Eight awakenings
As you know, in the
context of Buddhism and, particularly in Zen, I try to sidestep the word
“enlightenment.” That word has become so trendy—especially in the Western
world—that many individuals believe enlightenment is the goal of Zen.
And that misses the
whole point of living Zen.
Instead of
“enlightenment,” I prefer “awakening,” or even such terms as illumination, or
edification, or insight, or awareness, or self-perception. Those concepts are
what Zen is about.
In a talk I gave three
or four years ago, I mentioned reading a statement to the effect that Zen
practice consists in gaining enlightenment. That’s a common thought
among people who don’t know Zen, and on the surface it sounds pretty good
because it contains that old buzz word, enlightenment.
But on second thought gaining
enlightenment sounds too much like a logical, rational process. Remember, Zen
balks at logic, and Zen certainly isn’t rational if rationality implies
reasoning because Zen goes beyond reasoning. To separate Zen from awakening is
to create a “this” versus “that” dualism.
I prefer to say Zen
and enlightenment—or awakening—are identical.
In the year 1200 the
mislabeled founder of Soto Zen, Master Dogen, spoke about what he termed the
eight awakenings of great beings. These awakenings are not stages to run after,
and they aren’t benchmarks. They represent underpinnings in the process of
realizing awareness.
And they are
interrelated.
What Dogen had to say
800 years ago to a group of Japanese monks is relevant today to everyone.
The
first awakening is to have few desires.
Having few desires is
to avoid the craving for “stuff.” Stuff such as a commanding position among
people, wads of money, a five-bedroom house, a Ferrari.
I once knew a fellow who
craved a Ferrari and was wealthy enough to buy one. Every day he’d open his
garage and sit in the car’s driver seat. Just sit. He never rolled the car out
of the garage because there were no highways where he could crank it up over a
hundred miles an hour. Also, he was afraid of getting a scratch on the red
paint.
What he coveted, he
had, but it was of no real use to him.
People who have hardly
any desires are free from the never-satisfying hunt for importance, and riches,
and stuff.
People who have few
desires don’t feel the need to use others to acquire celebrity status or pile
up more money.
People who have few
desires are comfortable with what they have, and are not constantly agonizing
about not having something else or gaining more of something.
The
second awakening is to know when enough is enough.
The Buddha is quoted
as having said, “Monks, to be free from suffering, mull over knowing how much
is enough. If you know how much is enough, you will be satisfied. If you don’t
know, you will be discontented.”
Even if you are
wealthy you may have a disconcerting feeling of being poor, and will desire to
have more.
This is called
“knowing when enough is enough.”
The
third awakening is to enjoy serenity.
This is the ability to
be away from crowds and be happy alone.
The Buddha said to his
monks: “If you want to have the joy of calm nondoing, be away from crowds and
be alone in a silent place.”
Now, this is a
difficult undertaking in today’s world. Between noise-belching cars and
motorcycles, and clattering television sets in almost every restaurant—and if a
public place doesn’t have television it blares out irritating background
noises, euphemistically called music. There are few public places that enjoy
quiet.
Such torments are
diminished by making one’s home in a quiet place. That’s why I live in the
woods. Only squirrels and armadillos bother me.
But if you do enjoy
crowds, when you’re in them, you may sweat and stew, and—as Dogen said—you’ll
be like a tree that attracts hordes of birds and is eventually killed by the
racket.
The fourth awakening is to give what Dogen called diligent effort.
Diligent effort. What
is diligent effort?
Dogen said the Buddha
said that diligent effort is holding to natural efforts. It’s a sort of
constant fine-tuning without being mixed with other actions. It’s a going
forward without any sort of turning back.
If you make diligent
effort, nothing is too difficult.
It’s like a tiny
trickle of water wearing through a large rock by constantly seeping.
The
fifth awakening is to uphold mindfulness.
In the Buddhist
Eightfold Path mindfulness is also called right thought. But the term “right”
may evoke the term, “wrong,” which is a dualism. Let’s stick with one thing at
a time, and never mind opposites.
To uphold mindfulness.
The Buddha said,
“There is nothing like not neglecting mindfulness. Do not lose mindfulness.
Mindfulness is like wearing armor when going into a battlefield.”
Now that is somewhat
flowery because it’s couched in metaphor. The point is to be totally aware,
whether you’re reading a book, or preparing a meal, or drinking a glass of
water, or sitting in zazen.
Uphold mindfulness.
The
sixth awakening is to practice meditation.
Practice meditation?
That’s another common
term in Zen writings.
To practice something
is to do it over and over again in order to acquire skill at it. Like
practicing a dance step, or a golf swing.
Meditation isn’t a
golf swing. Meditation is not repetition. Meditation is full-time being.
Meditation is full-time awareness.
Dogen said meditation
is awakening.
Meditation is
remaining in dharma—that is, in Buddha knowledge—without flip-flopping from one
approach to another.
Dogen said the Buddha
said, “If you gather your mind it will abide in stability. Then you will
understand the birth and the death of all things. When you have stability your
mind will not be scattered.”
This is what’s called
the sixth awakening.
To maintain meditation.
To constantly be alive, and awake, and aware.
The
seventh awaking is to cultivate wisdom.
That means to listen,
to contemplate, to meditate, and to realize.
If you have wisdom
you’re free from craving, from self-indulgence, from excess desire, from
materialism.
No more thoughts of
gaining “stuff.”
Doesn’t that sound
good?
Finally,
the eighth awakening is to steer clear of hollow discussions.
To steer clear of
hollow discussions is to be free from prejudiced thinking, and from pointless
cocktail-party babble.
Have you ever seen a
desert dust devil? They’re miniature tornadoes. They swirl across the
landscape, picking up loose trash, carrying it for a while, and then scattering
it all over the place. Hollow discussions are like dust devils. They cause the
mind to collect pieces of dry weeds, and scraps of paper, and dead cigarette
butts, and then spread them.
* * * * *
According to Dogen, by
nurturing these eight awakenings, you can arrive at insight, and share your
insight with all beings, just as Shakyamuni Buddha shared his awakening with
anyone who was interested.
* * * * *
According to Dogen,
the last words of the Buddha, before he died, were, “You should always endeavor
wholeheartedly to search for the way of liberation. All things in the world are
insecure and bound to decay.”
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