You know when you learn to ride a bike, or swim, or play a musical instrument, or learn to juggle, how at first its seems so difficult? But then eventually you break through to another level where you relax and stop forcing the effort. You become completely engrossed in the activity and it comes to you with ease- a sense of not being "blocked" by your own effort. That is how I would describe Zen.
Exactly! Yet another fake path. No Money? Go away! We want your Money Or You cannot have access the path of "enlightenment" !!!!!!! You must pay for entry to pair of dice Casino ANOTHER SCAM another day
I purchased a Empty Minds martial arts dvd years ago and I still enjoy it. I think they create some cool vids. That jus me tho. Peace. I would also note that probably all of us reading this just watch this video for free. That's something.
We recommend Three Pillars of Zen by Philip Kapleau - as a must-have book. 5 Rings is a great book but primarily about Strategy. The translator, Bill Wilson is a close friend of ours. The Alan Watts lectures are very enoyable to listen to. Thanks for watching - emptymind films
Hi everyone. I rarely comment, but this discussion needs a finger pointing to the moon. My films cover very difficult topics such as zen but the film and even this discussion are just a finger pointing. Nothing more. Any words, even from a zen master are just words - they are not the moon. I will leave you for the next 10 weeks - we are filming in China - another difficult topic - Qi. Look for the clips in 2008. EmptyMind Films
The interesting thing about what you're describing is that explaining it to people that have never experienced it is like trying to describe how water tastes to someone who's never tasted or seen it. How awesome it would be to be able to directly share experience between people. Imagine seeing the sunset through the eyes of your best friend or even some random person standing by you, ..even better, through the eyes of a whole crowd of people at once. Unfortunately, for now all we have is words.
The book is "Zen Flesh, Zen Bones", actually. I wore out my first copy I got over 20 years ago and recently had to replace it. A good read for an introductory "feel" to Zen :)
"Oh yes, I love zen, the idea that an idea itself is its own liberation and that ultimately its all emptiness, the same feeling planets must have which makes them float, we become like planet, universe, floating on nothing... yes zen is healing, its the experience of the universe..." - my Japanese friend, Radewa talking about zen
Beautiful video. Zen changed my life, it taught me to stop resisting, but to accept and just be. It helped me live a better and more sufficient way with my illness, and it is about teaching your mind discipline in a way.
Well, the 'who' is not too important. This line is a reference to not forcing a natural activity like seeing or hearing - non interference. To not get in your own way. This is from the Tao and known as 'Wu Wei' which literally means 'Not Doing'. Can also mean that nothing is accomplished by going beyond or forcing a natural activity. It is a principle of the middle way and may sound odd when taken out of a large context, such as this whole film clip. Thanks for watching. EmptyMind Films.
Actually, we are saying that you are the leaf, not the stream. It is a comment to 'wu-wei' of not opposing change or not forcing something. In life, as in the stream, change is inevitable, and this can carry you along just as well, even if it seems there is nothing at work, or no set path. We used the leaf and the stream to show similarity between Zen and popular Taoist thought.
@impermanentoo "Ill have the last laugh with wisdom when i die" A true and honest establishment of ego, and a well-defined concept of self, and a selfish expression at that. Bravo friend! I knew you had it in you! Thank you for proving my point. The self, no matter how much you lie, cannot be denied.
"When I am weak, then I am strong" Even Paul, a judeo-neo-christian could see a twofold pattern in the world. Try to minimize your ego, and you will see how Gandhi reached the freedom of India without guns, just being" weak". Don´t refuse to be yourself, just be yourself and let be.
Well first of all it meshed with some things I already believed and wasn't based on faith. Its teachings were logical. It did help me better understand the ego, it taught me detachment also (Ego falls under that category). I really hadn't thought of that at all before I read about Buddhism. It helped encourage me to be a better person (I could do that anyway, but it did give me more motivation and helped me define my morality.)
0:33 Wait, Tozan, like in the shakuhachi - the flute in the background - player Nakao Tozan, who found the Tozan ryu, or a different Tozan? I couldn't find any further information by googling, on which 'Tozan' they're referring to. I'm biased as I play shakuhachi. Maybe Tozan just is/was a common Japanese name? www.komuso.com/people/people.pl?person=668
If you want to study the origins of Zen? and how hinduism gave rise to buddhism mixed with Taoism gave rise to chinese Zen and finally Japanese Zen. READ "The Way of ZEN". By Alan Watts.
Loving Kindness, may the buddha in my lawn attract good fortune not just to me but to the whole community, I am so glad to have a stone Buddha in my lawn that everyone can see, I've meditated intensely for 10 years, loving kindness, its a fruit of the practice. Meditation is such a gift, may my house be a little Buddha shrine
So, if no effort is needed, ,why all this Zazen sitting, why becoming a monk, why the need of temples? Just flowing with the stream is enough, wherever you are, whatever clothes you wear, in whatever posture you are.
If you have realized then there's no need for effort but if not then you need effort. The effort is like a slap in your face to make you realize you have never lost your face.
Whenever I hear words like "There is nothing more than this" I wonder why such a thing would be said. I do not assume he knows more than I, nor I than he, but as beautiful as the words sound I hear eyes closing. Without love there is no loss, but neither is there passion. There is a price to living and one does not have to pay if one does not wish to live.
I love how people try so hard to achieve a state they are already inhabiting, I will sum the entire philosophy up so you don't even need to watch this.....just be.
I have only reasently began learning Zen on my own so I hav no formal instruction. That in mind I would like to share what I hope will help all Zen/non Zen practioners to find peace with their lives. I reacently read that the true nature of the mind is to be at peace, and it is filled by feelings of non-peace by our own doing. The distractions of every day life keep us from achiving this peace. So I belive the way to achieve this is to let your mind free.
So croscream, I am sorry to say that so far, you have proven to be the antithesis of my beloved true Christian friend (Aunt B) as I referred to her. She took us to a Baptist church every Sunday in order to teach us about Jesus and the Gospel. A great debt I owe her for introducing me to such a wonderful person such as Christ. May she be with Him in His Glory for as long as it is ordained.
zen mind simply and beautifully explained! the core of enlightenment can be found here: in present moment awareness!!! to see and to hear clearly, to perceive everything as it is, without attachment or illusion, to be awakened, to live in the here and now!!! that's all you need in order to be free to live, to love and to be happy!
This is a good documentary that touches some of the basis of zen, and shows a lot of different japanese temples and teachers. Good for an introduction to the way of zen buddhism!
I have become interested in Zen due to reading some books by Dennis Schmidt when I was a boy. Many years, and many things have passed. I forsook the christian teachings of my childhood, and am now empty in my praise of science and atheism. I need to explore the emptiness that fills me, and see if a foundation can be built on Nothing. Thank you for this video. It is not the Path, but as much a way to the path as any other.
Every living being on this planet is right now experiencing the most intense joy and health that's ever been felt in this universe Every Being Living or who has ever lived in this universe is now also experiencing this same joy and health - Africa
So where are the monks at? I came here to explain that due to a torn tendon in my right knee, I struggle to stay in "hero pose" aka Zen meditation posture for very long but it doesn't matter to me because I have practiced the art of Shikantaza most of my life with or without knowing which of course is very fitting.
ekydami, thank you for your kindness. It is always for people such as you that I spend my time and energy to reply to such agitated and non-sensical folks like CROSCREAM. In reality, he is an unwitting helper and validator of the spotless Dharma. Without his agitated mind, this exchange would have never occured & many folks would have lost the chance to be exposed to the Dharma. And so, we should both thank CROSCREAM sincerely for bringing us here to illustrate the principles of the Dharma.
Emptying your mind is not the final stage. There's at least one more stage of returning to the world and taking comfort in being alive and part of the world, without worries or cravings.
Thank you Justin for your appreciations about my english abilities!!! However it seems that you got the point. By ceasing to focus too much on our conscious selves we can receive a greater general ( but also impersonal ) awareness about what's happening around us. In deep shikantaza meditation I can experience depersonalization. It was scary at first. I felt like my "self" was empty. But I accepted it and I realized that it is not an alteration of the perception but it is our true mind.
Gary Snyder is an ordained Zen monk and learned in the poetry and religious literature of India, China, and Japan. I will always remember the night Jack Kerouac appeared uninvited at my home, sat down with a jug of cheap port wine beside him on the floor, announced that he was a Zen Buddhist, and discovered that everybody in the room read at least one Oriental language.
Zen is pure common sense. Many arenät in tune with how things are. They apply their own view on how things should be. And it seldom works. We can only have our way if the flow, others, can have their way as well. Mutual benefit as they call it.
Yes, tohoho. zen is mastered by practice. Conversely, no-zen just won't sit still long enough to be grasped. But, your zen is very admirable. You should be quite proud.
Loving kindness for my (and other's) appearance, may it be enjoyable and cute, loving kindness, may I (and others) be able to bring out the original beauty in others (and myself) as well, that of the totally innocent, unconditioned mind. Loving kindness because it is the miracle of the mind, our own inner attitude about ourselves is the most important factor in whether we are beautiful. Everyone has beauty within, and a true artist knows this. When we carefully find the seed of it and cultivate it with mindfulness not submission to fashion trends then there is no limit to anyone's beauty. Loving kindness it is true.
Please some guidance I’m 21 🙏🏼 Last week or two I started to have this states of blank mind.. I just stare somewhere and don’t think about anything or don’t feel anything, I just am. It comes to me naturally.. and I’m confused about why this happens to me these days so often or more like why it happened so suddenly Also I feel like I lost myself, like I don’t know who is this in this mind/body, my concept of my self just got destructed. Like ME just flew away somewhere. It’s like there’s empty cloud in my head. And also like I’m watching some movie in front of my eyes. I used to have lots of thoughts in my mind like some chaotic war and me my persona. It’s different and confusing and feels a bit scary.. I’m not used to this and sometimes I have the urge to think I have some medical condition…
The difficulty in understanding a "stillness of the mind" vs "active daily thought" is a product of our language lacking terms that have traditionally been used in buddhism. Far from having "no" mind, Buddhism describes the subtle characters of different mindsets. I highly recommend "Sleeping, dreaming, and dying" with credit to the Dalai Lama as well as "The Art of Happiness". Both seek to meld our language and ideas with that of the eastern language and ideas.
a beautiful "empty" film, i see it today second time, landed here again by accident surfing thru other empty channels :-))) best greetings from berlin - t...OM
at the end it says to not look at yourself different than society. and i have realized ALOT of my internal problems, but i still have a hard time figuring out how to fix these problems, or what zen suggests to do? or is the practice of zen just realizing these problems. cause if so i have been practicing zen for a few years now and havent even studied it. lol but i feel the habits in my mind are almost imposible to fix. has everyones answer been as easy as just not doing them?
How do you know that your work is best when you do this? Have you ever tried doing the opposite, stilling your mind and quieting your impulses, and seeing what your work is like then?
@impermanentoo Each of us should ask ourselves, why do we practice? What do we hope to understand? What methods will help us meet our goals? These are personal and intimate questions that no can answer for you. Printed words or spoken words are symbols that our minds understand to represent things and ideas. The 5 senses take in information and our minds produce thoughts. The mind uses these symbols to categorized what we experience in reality.
not only the "negative" emotions and feelings are in fact unreal, the "positive" ones as well. Through Selfforgiveness both can be deleted, nothing left. Thus emptying the ego, the personality, one may come to the realisation of Self as the Lifeessence in all and everything. One will not rest untill all realise this and all will be one and equal as Life.
@LEVRAIVRAIZEN Thank you for your response. We can go on endlessly stirring up the water and making it more murky. I choose to let it settle and become clear. I practice to understand what the Buddha taught and have a direct experience. Everyone must make the journey alone by themselves. This is the nature of the Zen method. Believing in something is very different than having faith. Come and realize for yourself. Experience establishes trust that you are on a good path. May your life go well
People never change coz the are indepedent but the think the are depedent so only their viewpoint of each part of them changes being good can be at a large degree but in troubled times u see good at a smaller degree but in reality it's magnitude has not changed only ur perception has changed its an illusion but a wise man may still see each part of him at the same degree and accepting it even in troubled times this to me is a true wise man
Yes, Justin I have experienced mushin. I can't always apply it on daily life, but I'm working on it. I mean, Mushin is the easiest thing to do beacause you have just to "do nothing" and let the unconsciuous mind work for you but it's not too easy for me to - as Lao Tzu said - " remain unmoving until the right action arises by itself ". However , sometimes I can tap into some sort of sixth sense trying to achieve mushin, as you did in that game.
gratitude FOR THE peaceful times gratitude for the quiet places thank you for that gratitude for the poems, gratitude for the leaves of fall many illnesses can sway us a Japanese remedy book says a warm cup of tea can heal them all gratitude for the soul power in simple persistence, zen makes them all beautiful; each breath is a new and different, thank you, very much! - dearb (nothing to add) ______ A baker woman shows her grains, the sun answers in light and butter, I have sun butter, I have seen the cows run today, oh, yet they've only been walking is the clock of my mind fast or is the circle of the sun slow she is waiting now, to be with every moment the days are long, yet light is fast the candle of this life burns slower, with poetic words as its wick not wax, they never burn away... your love is a cake I am eating and not lessening my pen is drunk with divine love when shin poets words are large, towers are small yet you can see all the world from wherever you stand, hidden places of lovers excluded! - dearb
It's interesting to juxtapose modern efforts in psychology with the study of Zen. Zen explained the concepts of Maslow, Gestalt and the rest long ago, but the lack of a scientific basis kept it from recognition. In a world ever obsessed with health, it is interesting that mental and emotional health is neglected as it is. We look to food as our cure, medicine and preventions, when it is truly the purity of our minds that brings our greater health.
If you go around telling people you're enlightened, you're not enlightened. You're ego is lying to you. In fact it can be seen as a form of spiritual narcissism.
The new syncretic form of Buddhism expanded fully into Eastern Asia soon after these events. The Kushan monk Lokaksema visited the Han Chinese court at Loyang in 178 CE, and worked there for ten years to make the first known translations of Mahayana texts into Chinese. The new faith later spread into Korea and Japan, and was itself at the origin of Zen
we need to be able to see rituals as just rituals, though it can be fun to enter into it, its also nessecary to be able to work with things as they truly are. climbing a labyrinths walls can be a deep insight into leaving a situation. the problem with people these days is not that we are physically bound, but we have trouble getting beyond the conceptual train tracks with control our lives, not that they are useless but we should be able to realize we are not trains, we are just walking along
In zen we become one with ourselves; independent of others. And in so doing we realize the beauty of the other; by seeing that the other and ourselves not different. Why do we feel the fear of another? why do we share their joy? We share these things as the cloud waters the blue mountain and the mountain holds the white cloud. To learn the joy of another one must first learn the joy in themself. But to learn the joy in oneself one must share in laughter with others. "May all beings have happiness and the cause of happiness May they be free of suffering and the cause of suffering May they never in any life be disassociated from the supreme happiness which is without suffering in the shelter of the tripple gem. And May they dwell in boundless equanimity free from hate and hunger Though the souls be numberless I vow to free them Though the fears be more vast than time and space I vow to remove them Though the way be full of enemys I vow to live in love. The Budda way is unsurpassable, I vow to embody it someday. Out of the night that covers me and Black as the pit from pole to pole I thank what ever Gods may be For my unconcerable soul In the fell clutch of circumstance I may have winced and cried alloud but beneath the bludgeonings of chance My head is bloody but unbowed Beyond this place of wrath and tears looms yet the horror of the shade and yet the menace of the years finds and shall find me unaffraid Why did bodhidharma come from the west To see if Buddha was still living Gasho With Love Alexander M. Hall May i Quickly attain the state of Fugen Boatsu And may he come to my aid to strengthen me
If you are interested in Zen and are new to it and want a good book to read try "The Miracle of Mindfulness" by Thich Nhat Hahn, also "Being Zen, bringing meditation to life" these books are what beginners or even those that have practiced for 35 years can learn from easily. Also "What the Buddha Taught" while not Zen is good for general Buddhist understanding. I own all three of these books, and "The Miracle of Mindfulness" is my favorite.
I often get into the same type of paradox; I try to be aware and see things and people as they are, but i end up going in circles and being frustrated like you described. I guess one way you can look at things is, at everyone's core they are, in a way, empty; all the opinions and projections of one's "identity" dont have any real "substance"; so just let go of them, even if only for a moment. Things become a little clearer.
You know when you learn to ride a bike, or swim, or play a musical instrument, or learn to juggle, how at first its seems so difficult? But then eventually you break through to another level where you relax and stop forcing the effort. You become completely engrossed in the activity and it comes to you with ease- a sense of not being "blocked" by your own effort. That is how I would describe Zen.
I believe that Zen is finding true yourself, understanding eternity, and peace in this finite world.
I can juggle and I am learning piano.. yes I agree.. without conscious effort don't think about doing it right👍🎹
Focus and no thinking
Obviously it goes far beyond.
Otherwise people would just practice something like these activities and get ...
2:42 "Do not differentiate yourself as apart from others."
3:21 "Copying is illegal and subject to prosecution."
Exactly! Yet another fake path.
No Money?
Go away!
We want your Money
Or
You cannot have access the path of "enlightenment" !!!!!!!
You must pay for entry to pair of dice
Casino
ANOTHER SCAM
another day
🤣🤣
Find the middle way between the paradox
I purchased a Empty Minds martial arts dvd years ago and I still enjoy it. I think they create some cool vids. That jus me tho. Peace.
I would also note that probably all of us reading this just watch this video for free. That's something.
We recommend Three Pillars of Zen by Philip Kapleau - as a must-have book. 5 Rings is a great book but primarily about Strategy. The translator, Bill Wilson is a close friend of ours. The Alan Watts lectures are very enoyable to listen to. Thanks for watching - emptymind films
Buddhism saved my life.
And then Slave Leia took it away
nobody lives forever.
@@nathanpiazza9644 ;")
. . . Buddhism saved me from being ....mundane....
Hi everyone. I rarely comment, but this discussion needs a finger pointing to the moon. My films cover very difficult topics such as zen but the film and even this discussion are just a finger pointing. Nothing more. Any words, even from a zen master are just words - they are not the moon.
I will leave you for the next 10 weeks - we are filming in China - another difficult topic - Qi. Look for the clips in 2008.
EmptyMind Films
The interesting thing about what you're describing is that explaining it to people that have never experienced it is like trying to describe how water tastes to someone who's never tasted or seen it. How awesome it would be to be able to directly share experience between people. Imagine seeing the sunset through the eyes of your best friend or even some random person standing by you, ..even better, through the eyes of a whole crowd of people at once. Unfortunately, for now all we have is words.
Its interesting to see how comments vary from video to video, this peaceful video reflect peaceful comments
Of course - this is a trailer and can even be downloaded and used anywhere. We have trailers for download on our site.
dependent, yet independent - I love it.
The book is "Zen Flesh, Zen Bones", actually.
I wore out my first copy I got over 20 years ago and recently had to replace it. A good read for an introductory "feel" to Zen :)
"Oh yes, I love zen, the idea that an idea itself is its own liberation and that ultimately its all emptiness, the same feeling planets must have which makes them float, we become like planet, universe, floating on nothing... yes zen is healing, its the experience of the universe..." - my Japanese friend, Radewa talking about zen
Beautiful video. Zen changed my life, it taught me to stop resisting, but to accept and just be. It helped me live a better and more sufficient way with my illness, and it is about teaching your mind discipline in a way.
"The mind should be nowhere, in particular." -Zen Buddhist saying.
Well, the 'who' is not too important. This line is a reference to not forcing a natural activity like seeing or hearing - non interference. To not get in your own way. This is from the Tao and known as 'Wu Wei' which literally means 'Not Doing'. Can also mean that nothing is accomplished by going beyond or forcing a natural activity. It is a principle of the middle way and may sound odd when taken out of a large context, such as this whole film clip. Thanks for watching. EmptyMind Films.
I like the metaphor of the leaf and the river ^^
Absolutely agree with previous post: Suzuki's book is definitely a must. Simple yet deep. "Everything" in just one book..
If I went with the flow of advertising today, I would be broke today!
Actually, we are saying that you are the leaf, not the stream. It is a comment to 'wu-wei' of not opposing change or not forcing something. In life, as in the stream, change is inevitable, and this can carry you along just as well, even if it seems there is nothing at work, or no set path. We used the leaf and the stream to show similarity between Zen and popular Taoist thought.
"There is no spoon." - The Matrix
@Muhammad Hamzah Ali I hope he's doing okay
You are the spoon and seeing is what makes it so.
@@bobobake1232 .
@impermanentoo "Ill have the last laugh with wisdom when i die" A true and honest establishment of ego, and a well-defined concept of self, and a selfish expression at that. Bravo friend! I knew you had it in you! Thank you for proving my point. The self, no matter how much you lie, cannot be denied.
"When I am weak, then I am strong"
Even Paul, a judeo-neo-christian could see a twofold pattern in the world.
Try to minimize your ego, and you will see how Gandhi reached the freedom of India without guns, just being" weak".
Don´t refuse to be yourself, just be yourself and let be.
Well first of all it meshed with some things I already believed and wasn't based on faith. Its teachings were logical. It did help me better understand the ego, it taught me detachment also (Ego falls under that category). I really hadn't thought of that at all before I read about Buddhism. It helped encourage me to be a better person (I could do that anyway, but it did give me more motivation and helped me define my morality.)
awesome
0:33
Wait, Tozan, like in the shakuhachi - the flute in the background - player Nakao Tozan, who found the Tozan ryu, or a different Tozan?
I couldn't find any further information by googling, on which 'Tozan' they're referring to.
I'm biased as I play shakuhachi.
Maybe Tozan just is/was a common Japanese name?
www.komuso.com/people/people.pl?person=668
If you want to study the origins of Zen?
and how hinduism gave rise to buddhism mixed with Taoism gave rise to chinese Zen and finally Japanese Zen.
READ "The Way of ZEN". By Alan Watts.
Thanks Bob I always thought they were linked, how about western mysticism? what Is your take?
Thank you
thankyouu
Loving Kindness, may the buddha in my lawn attract good fortune not just to me but to the whole community, I am so glad to have a stone Buddha in my lawn that everyone can see, I've meditated intensely for 10 years, loving kindness, its a fruit of the practice. Meditation is such a gift, may my house be a little Buddha shrine
So, if no effort is needed, ,why all this Zazen sitting, why becoming a monk, why the need of temples? Just flowing with the stream
is enough, wherever you are, whatever clothes you wear, in whatever posture you are.
ruzickaw
To reach maximum nothingness, one must train
If you have realized then there's no need for effort but if not then you need effort.
The effort is like a slap in your face to make you realize you have never lost your face.
Whenever I hear words like "There is nothing more than this" I wonder why such a thing would be said. I do not assume he knows more than I, nor I than he, but as beautiful as the words sound I hear eyes closing.
Without love there is no loss, but neither is there passion. There is a price to living and one does not have to pay if one does not wish to live.
I love how people try so hard to achieve a state they are already inhabiting, I will sum the entire philosophy up so you don't even need to watch this.....just be.
thank you
Genius.
+Yann Pilgrim easy said then done
fnatist I don't know we are both doing it right now so it cant be that hard.
Who is it that is being ?
Thanks for letting me a little understand on your answering to proton1. I have been interesting in the basic on Zen for beginner.
"A witty saying proves nothing."
-- Voltaire
Nice 👌
Too much negativity is never needed
It's not a competition
most concise explanation I've heard on it
Short and beautiful. Thank you.
I have only reasently began learning Zen on my own so I hav no formal instruction. That in mind I would like to share what I hope will help all Zen/non Zen practioners to find peace with their lives. I reacently read that the true nature of the mind is to be at peace, and it is filled by feelings of non-peace by our own doing. The distractions of every day life keep us from achiving this peace. So I belive the way to achieve this is to let your mind free.
So croscream, I am sorry to say that so far, you have proven to be the antithesis of my beloved true Christian friend (Aunt B) as I referred to her. She took us to a Baptist church every Sunday in order to teach us about Jesus and the Gospel. A great debt I owe her for introducing me to such a wonderful person such as Christ. May she be with Him in His Glory for as long as it is ordained.
Aiki all the way. Excellent work. Where can I buy the full doc?
zen mind simply and beautifully explained! the core of enlightenment can be found here: in present moment awareness!!! to see and to hear clearly, to perceive everything as it is, without attachment or illusion, to be awakened, to live in the here and now!!! that's all you need in order to be free to live, to love and to be happy!
This is a good documentary that touches some of the basis of zen, and shows a lot of different japanese temples and teachers. Good for an introduction to the way of zen buddhism!
I have become interested in Zen due to reading some books by Dennis Schmidt when I was a boy. Many years, and many things have passed. I forsook the christian teachings of my childhood, and am now empty in my praise of science and atheism. I need to explore the emptiness that fills me, and see if a foundation can be built on Nothing. Thank you for this video. It is not the Path, but as much a way to the path as any other.
Every living being on this planet is right now experiencing the most intense joy and health that's ever been felt in this universe
Every Being Living or who has ever lived in this universe is now also experiencing this same joy and health - Africa
I love the music on this. I believe it's Chris Yohmei on the shakuhachi, right? Anybody know the particular piece?
So where are the monks at? I came here to explain that due to a torn tendon in my right knee, I struggle to stay in "hero pose" aka Zen meditation posture for very long but it doesn't matter to me because I have practiced the art of Shikantaza most of my life with or without knowing which of course is very fitting.
that was great .....checking out your other videos..... but first i want to listen to this one again & again
peaceful calming stuff
ekydami, thank you for your kindness.
It is always for people such as you that I spend my time and energy to reply to such agitated and non-sensical folks like CROSCREAM.
In reality, he is an unwitting helper and validator of the spotless Dharma. Without his agitated mind, this exchange would have never occured & many folks would have lost the chance to be exposed to the Dharma.
And so, we should both thank CROSCREAM sincerely for bringing us here to illustrate the principles of the Dharma.
Emptying your mind is not the final stage. There's at least one more stage of returning to the world and taking comfort in being alive and part of the world, without worries or cravings.
This is a great video. I hope people will take the time to learn more about Zen practice. This dharma is so powerful. GASSHO!
Appreciate what you said, do you know or not where to see this documentary? simple question, if not I will keep looking,,
thank you for making this information readilly available to those who seek inner peace and well being
Thank you Justin for your appreciations about my english abilities!!! However it seems that you got the point. By ceasing to focus too much on our conscious selves we can receive a greater general ( but also impersonal ) awareness about what's happening around us. In deep shikantaza meditation I can experience depersonalization. It was scary at first. I felt like my "self" was empty. But I accepted it and I realized that it is not an alteration of the perception but it is our true mind.
Very Zen way of life. It resonate in my " mountain girl" spirit.
On my blog my own way of being in Zen.
There is no greater teaching than this
Gary Snyder is an ordained Zen monk and learned in the poetry and religious literature of India, China, and Japan. I will always remember the night Jack Kerouac appeared uninvited at my home, sat down with a jug of cheap port wine beside him on the floor, announced that he was a Zen Buddhist, and discovered that everybody in the room read at least one Oriental language.
This is a healthy practice, meditation, day by day, the mind sheds and blossoms, like the seasons, at the core; stillness.. Buddha-nature is here
Gosh Ryan that's really generous of you... can't imagine OcultOprah taking you up on it, but still you're a kind soul.
Zen is pure common sense. Many arenät in tune with how things are. They apply their own view on how things should be. And it seldom works. We can only have our way if the flow, others, can have their way as well. Mutual benefit as they call it.
Yes, tohoho. zen is mastered by practice.
Conversely, no-zen just won't sit still long enough to be grasped.
But, your zen is very admirable. You should be quite proud.
As Angels sit in meditation in the ethereal the practice of meditation is "on earth as it is in heaven"!!! Beautiful in the sight of God and angels!!
@muhrvis thanks a lot :) this way of thinking is really great...is this buddhism?
TIME FOR SOME PUPPY VIDEOS!!!! All this heavy talk has gotten me in the mood for some light cute puppies running around! whooohooooo!!!
Awesome music, fantastic pictures and the wisdom of Zen. I sholud live a similar place, I know.
Loving kindness for my (and other's) appearance, may it be enjoyable and cute, loving kindness, may I (and others) be able to bring out the original beauty in others (and myself) as well, that of the totally innocent, unconditioned mind.
Loving kindness because it is the miracle of the mind, our own inner attitude about ourselves is the most important factor in whether we are beautiful. Everyone has beauty within, and a true artist knows this. When we carefully find the seed of it and cultivate it with mindfulness not submission to fashion trends then there is no limit to anyone's beauty. Loving kindness it is true.
"Cutting off all thinking, forgetting all conditions while sitting here with nothing to do -- Yet spring comes, and grass grows all by itself."
Please some guidance I’m 21 🙏🏼
Last week or two I started to have this states of blank mind.. I just stare somewhere and don’t think about anything or don’t feel anything, I just am. It comes to me naturally.. and I’m confused about why this happens to me these days so often or more like why it happened so suddenly
Also I feel like I lost myself, like I don’t know who is this in this mind/body, my concept of my self just got destructed. Like ME just flew away somewhere. It’s like there’s empty cloud in my head.
And also like I’m watching some movie in front of my eyes.
I used to have lots of thoughts in my mind like some chaotic war and me my persona.
It’s different and confusing and feels a bit scary.. I’m not used to this and sometimes I have the urge to think I have some medical condition…
The difficulty in understanding a "stillness of the mind" vs "active daily thought" is a product of our language lacking terms that have traditionally been used in buddhism.
Far from having "no" mind, Buddhism describes the subtle characters of different mindsets.
I highly recommend "Sleeping, dreaming, and dying" with credit to the Dalai Lama as well as "The Art of Happiness". Both seek to meld our language and ideas with that of the eastern language and ideas.
very nice. Ive been looking into Tao and all that lately I find it a lot more peacful and calmer then anything else ive studyed.
Thanks for sharing, it is a great movie! 🙏
i have been researching zen and want to know what is the difference between soto and rinzai like the practices etc.
+Dominik Doherty
Rinzai have in his major learn KOANS.
Soto have in his major learn ZAZEN.
a beautiful "empty" film, i see it today second time, landed here again by accident surfing thru other empty channels :-))) best greetings from berlin - t...OM
at the end it says to not look at yourself different than society. and i have realized ALOT of my internal problems, but i still have a hard time figuring out how to fix these problems, or what zen suggests to do? or is the practice of zen just realizing these problems. cause if so i have been practicing zen for a few years now and havent even studied it. lol but i feel the habits in my mind are almost imposible to fix. has everyones answer been as easy as just not doing them?
@Ragleif Do you know this from personal experience? If so I'd like to hear more.
How do you know that your work is best when you do this? Have you ever tried doing the opposite, stilling your mind and quieting your impulses, and seeing what your work is like then?
@impermanentoo Each of us should ask ourselves, why do we practice? What do we hope to understand? What methods will help us meet our goals? These are personal and intimate questions that no can answer for you. Printed words or spoken words are symbols that our minds understand to represent things and ideas. The 5 senses take in information and our minds produce thoughts. The mind uses these symbols to categorized what we experience in reality.
not only the "negative" emotions and feelings are in fact unreal, the "positive" ones as well. Through Selfforgiveness both can be deleted, nothing left. Thus emptying the ego, the personality, one may come to the realisation of Self as the Lifeessence in all and everything. One will not rest untill all realise this and all will be one and equal as Life.
as a catholic, i have immense interest in zen, i hope to one day delve into the teachings of zen, i have no wish to convert, but to better understand.
prayers for the moral and environmentally friendly conduct of all those who meditate in the zazen posture
Thank you for uploading this video.
@LEVRAIVRAIZEN Thank you for your response. We can go on endlessly stirring up the water and making it more murky. I choose to let it settle and become clear. I practice to understand what the Buddha taught and have a direct experience. Everyone must make the journey alone by themselves. This is the nature of the Zen method. Believing in something is very different than having faith. Come and realize for yourself. Experience establishes trust that you are on a good path. May your life go well
Thank you! Just what I needed this morning, a new perspective.
People never change coz the are indepedent but the think the are depedent so only their viewpoint of each part of them changes being good can be at a large degree but in troubled times u see good at a smaller degree but in reality it's magnitude has not changed only ur perception has changed its an illusion but a wise man may still see each part of him at the same degree and accepting it even in troubled times this to me is a true wise man
Beautiful images and I liked the narration.
5 stars!
Yes, Justin I have experienced mushin. I can't always apply it on daily life, but I'm working on it. I mean, Mushin is the easiest thing to do beacause you have just to "do nothing" and let the unconsciuous mind work for you but it's not too easy for me to - as Lao Tzu said - " remain unmoving until the right action arises by itself ". However , sometimes I can tap into some sort of sixth sense trying to achieve mushin, as you did in that game.
gratitude FOR THE peaceful times
gratitude for the quiet places
thank you for that
gratitude for the poems,
gratitude for the leaves of fall
many illnesses can sway us
a Japanese remedy book says
a warm cup of tea
can heal them all
gratitude for the soul power
in simple persistence,
zen makes them all beautiful;
each breath is a new and different,
thank you, very much! - dearb (nothing to add)
______
A baker woman shows her grains,
the sun answers in light and butter,
I have sun butter, I have seen the cows
run today,
oh, yet they've only been walking
is the clock of my mind fast
or is the circle of the sun slow
she is waiting now, to be with every moment
the days are long, yet light is fast
the candle of this life burns slower, with poetic words as its wick
not wax,
they never burn away...
your love is a cake I am eating
and not lessening
my pen is drunk with divine love
when shin poets words are large, towers are small
yet you can see all the world from
wherever you stand, hidden places of lovers excluded!
- dearb
May I congratulate you on an inspirational insight into Zen . . . Buddha, Dharma, Sangha!
It's interesting to juxtapose modern efforts in psychology with the study of Zen. Zen explained the concepts of Maslow, Gestalt and the rest long ago, but the lack of a scientific basis kept it from recognition.
In a world ever obsessed with health, it is interesting that mental and emotional health is neglected as it is. We look to food as our cure, medicine and preventions, when it is truly the purity of our minds that brings our greater health.
I am enlightened ~ gratitude to the dream teacher that is zen, gratitude to the wisdom of nature, gratitude to the poetry!
You enlightened ?
If you go around telling people you're enlightened, you're not enlightened. You're ego is lying to you. In fact it can be seen as a form of spiritual narcissism.
Where can i get this movie?
beautiful time before sunset, practicing zazen, feeling happiness, orange pink clouds, this is the liberation of all consciousness OM
@soona86 He was referring to the "Tao" or the great oneness or union of the opposites yin and yang. It is pronounced like "dow."
The new syncretic form of Buddhism expanded fully into Eastern Asia soon after these events. The Kushan monk Lokaksema visited the Han Chinese court at Loyang in 178 CE, and worked there for ten years to make the first known translations of Mahayana texts into Chinese. The new faith later spread into Korea and Japan, and was itself at the origin of Zen
Indeed Zen is a means of silencing mind, have you ever read Shobogenzo?, i am only reading it now myself, but i would recommend it to you.
I needed this growing up.
we need to be able to see rituals as just rituals, though it can be fun to enter into it, its also nessecary to be able to work with things as they truly are. climbing a labyrinths walls can be a deep insight into leaving a situation. the problem with people these days is not that we are physically bound, but we have trouble getting beyond the conceptual train tracks with control our lives, not that they are useless but we should be able to realize we are not trains, we are just walking along
In zen we become one with ourselves; independent of others. And in so doing we realize the beauty of the other; by seeing that the other and ourselves not different.
Why do we feel the fear of another? why do we share their joy? We share these things as the cloud waters the blue mountain and the mountain holds the white cloud.
To learn the joy of another one must first learn the joy in themself. But to learn the joy in oneself one must share in laughter with others.
"May all beings have happiness and the cause of happiness
May they be free of suffering and the cause of suffering
May they never in any life be disassociated from the supreme happiness which is without suffering in the shelter of the tripple gem.
And May they dwell in boundless equanimity free from hate and hunger
Though the souls be numberless I vow to free them
Though the fears be more vast than time and space I vow to remove them
Though the way be full of enemys I vow to live in love.
The Budda way is unsurpassable, I vow to embody it someday.
Out of the night that covers me
and Black as the pit from pole to pole
I thank what ever Gods may be
For my unconcerable soul
In the fell clutch of circumstance
I may have winced and cried alloud
but beneath the bludgeonings of chance
My head is bloody but unbowed
Beyond this place of wrath and tears
looms yet the horror of the shade
and yet the menace of the years
finds
and shall find
me unaffraid
Why did bodhidharma come from the west
To see if Buddha was still living
Gasho
With Love
Alexander M. Hall
May i Quickly attain the state of Fugen Boatsu
And may he come to my aid to strengthen me
where can i view the whole documentary of this vid?
If you are interested in Zen and are new to it and want a good book to read try "The Miracle of Mindfulness" by Thich Nhat Hahn, also "Being Zen, bringing meditation to life" these books are what beginners or even those that have practiced for 35 years can learn from easily. Also "What the Buddha Taught" while not Zen is good for general Buddhist understanding. I own all three of these books, and "The Miracle of Mindfulness" is my favorite.
I often get into the same type of paradox; I try to be aware and see things and people as they are, but i end up going in circles and being frustrated like you described. I guess one way you can look at things is, at everyone's core they are, in a way, empty; all the opinions and projections of one's "identity" dont have any real "substance"; so just let go of them, even if only for a moment. Things become a little clearer.
crazy how this video was uploaded one month before i was born
@Yawwwn1990
It's ironic that you have spelt "your" incorrectly in that sentence. May i suggest "you're"?
Tell me about how did you get influemce by zen?