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The Great Affair
- Ta Hui (1088 1163)


This affair is like the bright sun in the blue sky, shining clearly,
changeless and motionless, without diminishing or increasing. It shines
everywhere in the daily activities of everyone, appearing in everything.
Though you try to grasp it, you cannot get it; though you try to abandon
it, it always remains. It is vast and unobstructed, utterly empty. Like
a gourd floating on water, it cannot be reined in or held down. Since
ancient times, when good people of the Path have attained this, they've
appeared and disappeared in the sea of birth and death, able to use it
fully. There is no deficit or surplus; like cutting up sandalwood, each
piece is it.
Where do the passions of birth and death arise from? Where can it be
located when gathering the causes to produce the effect? Since there is
no place to locate it, Buddha is illusion and Dharma is illusion; the
three worlds, twenty-five states of being, the sense organs,
sense-objects, and consciousnesses are utterly empty. When you get to
this realm, there's no place to put even the word "Buddha"; if even the
word "Buddha" has no applicability, where is there True Thusness, Buddha
Nature, Enlightenment, or Nirvana? Thus the Great Being Fu said,
"Fearing that people will give rise to a view of annihilation, we
provisionally establish empty names."
Students of the Path who do not understand this principle are always
going to the stories of people of old entering the Path looking for
mysteries and subtleties and marvels, seeking interpretations and
understanding. They are unable to see the moon and forget the pointing
finger, unable to cut directly through with one blow.
This is what Yung Chia called understanding the empty fist as though there were actually
something in it, falsely making up wonders within the senses and their
objects. Such people vainly imprison themselves within the passions of
the five clumps, the sense organs, objects, sensations, the twenty five
states of being - the Tathagata said they are to be pitied. Haven't you
seen Yen T'ou's saying?
"Just have no desires and depend on nothing, then you'll be capable of goodness."
All this time there's just been a lump of flesh born of your parents.
Unless you come up with a bit of energy, it is subject to the control of
others. What else is there outside the lump of flesh? What can you hold
to be wonderful, mysterious, or marvelous? What can you take to be
Enlightenment or Nirvana? What can you take to be True Thusness or
Buddha Nature?
You wanted to investigate this affair to the end, but
from the first you have not gotten to the root of its reality - you just
wanted to seek knowledge and understanding from the public cases of the
ancients. Even if you had a thorough knowledge and understanding of the
entire Buddhist Canon, on the last day of your life, when birth-and-death
comes upon you, you won't be able to use it at all.
There's another sort: as soon as they hear a wise advisor speak of such
an affair, they still use their conceptual minds to figure it out and
say, "If it's like this, then won't I fall into emptiness?" Ten out of
ten people of affairs entertain this kind of view. I have no choice but
to tell them, "You haven't ever reached emptiness, so what are you
afraid of? It's as if you're trying to leap out of the water before the boat has capsized."
Ta Hui (1088-1163)
- excerpted from "Swampland Flowers: The Letters and Lectures of Zen Master Ta Hui"
translated by Christopher Cleary (1977)


Several hundred years earlier Rinzai speaks to his followers in this
manner:
Followers of the Way, the one who at this moment stands alone, clearly
and lively right before the eyes and is listening, this one is nowhere
obstructed; unhindered he penetrates everywhere and moves freely in the
Three Worlds. Entering all kinds of situations, he is never affected by
them. In the fraction of a moment he goes to the bottom of the scheme of
things. Meeting Buddha, he talks with Buddha; meeting patriarchs, he
talks with patriarchs, meeting with ordinary people, he talks with
ordinary people. He goes everywhere, roaming through the kingdoms and
talking with living beings, yet never strays for a single thought from
his shining purity. Penetrating the ten directions, the ten thousand
things are of one suchness.
Rinzai (d.866)
- taken from "The Zen Teaching of Rinzai" by Irmgard Schloegl (1976)


"They are unable to see the moon and forget the pointing finger, unable
to cut directly through with one blow."
As we read these inspiring pieces from the past, they become part of our
present, and if we can bring them to life in the present through our
actions, then we enter the realm of Practice. Often we are left with the
question, "How?" We need some kind of help, some kind of tool....
*
Here's a sword for you, a razor sharp sword that will cut through all
sorts of illusions and obstacles if you learn to wield it properly. It's
the sword of the Return. Technique, perhaps, but big technique - technique
which leads beyond itself. It's a two edged sword that will cut in
either direction, a sword of both action and stillness. It's a sword
borrowed from the warrior-sage, but anyone can use it. It will help you
to Return and to maintain a life of Practice, whatever your practice may
be.
This two-edged sword is actually the highest form of meditation, but
meditation totally beyond any system, formal name, method, or dogma. One
edge of your sword cuts without even moving - it's the unbelievably sharp
blade which severs all things as they blow against it. This is the edge
of "waiting," and it involved STOPPING, totally, within and without. It
is to let both "inner" and "outer" forces build and ebb as they will. It's to allow the murkiness of the water to clear by itself as you do absolutely nothing.
This edge of waiting is such a simple thing, yet it allows your mind of
situations, problems, and confusion to Return to its natural state... to the
state before the pressure of gaining mind interfered and distorted
things. Though this sword of waiting is passive, don't be fooled; it
take resoluteness and real mental strength to wield it, and it will in
turn free up a tremendous, unattached energy within. You'll reside in
motionlessness and become that sharpest sword against whose edge all
things are cut.
But you must learn to calmly wait until the water becomes crystal clear... to wait without stirring anything up. Learning to wait like this is a wonderful and awesome ability.
The other edge of your sword, the edge of "questing" is quite dynamic,
there's nothing passive about it. It's a true sword cut, and all your
energy, your entire spirit must be focused into the very edge of the
blade. You have to arouse your energy - a half-hearted cut won't do. But
if you learn to cut sincerely, with the power of immediacy, this edge of
inner questing will cut through any Gordian Knot. It will cut right
through the dreamlike shell of your past, through distractions, and
confusion. It's that powerful!
It's simple - but you must be alive to make the cut. To wield the sword of
questing, gather all your energy for a decisive cut and then focus all
that energy into a brief but intent search for the form of your own past. Nothing gradual about it, this is a sudden technique, an unleashing. This sword of questing will cut through each and every obstacle. See for
yourself what happens when you search suddenly for the very form of your
own past.
Through this cut you will Return, paradoxically, to the same clarity you
found through the edge of waiting. Not gradually becoming clearer,
though, but instantly with one decisive cut! Searching for the form of
your past cuts through illusion, pierces the Rolling Mirror itself.
Tune into your own energy. Learn the "when" of it. It's like night and
day, when one edge just isn't there for you, the other will be.
- from Maverick Sutras
*
Wielding the Sword,
The Monkess

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