Zen Spontanaity
Suzuki has translated a long letter from the Zen master Takuan on the relationship of Zen to the art of fencing, and this is certainly the best literary source of what Zen means by mo chih ch'u, by "going straight ahead without stopping." 13 Both Takuan and Bankei stressed the fact that the "original'' or "unborn" mind is constantly working miracles even in the most ordinary person. Even though a tree has innumerable leaves, the mind takes them in all at once without being "stopped" by any one of them. Explaining this to a visiting monk, Bankei said, "To prove that your mind is the Buddha mind, notice how all that I say here goes into you without missing a single thing, even though I don't try to push it into you." 14 When heckled by an aggressive Nichiren monk who kept insisting that he couldn't understand a word, Bankei asked him to come closer. The monk stepped forward. "Closer still," said Bankei. The monk came forward again. "How well," said Bankei, "you understand me!" 15 In other words, our natural organism performs the most marvelously complex activities without the least hesitation or deliberation. Conscious thought is itself founded upon its whole system of spontaneous functioning, for which reason there is really no alternative to trusting oneself completely to its working. Oneself is its working.
Notes:
Folksonomies: zen
Taxonomies:
/religion and spirituality/buddhism (0.987956)
Concepts:
Mind (0.993432): dbpedia_resource
Zen (0.946491): dbpedia_resource
Source text (0.843691): dbpedia_resource
Consciousness (0.771163): dbpedia_resource
Zen master (0.672426): dbpedia_resource
Gautama Buddha (0.643996): dbpedia_resource
Mahayana (0.581766): dbpedia_resource
Dōgen (0.564198): dbpedia_resource




