Kong-an Blues
Zen Master Seung Sahn and Zen Master Su Bong in Korea |
(from Dropping ashes on the Buddha)
March 4, 1975
Dear Soen-sa-nim,
Enclosed you will find an
assortment of letters I have written and never mailed to you, so here they are.
My practice is I don't know what. It is neither good nor bad, I guess, but
still I don't know what. It seems I don't know what about anything, which seems
different from I don't know what.
Tell me about shakuhachi
practice. It is my ego that wants to play well. How can I just play? As I watch my playing I sense today that
all things are like those music notes on the page. It says: move third finger.
How can I learn to live each moment as when each note directs me and fulfill that
request as best I can? I don't really know what I am saying but I must write
you and I hope I mail these letters to you.
See Hoy (aka: Zen Master Su Bong)
March 5, 1975
Dear Soen-sa-nim,
I am very confused. Since you are
not here I go to sit with Venerable Hearn and sometimes Dr. Thien-An. Venerable
Hearn is here only once a week
for dokusan and will be leaving for the Asian
countries at the end of the month. Once, soon after you went to Providence, I
went to visit with Roshi Kozan Kimura. Here are a list of kong-ans given to me:
From you: "What am I?"
"Why does Bodhidharma have
no beard?"
From Venerable Hearn: "What
is the sound of the flute with no holes?'' One day he said to me, "Now
show me your understanding of this," and gave me the kong-an, "Can you drive a nail without
a hammer?"
Dr. Thien-An: "Where do you
find Buddha-nature?"
My answer: "Galloping
through, it is all around. How could it leave a trace?"
He said: "Go work on it some
more."
Kimura Roshi said I should decide
on one Master. I told him you were not here. He told me I should follow you around
and go to Providence. He said he likes me to come and sit Zen with them but
would not give me dokusan
lest he interfere with another's kong-an. Last night I went to sit with him
and had no dokusan.
Tonight I went to sit and went to
dokusan. He said I should only work on one
kong-an and asked me to meditate on "When
were you born?" After all others were finished with dokusan, I went back and answered with,
"Since there is no trace, how should I know?" We then talked and he
asked me what other kong-ans I had and which I worked on. I told him I work most
on "What am I?" He said it is too hard for beginners and I should
work on "When were you born?"
Please advise me, because when I
sit Zen I can only ask -rather, I like only to ask-"What am I?" and
even at other times only "What am I?" I do not know what to do. Shall
I just go and sit with Kozan but
have no dokusan?
Shall I come to Providence? But
here I have so many attachments and even to you attachment.
Sometimes I remember you asking
"What am I?" and can even get angry with you for giving me such a
thing. Even now I am attached to "What am I?" and the thought
of "When was I born?" makes me want to vomit, because all these
things are puzzling my head. I will sit more zazen tonight and only think "What am I?"
Please help me because I think only you can take "What am I?" back.
Please answer me soon, but you
probably won't, huh? Anyway, I'd like to tell you to go fuck yourself.
Respectfully, and hope to see you
soon,
See Hoy (aka: Zen Master Su Bong)
March 22, 1975
Dear See Hoy,
Thank you for your two letters. I
have been in New York since the beginning of the month, so I didn't receive
them until a few days ago. That's why my answer is so late. I am sorry.
You say that you don't know what
your practice is, that you don't know anything. But then you say that you are confused.
If you keep a complete don't-know mind, how can confusion appear? Complete
don't-know mind means cutting off all thinking. Cutting off all thinking means
true emptiness. In true emptiness, there is no I to be confused and nothing to
be confused about. True emptiness is before thinking. Before thinking,
everything does not appear and does not disappear. So the truth is just like
this. Red comes, there is red; white comes, there is white. When you close all the
holes of the shakuhachi, there is no sound; when the holes are open, there is a
high sound. Only like this. The shakuhachi is a very good teacher for you. If
you don't understand, just ask the shakuhachi. Just enter the sound of the
shakuhachi, and the shakuhachi will explain to you what enlightenment is.
Dr. Thien-An, Song Ryong Hearn,
and Kimura Roshi are all good teachers. I think you can take your questions and
problems to any of them and they will teach you well. You have many kong-ans. But a kong-an is like a finger pointing at the
moon. If you are attached to the finger, you don't understand the direction, so
you cannot see the moon. If you are not attached to any kong-an, then you will understand the direction. The direction
is the complete don't know mind. The name for "like this" is
"don't know." If you understand "don't know," you will
understand all kong-ans
and you will soon understand
"like this."
You have many problems in your kong-an work. "What am I?" -do
you understand this? Your answer is, "I don't know." "When were
you born?"-do you understand this? Your answer is also, "I don't
know." If you are not attached to words, the don't-know mind is the same.
All kong-ans become the same don't-know mind.
Your don't-know mind, my don't-know mind, all people's don't-know minds, the "What
am I?" don't-know mind, the "When was I born?" don't-know
mind-all these are the same don't-know. So it is very easy. Only keep
don't-know. Don't be attached to words. This don't-know is your true self. It
is nothing at all. It is very easy, not difficult.
So you must keep only don't-know,
always and everywhere. Then you will soon get enlightenment. But be very careful
not to want enlightenment. Only keep don't-know mind.
Your situation, your condition,
your opinions-throw them all away.
I think it would be very good for
you to learn with Kimura Roshi. I hope you also listen to what your shakuhachi is
teaching you and soon get enlightenment. At the end of your letter you say,
"Go fuck yourself." These are wonderful words that you have given me,
and I thank you very much. If you attain enlightenment, I will give them back to you.
Sincerely yours,
SS
1 Comments:
Terrific. Thank you.
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