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Friday 8 January 2010

from my teacher's teacher...

TEISHO.

SNOWFALL

Snow is falling. The white flakes drift down from the sky . Coming from the north the gentle blizzard reaches the southern hills. As the snow arrives, so comes the great silence. The track is filling up, no one can come, and no one can go. Stillness lies in the reflection of the cloud brightened snow, white around the bird table. The Bullfinch is stealing the whitened buds, the tits are pecking at the nuts and the Nuthatch takes the seed to a branch and hammers it. Although it is cold, the feeling is warm. Now, as the silence and stillness descend, the Chan house is isolated. Its true nature appears.

What might Dogen say of this?

Once upon a time a famous biologist and his Zen practitioner companion were travelling in the high mountains of Dolpo in Nepal searching for Snow Leopards. For the biologist it was an ecological project; for the practitioner the Snow Leopard was an enlightenment quest in remote places. Their mutual understanding was rather slight! The winter was fast approaching and they were on their way south under falling snows.

In a remote valley they found a tiny deserted village, all inhabitants gone south over the passes for the winter. Yet, there was smoke drifting from the chimney of a small Gompa. Intrigued, they knocked upon the door. An old monk, one legged and dressed in yak cloth, woollen robes, creaked it open. He was quite alone. Knowing the villagers had all moved south, they asked him.
“Why are you staying here?”
“Oh,” he said “Can’t you see – a one legged man cannot cross passes in snow.”
“But how can you survive the winter here, alone, deep in snow and frozen in?” they asked.
“ Well," he said, “I have everything”
The biologist understood him to mean he had logs and dung for heating, and supplies for simple food and drink . The practitioner understood him to mean something quite else. What was that? Perhaps only another practitioner can understand.

When the track is blocked for vehicles at Winterhead in winter, which is a rare occurrence, there can be no coming and going except by horse or on foot . With a damaged back, there can be no movement.

What does it mean to stay in minor uncertainties? Perhaps the calor tank will soon be empty ? Maybe the electricity will fail? Are there enough supplies in the freezer? Do I have everything?

Do we have ‘everything’ when uncertainty strikes? What is that?

The snow flakes drift softly on the Buddha room windows. The incense burns and the candle flames wander to and fro on the silent images. The sitter sits. The gentleness of the lone home floats the air. Everything is here, nothing missing. The sitter lets self dissolve in stillness. What is to be found?

Do you know the fruits of silence? Do you know the blessing of the snow?


Chuan deng Jing di January 5, 2010

6 comments:

  1. Lovely, and very thought provoking. Hope you are ok in the big freeze! I'd gladly trade you some of our 39 deg C day for a bit of snow....

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  2. Yeah, he's pretty good, our Teacher. Have yet to meet him, but I hear from & about him regularly & he seems to have had his head screwed on the right way even before he got into the Ch'an stuff. He usually goes by the name of John Crook; the other thing is his Dharma name (he was Master Sheng-Yen's first Western Dharma heir).

    Will gladly take you up on your offer. I used to be partial to a bit of snow, but as I've got older & more curmudgeonly it seems to have lost some of its appeal. So here's some virtual -8 deg C in exchange for some virtual 39 deg C...

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  3. Spud, when do you meditate? I'm on hols (still!) but going back to work on Monday. During semester (I work at a uni) there is a meditation group that meets every morning, which I'm planning to join. But I'm curious as to others' practices.

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  4. By the way, wouldn't it be great if we could average out our respective weather? I'd love a nice 20-ish degrees!

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  5. We're pretty well thawed out by now, but 20 deg would be still very nice in order to counterbalance the hefty fuel bill that I know is just araound the corner!

    When do I meditiate? It should be at the same time every day. Sadly that's far from the case, as my wife works some evenings, one afternoon and one morning (plus the occasional bit of overtime at strange hours). So it ends up being whenever I can - very often on the train to/from work. Hardly satisfactory, but I take the view that it's better to get in 15 min every day than miss a day or so just because you can't stick to your routine. The whole point (well, one of, anyway...) is to take smashed routines in your stride, isn't it?

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  6. Sorry for typos in above post.

    Let me know how you get on in the meditation group. Which teaching (s) do they follow?

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