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Experience Chan!By Chuan Zhi Shakya, July 2007 Poetry by Empty Cloud [Chan Master Hsu (Xu) Yun (1839-1959)] Artwork by Rev. Fa Lian Shakya, OHY (Greece) www.hsuyun.org Click here to download the PDF version
"Truth is a pathless land. Man cannot come to it through any organization, through any creed, through any dogma, priest or ritual, nor through any philosophic knowledge or psychological technique. He has to find it through the mirror of relationship, through the understanding of the contents of his own mind, through observation and not through intellectual analysis or introspective dissection..."
- J. Krishnamurti Arthur Young, that oft quoted philosopher, spiritualist, and inventor of the modern helicopter, expressed, in The Reflexive Universe, what many feel to be an improvable truth: "Man…is more than the beasts…but…he is still not very far along. He is, in fact, … at a stage corresponding to that of a clam in the animal kingdom. Like the clam, he is buried in the sand with only a dim consciousness of the worlds beyond. Yet potentially he can evolve far beyond his present state; his destiny is unlimited." Deep inside each of us lurks a presence that is our full human potential, but it remains hidden from us - an aspect of the unconscious. It hides because of our fear of it. Its aspect is wisdom, understanding … compassion, yet it remains hidden. The question we must ask ourselves is, do we remain closed up in our shells, living in the ego-world where our actions are dictated by unconscious forces, or can we push those shell doors open and find out what awaits us beyond our safe, self-contained, persona? The unknown is always scary, to some degree, yet learning and growing happen by no other means than by moving toward the unknown. We can read an essay on Chan and remain passive, a safe distance from it - or we can move inward, to where the action is.
Chan practitioners are the ultimate thrill-seekers. We're willing to risk everything to open doors to the unknown. Beginning Chan Practice: Meditation No Chan practice is complete without a mediation regimen - in fact, some Zen schools emphasize meditation above all else. In our Lin Chi lineage, we consider mindful awareness in our daily activities, in the context of the Eightfold Path, also extremely important. While meditation is not regarded as an end unto itself, it's indispensable in helping us expand our relationship with ourselves and with the world around us. Without the ability to focus our attention in concentration, a prerequisite for meditation, we are like slaves to our programmed-selves. We are pushed and pulled this way and that, our own Self hidden from us to such an extent that we mindlessly follow the dictates of others, be they politicians, religious leaders, friends and family, celebrities or salesmen. Until we become autonomous, as we do during the first phase of Chan training, we are like puppets, slaves to unconscious commands, acting on instinct, reacting not from reason and compassion but from wily emotions that serve only the edicts of the ego. It's all too easy to put the cart before the horse when we start out on Chan's journey - to elevate the methods of Chan training above the purpose they serve. Meditation is nourishment for the soul - without a strong meditation practice we loose touch with ourselves. We loose the ability to discern the real from the imaginary. We lose our sense of humor, our sense of interconnectedness with others, and most importantly, our connection with ourselves. Meditation is an elixir for helping us to live a fulfilling and happy life. Yet meditation is not something we jump into for the first time and expect to succeed at. The journey to meditation is a tough one for most of us. As we begin that journey, we initiate a face-to-face encounter with ourselves. And for most of us, there are a lot of unpleasant things we'd rather not look at! Buried childhood traumas, repressed feelings of hate or despair, jealousy, rage, insecurity, fear … they all come lurching out at us as we progress on the first stages of the path. Our dream life becomes extraordinarily vivid; our emotional life may become fragile as our psyche struggles to grapple with the onslaught of newly released unconscious psychic content. This is why we say that it takes great courage to undertake Chan. The side of ourselves we don't want to see is that side we have repressed and when it all comes up we have to want to see it - to integrate it into our conscious minds. But it's equally essential that we don't inadvertently identify ourselves with these repressed emotional images of ourselves, for they are not real - they are fabricated, imagined chimera that, despite their great power, are lifeless and dead the moment we render them so. Let them go.
What is Meditation? Over the last several decades scientific studies of the brains of meditators using fMRIs, EEGs, PET and SPECT scans, has revealed significant changes that occur in the brain during meditation.
Upon coming out of our first meditation experience, some of the effects we may notice include: hyper-acute senses of sight, hearing, smelling, etc., an unusual feeling of calm-energy flowing within us, and an absence of silent mental-chatter.
Let's return to ground zero. As beginners, the question always arises "How do I do it?" Reading about Chan is 180 degrees out of phase with actually doing it, and unless we're actually doing it, we're not even close to it. The easy answer is "Let everything go and concentrate fiercely on some thing." But this neither addresses "how" we let things go, nor "what" we are to concentrate on. So we turn toward our dear Chan ancestors for advice and guidance (this is why Chan lineage is considered important to us - it helps provide some level of confidence that the advice we're getting is the right stuff. After all, we don't want to spend our lives trying to reinvent the wheel when we may as well just use it and be on our way!) There are straightforward, simple, methods we can use - all we need to bring to them are dedication, devotion, integrity, and hard effort!
The Methods
One: Posture
An easy way to correct poor posture habits is to imagine a strong thin string or thread attached to the spine, coming out the top of the head, pulling upward. Imagine the spine falling in line with the taught string, pulling the vertebrae, including the neck and head, into a straight line. We have to use our muscles to make it happen - and we have to concentrate to hold this posture. At first it's difficult because we're using muscles we haven't used for a long time, but with practice the muscles strengthen and the effort we need to expend decreases until the right posture comes automatically. There are many ways to sit, some are illustrated above by Rev. Fa Lian - keeping an erect posture is more important than whether we sit in full or half-lotus, on a meditation bench, or on a chair. If you use a chair, be sure to sit on the front third of the seat and to not lean back against the backrest. If you are new to this type of formal sitting, progress slowly - sit for, say, two 10-minute intervals per day for the first week, then on the second week extend it to two 15-minute intervals twice a day. Keep your goals attainable.
Two: Breathing
Three: Diet
Four: Mental Attitude Be like an arrow traveling through the sky, piercing every obstacle it comes to - let the mental chatter be okay, just watch it and acknowledge it as "only mental chatter" … don't heed its directives.
Five: Concentration
What do we concentrate on? To begin, the breath is often the best place to start, but once our breathing becomes naturally relaxed and smooth we can focus on nearly anything … the rules stay pretty much the same: keep the mind coming back to the subject of concentration (the "seed") whenever it wonders off; keep the body relaxed and alert; don't self-criticize.
The Value of Willful Action Chan is not a passive activity but requires great effort of will. Without the will to affect change, change doesn't come. Directed attention, moderated by willpower, breaks down the mental and emotional patterns that have become firmly implanted in our lives. Without willful effort to change these patterns, we continue to be slaves to them. As Jeffrey Schwartz MD, research professor of psychiatry at the UCLA School of Medicine (and fellow Zen Buddhist!), suggests in The Mind and the Brain, Neuroplasticity and the Power of Mental Force, the question is not whether or not we have "free will", but rather "free won't" - it's our ability to throw on the brakes, to arrest our pre-conditioned actions, that throws a wrench in the works of mindlessness. By arresting our conditioned responses to things consciousness itself grows. How do we say "no!"? Simply through an act of will … free will. When we act on unconscious urges, there is no free will, but the moment we deny those urges, free will manifests. In Buddhism we call it detachment: detachment is the exercise of free will.
Enlightenment So where does enlightenment come in? Advertising campaigns, historians, cults and new-age groups have adopted the term yet it's meaning in Chan is far from that implied by these mostly misappropriated versions. In Chan, enlightenment is simply the event of our recognition of self as other than ego-self. It's a cognitive realization of the divine within us - or better yet, a realization that we and the divine are One. Enlightenment is an experience that cannot be explained, interpreted, or analyzed; yet it comes straight out of Chan practice. In Chan we say that everyone is already enlightened - because it's our fundamental nature. It's just that most of us don't know we're enlightened. … Indeed, we can't know about something we don't know about! And since we're at a loss for words when it comes to explaining enlightenment, we'll never convince anyone that enlightenment is real. But once we experience our true nature ("Buddha Nature") through mystical disciplines such as Chan, we simply "get it". We can't say we are enlightened because that would mean that we are separate from reality - an oxymoron!
Enlightenment does not depend on meditation, but meditation can help prepare us for enlightenment. Enlightenment can not be forced to happen by our will, nor is there any method or formula we can apply to "achieve" enlightenment. Indeed, in the historical annals of Chan, stories of enlightenment involve the moment of hearing a bell ring, a voice yell, a stick snap, or the Diamond Sutra read…seemingly ordinary events. Meditation helps put the mind in the right "spot" to experience enlightenment, but it does not lead, in and of itself, to enlightenment. Enlightenment can't happen until our entire lives are turned inside-out. Some Buddhist leaders have commented that the western mind is too wrapped up in itself -- too ego concerned - to attain knowledge of Self, to succeed with any mystical discipline. We are so tied up in our possessions, they say, in our friends, in our careers, so strongly identifying with the external world that our internal world has become opaque to us - totally unknown. Statements like these have been made, to the best of my knowledge, exclusively by non-western teachers - people who can clearly see the cover of a book but are unable to read what's inside because the language is different. In my experience working with western Chan students, the stronger their pull to the external world, the stronger their hidden or overt yearning for the inner one. We, as westerners, should not take our conditioned proclivities for interesting careers, cool cars, families, etc., as signs that we are not apt to succeed on Chan's mystical journey - but quite the opposite, that because of our passion for life we are likely to succeed. All we have to do is redirect our energies. The western world clearly encourages our interest in worldly affairs - TV and Internet commercials tell us that having things is where it's at: the advertising and marketing industry is expert at exploiting our inner fears and desires to manipulate us into wanting the next generation car, iPod, or Fergie album.
A side note: Chan Buddhism is, clearly, my favorite spiritual path, but it's only fair to mention that Chan does not hold a monopoly on disciplines that lead up to the same spiritual summit. In other religions, mystical teachings may be put out front-and-center for people to learn about, or they may be hidden or even buried within the depths of the institution, but we should be wary not to accuse the institutions themselves for the deficits of leaders unable to present and transmit these teachings to their congregations. Spiritual growth cannot be fostered through hollow subservience to leaders or mindless adherence to dogma. It requires a synaptic connection between ourselves and God - and to get there, we must transcend dogma and shed all artificial constraints imposed by religious institutions. The answers all lie not without, but within. Prerequisites for Chan Training Everyone seems to have their own list of prerequisites for Chan practice - the Buddha's was the simplest, yet the most profound: we must know suffering, and we must desire a solution to that suffering. That's it. In fact, nothing else will provide adequate motivation for us - for Chan is an exquisitely difficult path to follow, requiring fierce determination, unrelenting perseverance and courage. We can't just go through the motions and expect to get anywhere - it requires our heart and soul.
Rev. Chuan Zhi is a second-generation disciple of Empty Cloud (Hsu Yun), and Abbot of the Zen Buddhist Order of Hsu Yun, an Internet ministry, since its founding by Grandmaster Jy Din Shakya in 1997. Send comments or questions to . Responses From Readers Dear Rev. Chaun Zhi Shakya: In your essay "Experience Chan" you talk about how chan meditation causes the brain to change and that that change can be shown by various brain scanning technologies. What do you think about binaural beat technologies espoused by the Monroe Institute in its product "Hemisync" and Centerpointe's product "Holosync"?. Both companies claim that listening to their CDs causes exactily the same changes to the brain that meditation or zazen facilitate. Could they have found a way to make meditation easier? Centerpointe claims that using their product "Holosync" will enable the user to "Meditate deeper than a Zen monk." I know there are no shortcuts, but if they create the same brainwave patterns, are they creating the same results? Or perhaps brainwave patterns and imagery have nothing to do the Zen experience. -- K Reply to K: You ask a great question. There are definitely synchronistic effects that happen between the brain and exterior sources of sound, but it requires the listener to listen -- to immerse himself in the sound. I'm not familiar with the Monroe Institute's products, or Centerpointe's products, however I'm of the mind to say that if there's a product out there that helps people, then great! Whether their claims are founded with scientific scrutiny or not I think is important. Double blind studies on a large enough population is needed for a careful and accurate assessment. An analogy you may want to keep in mind is of two piano players. Consider two people starting out learning to play the piano, student one practices for 5 hours a day, while student two sits in front of a machine and puts her hands/fingers in that machine. The machine then moves her fingers and hands over the keyboard so as to produce beautiful music. By the end of the first day of practice, student one still struggles to play a simple scale, while student two has enjoyed listening to her own hands play Chopin's piano concerto No. 1. After a few years of daily practice by each student in each of the two different ways, can we say there is a difference in the way the brain has changed between the two of them? Research has actually been done to find out (different methods though) - much of it is summarized in Jeffrey M. Schwartz's "The Mind and the Brain". It's willful effort that makes the changes in the brain happen. This research has led to new approaches to helping stroke patients recover the use of previously paralyzed limbs - something that had been previously nearly impossible. The research I'm familiar with demonstrates that the brain wires itself differently depending on whether it's from volitional "action" or will, or action imposed from outside of the volitional circuits. Probably because of my background in science, I tend to be rather skeptical of claims made that are not well substantiated. People who run a business see dollars as the primary goal (otherwise they'll go out of business) and so marketing tends to be aimed at getting people to buy a product rather than aimed at purely helping people. If they claim you can "Meditate deeper than a Zen monk" I would ask, how deep can a Zen monk meditate? One, Ten, 100? What does this statement mean? (I also happen to know many Zen monks who have never learned to meditate ....) But then this begs another question - why do people want short cuts? It's the same motivation that has driven people to use various mind-altering drugs. It gives them a short burst of excitement, ecstasy, whatever ... and then it's over and they are back to square one again. We Zen people tend to have a "no shortcuts" attitude. We like each and every step along the way, and wouldn't want to miss anything lest it be an opportunity to learn and discover. Once we get into meditation, there's nothing easier. Meditation consumes us in rapture ... the hard part is getting ourselves in the right frame of mind/body/spirit -- to be able to let go of everything. The biggest obstacle for people seems to be fear: fear of the unknown, fear of loosing their sense of personal identity. A long winded answer for a simple question. But with all that said, if you gain any experience with these audio products I would be most interested in your observations. All the best, Chuan Zhi
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