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  • Tên sách : Dropping Ashes On The Buddha
  • Tác giả : Seung Sahn
  • Dịch giả :
  • Ngôn ngữ : Anh
  • Số trang : 231
  • Nhà xuất bản : Grove Press-NewYork
  • Năm xuất bản : 1978
  • Phân loại : Sách tiếng Anh-English
  • MCB : 1210000008185
  • OPAC :
  • Tóm tắt :

PREFACE

         Zen teaching is like a window. At first, we look at it, and see only the dim reflection of our own face. But as we learn, and our vision becomes clear, the teaching becomes clear. Until at last it is perfectly transparent. We see through it. We see all things: our own face.

         This book is a collection of Seung Sahn Soen-sa’s teach­ing in America—dialogues, stories, formal Zen interviews, Dharma Speeches, and letters. The words arise as situations arise. Each situation is a game, and a matter of life and death.

         The title comes from a problem which Soen-sa gives his students for homework. It goes like this:

        Somebody comes into the Zen Center with a lighted ciga­rette, walks up to the Buddha-statue, blows smoke in its face and drops ashes on its lap. You are standing there. What can you do?

         This person has understood that nothing is holy or un­holy. All things in the universe are one, and that one is himself. So everything is permitted. Ashes are Buddha; Bud­dha is ashes. The cigarette flicks. The ashes drop.

         But his understanding is only partial. He has not yet understood that all things are just as they are. Holy is holy; unholy is unholy. Ashes are ashes; Buddha is Buddha. He is very attached to emptiness and to his own understanding, and he thinks that all words are useless. So whatever you say to him, however you try to teach him, he will hit you. If you try to teach by hitting him back, he will hit you even harder. (He is very strong.)

         How can you cure his delusion?

         Since you are a Zen student, you are also a Zen teacher. You are walking on the path of the Bodhisattva, whose vow is to save all beings from their suffering. This person is suffering from a mistaken view. You must help him under­stand the truth: that all things in the universe are just as they are.

         How can you do this?

         If you find the answer to this problem, you will find the true way.

INTRODUCTION

         Deep in the mountains, the great temple bell is struck. You hear it reverberating in the morning air, and all thoughts disappear from your mind. There is nothing that is you; there is nothing that is not you. There is only the sound of the bell, filling the whole universe.

         Springtime comes. You see the flowers blossoming, the butterflies flitting about; you hear the birds singing, you breathe in the warm weather. And your mind is only spring­time. It is nothing at all.

         You visit Niagara and take a boat to the bottom of the Falls. The downpouring of the water is in front of you and around you and inside you, and suddenly you are shouting: YAAAAAA!

          In all these experiences, outside and inside have become one. This is Zen mind.

Original nature has no opposites. Speech and words are not necessary. Without thinking, all things are exactly as they are. The truth is just like this.

        Then why do we use words? Why have we made this book?

        According to Oriental medicine, when you have a hot sickness you should take hot medicine. Most people are very attached to words and speech. So we cure this sickness with word-and-speech medicine.

        Most people have a deluded view of the world. They don’t see it as it is; they don’t understand the truth. What is good, what is bad? Who makes good, who makes bad? They cling to their opinions with all their might. But everybody’s opinion is different. How can you say that your opinion is correct and somebody else’s is wrong? This is delusion.

         If you want to understand the truth/ you must let go of your situation, your condition, and all your opinions. Then your mind will be before thinking. “Before thinking” is deal mind. Clear mind has no inside and no outside. It is just like this. “Just like this” is the truth.

        An eminent teacher said.

         If you want to pass through this gate, do not give rise to thinking.

        This means that if you are thinking, you can’t understand Zen. If you keep the mind that is before thinking, this is Zen mind.

            So another Zen Master said,

          Everything the Buddha taught was only to correct your thinking.

            If already you have cut off thinking, what good are the Buddha’s words?

         The Heart Sutra says, “Form is emptiness, emptiness is form.” This means, “no form, no emptiness.” But the true meaning of “no form, no emptiness” is, “form is form, emp­tiness is emptiness.”

        If you are thinking, you won’t understand these words. If you are not thinking, “just like this” is Buddha-nature.

      What is Buddha-nature?

           Deep in the mountains, the great temple bell is struck.

        The truth is just like this.

Seung Sahn

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Preface…………………………ix

Introduction…………………………xi

  1. Zen Is Understanding Yourself…………………………3
  2. The Zen Circle…………………………5
  3. My Dharma Is Too Expensive…………………………8
  4. Advice to a Beginner…………………………10
  5. Inside, Outside…………………………19
  6. A Child Asks About Death…………………………20
  7. Who Needs a Zen Master…………………………22
  8. You Are Attached! …………………………23
  9. About the Heart Sutra…………………………25
  10. Not Difficult, Not Easy…………………………28
  11. A Dharma Speech…………………………30
  12. What Is One Plus Two? …………………………32
  13. What To Do About Noise…………………………33
  14. You Must Become Completely Crazy…………………………34
  15. The Story of Ko Bong…………………………36
  16. How Can the Buddha Be Smiling? …………………………39
  17. Apples and Oranges…………………………41
  18. Kong-an Blues…………………………42
  19. The 84,000 Levels of Enlightenment…………………………46
  20. What Is Freedom? …………………………49
  21. The Great Treasure…………………………50
  22. The Moon of Clear Mind…………………………51
  23. What Have You Brought Here? …………………………52
  24. Enlightened and Unenlightened Are Empty Names………………54
  25. Why We Chant……………………56
  26. A Dharma Speech……………………58
  27. The Story of Won Hyo……………………60
  28. Porcupines in Rat-Holes……………………63
  29. Practicing Zen……………………66
  30. It Is Your Mind That Is Moving……………………68
  31. Bodhisattva Attachment……………………70
  32. Five Kinds of Zen……………………71
  33. The Color of Snow……………………75
  34. Don’t-Know Mind, Continued……………………76
  35. Zen and Tantra……………………79
  36. The 10,000 Questions Are One Question……………………80
  37. Buddha Is Grass Shoes……………………82
  38. Three Interviews……………………84
  39. When the Lights Go Off, What?……………………86
  40. Testing the Mind……………………87
  41. What Is Death?……………………89
  42. Wanting Enlightenment……………………91
  43. The True Way for Women……………………93
  44. Can You See Your Eyes?……………………94
  45. Special Medicine and Big Business……………………96
  46. Miracles……………………99
  47. A Dharma Speech……………………102
  48. A Little Thinking, A Little Sparring……………………104
  49. No-Attainment Is Attainment……………………107
  50. True Sitting Zen……………………111
  51. Samadhi vs. Satori……………………113
  52. Lin-Chi’s KATZ……………………115
  53. Nirvana and Anuttara Samyak Sambodhi……………………117
  54. Zen and the Arts……………………118
  55. Plastic Flowers, Plastic Mind……………………121
  56. True Emptiness……………………123
  57. You Must Wake Up! ……………………124
  58. More Ashes on the Buddha……………………125
  59. The Story of Su Tung-p’o……………………129
  60. What Nature Is Saying to You……………………132
  61. It……………………135
  62. Small Love and Big Love……………………138
  63. Does the Cat Have Buddha-Nature? ……………………140
  64. Out of the Depths……………………141
  65. Funny……………………144
  66. The Story of Kyong Ho……………………145
  67. Bodhisattva Sin……………………148
  68. A Dharma Speech……………………150
  69. The True Way……………………151
  70. Sex Mind=Zen Mind? ……………………153
  71. Keen-Eyed Lions and Blind Dogs……………………156
  72. Original Sound, Original Body……………………158
  73. The Story of Mang Gong……………………163
  74. Mang Gong Explains His KATZ……………………167
  75. The Transmission of No-Mind……………………168
  76. Inside the Cow’s Belly……………………169
  77. Today Is Buddha’s Birthday. The Sun Is Shining……………171
  78. Dok Sahn and His Stick……………………173
  79. All Things Are Your Teachers……………………174
  80. Who Makes One? ……………………184
  81. What Is Your Star? ……………………186
  82. The Story of Sul……………………187
  83. Dialogue with Swami X……………………191
  84. Big Mistake……………………196
  85. Language-Route and Dharma-Route……………………196
  86. The Tathagata……………………200
  87. Bodhidharma and I……………………201
  88. Correspondence with an Ordained American Lawyer………………202
  89. Saving All People……………………211
  90. Dialogue at Tal Mah Sah……………………212
  91. The Boat Monk……………………213
  92. When the Bell Is Rung, Stand Up……………………217
  93. The Story of Mun Ik……………………218
  94. What Did You Say? ……………………220
  95. Much Ado About Nothing……………………221
  96. An Ambush in the Fields of Dharma……………………222
  97. Un-Mun’s Short-Answer Zen……………………223
  98. Ko Bong Explains a Poem……………………224
  99. The Story of Seung Sahn Soen-Sa……………………226
  100. What Is Love? ……………………232

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