances as they arise. This is what
Mazu referred to as Tao.
Mazu
apparently was the first master who developed tricks for nudging a disciple
into the state of "no-thought."
He was an experimenter, and he pioneered a number of methods that were later
used by his followers.
He might ask a novice an unanswerable
question and then, while the person struggled for an answer, to shout in his
ear hoping to jolt the pupil into a non-dualistic mind state. Another technique
was to call out the novice’s name just as that person was leaving the room, a bombshell
that seemed to bring the person up short and cause him to suddenly experience
his original nature. A similar device was to deliver a student a sharp blow as
he pondered a point, using violence to abort reasoning and focus attention
completely on reality.
The scanty records say Mazu's Chan
community was an incubator for the greatest thinkers of the eighth century and
the setting for some of the finest Chan anecdotes.
He believed in stories as the perfect
Chan teaching device, since they focus the listener to find its meaning in his
own inner experience. A sermon may have provided the theoretical basis for an
idea, but an anecdote showed the theory in action and made the listener share
in a real experience if only vicariously.
The following two anecdotes are included
in the collection of koans called the Wumen
Kuan (Japanese, Mumonkan).
Case 30
Question: "What is Buddha?" (That
is, what is the unworldliness that all seek?)
Mazu: "Mind is Buddha."
Case 33
Question: "What is Buddha?"
Mazu: "No mind, no Buddha"
(That is, unworldliness is in the mind, and for its realization one must
realize the mind.)
Trying
to reconcile those seemingly contradictory responses will likely tip your own mind
upside down, which is the whole point of shaking it loose.
Mazu
discovered and refined something that seems to have escaped earlier teachers such
as Huineng and Huairang, namely, a trigger mechanism for sudden enlightenment. He originated the use
of shouting and blows to precipitate
enlightenment, techniques used in later decades by such masters as
Huangbo and Linji, masters who shaped the Rinzai sect.
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