26 December 2011

Contemplation: Clear Observation 5

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

Whether walking, standing, sitting, lying, or rising, he should practice both 'cessation' and 'clear observation' side by side. That is to say, he is to meditate on the fact that things are unborn in their essential nature; but at the same time he is to meditate on the fact that good and evil karma, produced by the combination of the primary cause and the coordinating causes [i.e., he is to practice 'clear observation'], he is also to meditate on the fact that the essential nature [of things] is unobtainable [by intellectual analysis].


From The Awakening of Faith, p. 101

21 December 2011

Programming Notice

We will not be meeting for regularly-scheduled meditation on 27 December, 2011. Group practice will resume on 3 January, 2012.

Beginning on 11 January, our Tuesday evening discussions will involve a chapter-by-chapter introduction to Asvaghosa's The Awakening of Faith. This is a very helpful text for getting at the foundations of Mahayana Buddhist practice. It will guide our discussions for several weeks. I strongly recommend the translation by Hakeda, and encourage everyone to get their hands on a copy and read the translator's introduction before the 11th. It is not necessary to keep up with the reading to learn from the discussion, but you will certainly learn more if you are able to do that.

In the meantime, I wish you all safe travels and joyful celebrations. Namo Buddhaya!

19 December 2011

Contemplation: Clear Observation 4

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take the following as your object of contemplation:

Having made such a vow, he must, in accordance with his capacity and without faltering, practice every kind of good at all times and in all places and not be slothful in his mind. Except when he sits in concentration in the practice of 'cessation,' he should at all times reflect upon what should be done and what should not be done.


The Awakening of Faith, p. 101

15 December 2011

Our Thanks to Blue Mountain Sage Sangha

If you attended our retreat last May, you met my comrade Doko O'Brien. He leads the Blue Mountain Sage Sangha, a Tendai group in Denver.

And Blue Mountain Sage Sangha gave us the beautiful Shakujo that will accompany us in our practice, especially outdoors.

Please accept our deepest gratitude.

14 December 2011

The Shakujo

We have received a great and welcome gift from a donor in Japan. I will describe this in more detail later; for now, I would like to offer a verse in gratitude for this support of our practice.

Past various Buddhas held the Shakujo and attained Buddhahood. Present various Buddhas hold the Shakujo and attain Buddhahood. Future various Buddhas will hold the Shakujo and they will attain Buddhahood. Therefore, Namah the holding of the Shakujo and respect the Three Treasures...


This is part of a cycle of practices called Kujo Shakujo, from the "Transference and Generation of Vows." May the merit extend to all beings.

12 December 2011

Contemplation: Clear Observation 3

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take the following as your object of contemplation:

After reflecting in this way, he should pluck up his courage and make a great vow to this effect: may my mind be free from discriminations so that I may practice all of the various meritorious acts everywhere in the ten directions; may I, to the end of the future, by applying limitless expedient means, help all suffering sentient beings so that they may attain the bliss of nirvana, the ultimate goal.


The Awakening of Faith, p. 101

05 December 2011

Find us on Facebook...

If you use Facebook, find us here.

Contemplation: Clear Observation 2

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take the following as your object of contemplation:

He should reflect in the following way: all living beings, from the beginningless beginning, because they are permeated by ignorance, have allowed their mind to remain in samsara; they have already suffered all the great miseries of the body and mind, they are at present under incalculable pressure and constraint, and their sufferings in the future will likewise be limitless. These sufferings are difficult to forsake, difficult to shake off, and yet those beings are unaware [that they are in such a state]; for this, they are greatly to be pitied.


The Awakening of Faith
, pp. 100-101

27 November 2011

Contemplation: Clear Observation 1

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

He who practices 'clear observation' should observe that all conditioned phenomena in the world are unstationary and are subject to instantaneous transformation and destruction; that all activities of the mind arise and are extinguished from moment or moment; and that, therefore, all of these induce suffering. He should observe that all that had been conceived in the past was as hazy as a dream, that all that is being conceived in the future will be like clouds that rise up suddenly. He should also observe that the physical existences of all living beings in the world are impure and that among these various filthy things there is not a single one that can be sought after with joy.


Asvaghosa, The Awakening of Faith, p. 100

**this is the first in a series of contemplations in Clear Observation from The Awakening of Faith**

26 November 2011

Come on up to the Mothership...

Great River Ekayana Sangha is an affiliate of the Tendai Buddhist Institute of Canaan, New York, USA. One of my intentions for the future of our group as we continue to grow is to deepen the relationship of our individual members with the activities of our main temple. I am encouraging our Washington-area participants, our friends in Richmond and Harrisonburg, and anyone else with some connection to this work to get involved in some capacity with the activities at TBI. This can happen most straightforwardly through attending retreats (contact me by email about this), or through material and financial support of the organization.

Jikan's Office Hour: Back to Cherrydale

I am hosting an Office Hour near our sangha's original home in Cherrydale, Arlington, Virginia. Meet me at the Starbucks near the Italian Store in Lyon Village, 10 December, starting around 2pm. Find out more at our meetup page. All are welcome.

21 November 2011

Contemplation: Always Beyond Thoughts

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

What is called the essential nature of Mind is always beyond thoughts. It is, therefore, defined as 'immutable.'

The Awakening of Faith, p. 50

14 November 2011

Contemplation: A Sense of Humor

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take the following as your object of contemplation:

Q: Is sense of humor related in any way to the experience of instant enlightenment, satori?

A: Certainly. There is the story of a person who died laughing. He was a simple village person who asked a teacher the color of Amitabha which, traditionally, iconographically,is red. Somehow, by mistake, he thought the teacher said Amitabha's color was the color of ash in a fire. And this influenced his whole meditation practice; because when he practiced visualizing Amitabha, it was a grey Amitabha.

Finally the man was dying. As he lay on his deathbed he wanted to make sure, so he asked another teacher the color of Amitabha. The teacher said Amitabha's color was red and the man suddenly burst into laughter: "Well, I used to think him the color of ash, and now you tell me he is red." He burst into laughter and died laughing. So it is a question of overcoming a kind of seriousness.

There are many stories of people who were actually able to see the awakened state by breaking into laughter--seeing the contrast, the irony of polar situations.


Chogyam Trungpa, Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism, p. 117.

07 November 2011

Contemplation: Intrinsic Qualities

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

[I]f such men allowed their minds to hold on to anything they would be cherishing the idea of an ego entity, a personality, a being, or a separated individuality; and if they grasped and held on to the notion of things as having intrinsic qualities they would be cherishing the idea of an ego entity, a personality, a being, or a separated individuality. Likewise, if they grasped and held on to the notion of things as devoid of intrinsic qualities they would be cherishing the idea of an ego entity, a personality, a being, or a separated individuality. So you should not be attached to things as being possessed of, or devoid of, intrinsic qualities.


from The Diamond Sutra, chapter 6

31 October 2011

Contemplation: Like Images in a Mirror

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

It should be understood that [the conception of] the entire world of objects can be held only on the basis of man's deluded mind of ignorance. All things, therefore, are just like the images in a mirror which are devoid of any objectivity that one can get hold of; they are of the mind only and are unreal.


The Awakening of Faith
pp. 48-49

24 October 2011

Contemplation: Letting Go

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

Long-associated companions will part from each other. Wealth and possessions obtained with effort will be left behind. Consciousness, the guest, will cast aside the guest-house of the body. Letting go of this life is the Bodhisattva's practice.


from The Thirty-Seven Bodhisattva Practices of Ngulchu Thogme Zangpo

17 October 2011

Contemplation

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take the following as your object of contemplation:

At this time when the difficult-to-gain ship of leisure and fortune has been obtained, ceaselessly hearing, pondering and meditating day and night in order to liberate oneself and others from the ocean of cyclic existence is the Bodhisattva's practice.


from The Thirty-Seven Bodhisattva Practices by Ngulchu Thogme Zangpo

10 October 2011

Contemplation: The Teacher

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation (here, Buddha Shakyamuni is addressing Bodhisattva Universal Enlightenment by name):

Universal Enlightenment, you should know
that sentient beings in the Dharma Ending Age
who wish to seek a good teacher
should find one with correct views
whose mind is far away from the Two Vehicles.
The Dharma [he actualizes] should be free
from the four faults of
contrivance, stopping, allowing things
to be as they are, and annihilation.
Approached by the teacher, the should
not be arrogant and proud.
Left by the teacher, they should not be resentful.
When witnessing different conditions displayed by the teacher,
they should regard them as precious rare occurences,
like a Buddha appearing in the world.


from The Sutra of Complete Enlightenment, p. 57

03 October 2011

Contemplation: All Things are Teachings of Buddha

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

This mental moment is not vertical, not horizontal; it is inconceivable. This is not true only of oneself; Buddhas and sentient beings are also thus. The Flower Ornament Scripture says, "Mind, Buddha, sentient beings--these three have no difference." You should know your own mind contains all the Buddha's principles. The Scripture on Consideration of Benefit says, "The ignorant want to seek enlightenment in the elements of mind and matter, but these elements are themselves it--apart from these there is no enlightenment." The Pure Name Scripture says, "The liberation of Buddhas is to be sought in the mental activities of sentient beings. Sentient beings are enlightenment, which cannot be further attained; sentient beings are nirvana, and cannot be further extinguished." As one mind is thus, so are all minds, and so are all things. When the Contemplation of Universal Good says that Vairochana Buddha is omnipresent, this is what it means. You should know that all tings are teachings of Buddha, because the Buddha is the cosmos.


Chih-i, Stopping and Seeing, pp. 34-35

28 September 2011

Event: Potluck at Jikan's Place

Let's get together for sangha togetherness and sangha food: October 9, 2011, at 5pm, at Jikan's house.

For more information or to RSVP, check out our meetup page or contact Jikan at JikanAnderson@gmail.com.

26 September 2011

Contemplation: The Supreme Treasure of the Buddhas

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as the object of your contemplation:

Ordinary people caught in bondage are unaware and do not know, like blind children of a rich family sitting in a storehouse of treasures without seeing any of them, just bumping into them when they move and thus being wounded by the treasures. Those of the two vehicles, in their fever, think the treasures are ghosts and tigers, dragons and snakes; they reject them and run away, wandering in misery for fifty-odd years. Although these two types differ in bondage and liberation, both lack the supreme treasure of the Buddhas, those who arrive at thusness. Producing a great compassionate vow to remove their pains and give them happiness is arousing the genuine aspiration for enlightenment, neither in bondage nor in liberation.


Chih-i, Stopping and Seeing

21 September 2011

Jikan's Office Hour

I am hosting an Office Hour on Sunday, 2 October, at 7:30am at Caffe Amouri in Vienna, Virginia. Find out more at our Meetup page.

I look forward to seeing you there!

19 September 2011

Contemplation: Guarding Ethics

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

If, lacking ethical conduct, one fails to achieve one's own purpose, the wish to accomplish others' purpose is laughable. Therefore, guarding ethics devoid of aspirations for worldly existence is the Bodhisattva's practice.


from The Thirty-Seven Bodhisattva Practices by Ngulchu Thogme Zangpo

12 September 2011

Contemplation: Salt Water

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

Indulging sense pleasures is like drinking salt water--however much one indulges, thirst and craving only increase. Immediately abandoning whatever things give rise to clinging and attachment is the Bodhisattva's practice.


from The Thirty-Seven Bodhisattva Practices by Ngulchu Thogme Zangpo

05 September 2011

Contemplation: All Things Must Pass

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

The reality of birth-and-death is such that the sorrow of parting is mutually felt by all generations. A father cries over the death of his children; children cry over the death of their father. Brothers, sisters, husbands and wives mourn each other's death. According to the basic law of impermanence, whether death will occur in order of seniority or in the reverse is unpredictable. All things must pass. Nothing stays forever. Few believe this, even if someone teaches and exhorts them. And so the stream of birth-and-death continues everlastingly.


Buddha Shakyamuni, in The Sutra on the Buddha of Infinite Life (the Larger Pure Land Sutra), published in Three Pure Land Sutras, p. 286.

29 August 2011

Contemplation: To the Magic Citadel, Directly

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

Contemplating the body as empty, observing mind as empty, seeing no impermanence and no impurity in emptiness--such items of the path lead directly to the magic citadel.

When contemplating the body as impermanent, you see impermanence is identical to emptiness. Contemplating the reality nature of the body, you see it is not permanent, not impermanent, not empty, not nonempty. Contemplating the mind is also like this. Such items of the path lead indirectly to the abode of treasure.

Contemplating the real nature of the body as neither pure nor impure, yet aware of both purity and impurity, and so on, contemplating the real nature of the mind as neither permanent nor impermanent, yet aware of both permanence and impermanence, such items of the path lead directly to the abode of treasure.


Chih-i, Stopping and Seeing, p. 32

22 August 2011

Contemplation: To the Magic Citadel, Indirectly

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

Just observe the momentary arising of mind in the relationship of the sense faculties and sense data; the arising of mind is conditional, and the mind of conditional terminology is the basis of delusion and understanding. This means the four truths have infinite characteristics; there is nothing else in the triple world but the making of one mind, and the mind is like a painter, making various forms. The mind constructs the six states of existence and discriminates and compares infinitely various differences, such as, for example, that such and such views and cravings are characteristic of light or heavy causes of suffering in the world or characteristic of light or heavy causes of suffering beyond the world, or that such and such birth and death is characteristic of light or heavy suffering of individual birth and death, or characteristic of light or heavy birth and death beyond the world. By overturning this mind, one produces understanding, like a painter washing off colors and applying whitewash.

That means contemplating the body as impure and mind as inconstant. These items of the path lead indirectly to the magic citadel.


Chih-i, Stopping and Seeing, p. 31-32

15 August 2011

Contemplation: No Place to Escape

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

Now, the mind does not arise alone but in relation to objects. The intellective faculty is the cause, the data of phenomena is the condition, and the mind aroused is that which is produced. This faculty and data, subject and object, become, change, and pass away, suddenly arising, suddenly vanishing, again and again being born and passing away anew, not abiding moment to moment, like flashes of lightning, swift as rapids.

The foam of form, the bubbles of sensation, the flames of perception, the boundaries of conditioned states, the illusions of consciousness, all the objective counterparts of awareness, including land, fields, house, family, property--all are gone in an instant. Momentarily there, suddenly they are gone. The whole world is impermanent; the whole world is just suffering.

When the physical elements come together, there is no place to escape. One should only focus the mind on discipline, concentration, and wisdom, to vertically break up delusion and horizontally cut through the sea of death, crossing over the stream of existence. Scripture says, "In the past, I did not see the four truths, just like you; that is why I went around in circles for a long time." The "burning house" is like this; how can you be addicted to indulgence and amusement?


Chih-i, Stopping and Seeing, pp. 28-29; see also, Lotus Sutra chapter 3.

08 August 2011

Contemplation: My Good Friend

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

If you have heard the Dharma and do not forget it
But regard and revere it with great joy,
You are my good friend. For this reason,
You should awaken aspiration for Enlightenment.

Even if the whole world is on fire,
Be sure to pass through it to hear the Dharma;
Then you will surely enter the Path of the Buddha
And everywhere deliver beings from the river of birth-and-death.


Buddha Shakyamuni, in the Sutra on the Buddha of Infinite Life (Larger Pure Land Sutra), published in Three Pure Land Sutras, p. 275

01 August 2011

Contemplation: Seeing Buddha

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

If, seeing Buddha, one knows there is no Buddha in Buddha, if, seeing Buddha's marks and embellishments, one knows marks and embellishments are not marks and embellishments, and knows that Buddha and the marks are like space, and in space there is no Buddha, much less any marks and embellishments, then, seeing Buddha is not Buddha, one sees Buddha, and seeing the marks are not marks, one sees the marks, and aspires to equal Buddha and liberate countless sentient beings, this is arousing the aspiration for enlightenment by seeing marks and embellishments of the higher adaptive embodiment of Buddha, seeking above and teaching below.


Chih-i, Stopping and Seeing, p. 17

25 July 2011

Contemplation: Always Recollect Emptiness

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

"In brief, samadhi is explained
as being the complete satisfaction of the mind.
Great Being, listen attentively
to the explanation of the distinctions:
The samadhi of all the Buddhas
is said to be emptiness by the Jina.
It is attained through complete knowledge of the mind,
and from nothing else.
The complete abandonment of both
is said to be the samadhi of Perfect Buddhas:
It is called the Great Emptiness,
and perfects the All-knowing Awareness.
Therefore you should always recollect
emptiness in all situations."


The Maha-Vairocana-Abhisambodhi Tantra, trans. Stephen Hodge, pp. 123-124.

18 July 2011

Jikan's Office Hour: Harrisonburg & Staunton Outreach Edition

I am hosting an Office Hour in Harrisonburg, Virginia on August 20, 2011, at 3pm, particularly to answer questions about starting a practice group and offer support in doing such a thing. You can find more details here, at our Meetup page.

Contemplation: Ordinary Things

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

To seek the character of reality outside of ordinary things is like running from the space in one place to look for space elsewhere. The ordinary is the true; there is no need to abandon the ordinary and strive for the holy. Scripture says, "Life and death is nirvana; each form, each scent, is all the Middle Way." This is called arousing the aspiration for enlightenment by thinking of the uncreate four truths, seeking above and teaching below.


Chih-i, Stopping and Seeing, p. 16

11 July 2011

Contemplation: Shoyage

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:


I expound to sentient beings and others
the early evening verse of the non-eternal: Listen!
Attachments are deep enough, having no bottom,
And the ocean of birth and death is without limits.
The ship that takes us to the other shore
From this suffering world has not yet arrived;
Therefore, we should not rest
Until we discern the Absolute.


Shoyage, as recited at the Tendai Buddhist Institute

06 July 2011

Programming Notice: Now Meeting Each Week

I am pleased to announce that Great River Ekayana Sangha will now be meeting each week on Tuesday evenings, at 7:30pm in the Walden Room of the UUCA. I will be there on the first and third Tuesdays of each month for more formal practice, teachings, and discussion; on alternate Tuesdays, practice will be led by senior students.

05 July 2011

Jikan's Office Hour: District of Columbia Edition

This is an ongoing event I lead at different locations, this time in the heart of Washington, DC by popular request. The idea behind it is to give a venue for Dharma discussion beyond what we have time or space for during our Wednesday night sangha meetings, and to help build sangha connections. Everyone is welcome. Here is the format:

I will meet with whomever shows up and has an earnest question about Buddhism, and offer whatever help I can, on a first-come, first-served basis, or as a group discussion. Students, if you are interested in this, please come prepared with at least one good question.

Practically speaking, if only one person is around, then I will work with that person until time is up or I am out of coffee. But I would really prefer to make sure everyone with a question gets heard. The format should be dialogic. If you feel you need to speak with me privately, that can be arranged at another time and in another venue. If you need help understanding something you are reading, please email me in advance what you would like to ask me about, so I can come prepared.

Please meet me at 1pm on Saturday, July 30, 2011, in the Kogod courtyard at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC.

04 July 2011

Contemplation: Wear the Robe of the Tathagatha

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

How should the good men or women who live after my extinction expound this Sutra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma to the four kinds of devotees when they wish to? They should enter the room of the Tathagatha, wear the robe of the Tathagatha, sit on the seat of the Tathagata, and then expound this sutra to the four kinds of devotees. To enter the room of the Tathagata means to have great compassion towards all living beings. To wear the robe of the Tathagata means to be gentle and patient. To sit on the seat of the Tathagata means to see the voidness of all things. They should do these [three] things and then without indolence expound this Sutra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma to Bodhisattvas and the four kinds of devotees.



from The Lotus Sutra, trans. Senchu Murano, p. 177

21 June 2011

Programming Notice: Jikan On Retreat

After tonight's meditation, I will be away from phone and computer until July 4, as I will be attending gyo. This means, of course, that I will not be available to answer questions by email for a while. Our regularly scheduled practice will carry on though.

Thank you to the sangha for the support and encouragement in this. I will carry you with me in practice.

19 June 2011

Contemplation: A Great Cloud

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

Sometimes I go about in pity for myself,
and all the while a great wind
is bearing me across the sky.


Verse given for encouragement at Tendai Buddhist Institute

13 June 2011

Programming Notice: Rescheduled Walkabout & Potluck

The Warm-up walk and potluck event announced earlier has been rescheduled for Saturday, July 16. The rest of the details remain unchanged; read about it here. Thank you!

Contemplation: May I Become...

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation

For those who are without refuge,
Without base, support or friend,
May I become their supreme refuge,
Their base, their support and friend.


Shakyamuni Buddha, as recorded in The Sutra of Golden Light, p. 24.

10 June 2011

Calling Harrisonburg & Staunton...

Some nice people in Harrisonburg, Virginia have expressed an interest in starting a practice group there. I am willing to help organize such a thing, and offer what advice I can. So I would like to know if there is significant interest in this form of practice for this to be feasible.

Please contact me by email at JikanAnderson@gmail.com if you live in Harrisonburg, Staunton, or close by and would like to participate in the great work locally.

09 June 2011

What is Gyo?

Thanks to Heather for hosting a sangha get-together to send me off to gyo this summer. Some people have asked what gyo is and why I'll be doing it. This is the short version:

Gyo means "training" or "interval of training." In our school, ordinary people train for a certain period of time in a particular way, and if they are able to demonstrate certain skills by the end, they may take vows and carry on. In Japan, this kind of training is traditionally done in a 60-day intensive period on Mt. Hiei. The program is designed to prepare someone with a background in the Buddhist teachings to run a village temple. From there, a priest's training will vary depending on his or her teacher's instructions and other factors.

At the Tendai Buddhist Institute, this traditional curriculum has been broken up into ten-day segments, so you might accomplish your 60 days of basic training over six or more summers, with other kinds of work in between. This is helpful for our circumstances for logistical reasons, of course, but also for pedagogic reasons. In North America, most convert Buddhists have less experience with Buddhist teachings and temple practices than members of Japanese temple families. So we have more learning to do.

Yes, application to this training program is available to qualified applicants from the Great River sangha. Interested parties should discuss this with me privately.

My title is "doshu." This summer, I will be attending my fourth ten-day gyo. It is a challenging program, and I am humbled to be invited back to participate each year. You can find out more about what these words mean and about the day-to-day details of the program here.

07 June 2011

Celestial Drum Tendai Buddhist Sangha

Celestial Drum Sangha practices in the Adirondack Mountains of New York State. You can stay informed of their activities here at their blog.

Dai Chi, a sangha member, keeps a blog called Mountain Practice that is also worth your time and attention.

06 June 2011

Contemplation: The Objective Realm of the Buddha

After reading the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of meditation:

How can there be any dharma [thing] distinct from the Buddha? [There cannot.] All of the hundred realms and thousand suchnesses are the objective realm of the Buddha.


Great Master Chih-i, quoted in Foundations of T'ien-T'ai Philosophy by Paul L. Swanson, p. 134

05 June 2011

Event: Warm-Up Walk and Potluck Lunch

One of my favorite practices at the Tendai Buddhist Institute is called "kokorodo." It means "the path of the heart." It is a practice undertaken outdoors, in a group but also in a contemplative mode: we walk purposefully (not whimsically or without focus) in single file in the woods and along the hills, mindful of our neighbors and our situation in place, while reciting certain prayers and mantra. This practice engages body, speech, and mind in a coordinated way, and it draws the sangha together in harmony.

It is my intention to engage our sangha in the practice of kokorodo this summer. To prepare, I invite everyone to participate in what I am calling a Warm-Up Walk. This is an opportunity to learn how this practice feels, to get to know your body a bit better, and to get to know each other better too. Afterward, we will meet at my place in Fairfax city for a potluck. So, to the details:

On Saturday, July 16, meet at Jikan's home by 10:00 am, rain or shine. Bring with you clothing appropriate for the weather and the practice (athletic shoes or sturdy walkers, and nothing with text or designs printed or sewn on, just plain colors). Also bring some meatless food or drink to share for the potluck after. We will then caravan to a nearby park, where I will instruct the group in how to carry on this practice, and we will get to work at it. We should make it to our back patio for food and conversation by noon.

If you are interested in joining in, please contact Heather at heather_d_s_anderson at yahoo.com (replace "at" with "@", of course). She will give you directions to our home. You can also join in at our meetup page.

I look forward to seeing you there!

30 May 2011

Contemplation: Open Up and Serve

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

Open up and serve.


This is the motto for the Red Maple Sangha in Renfrew, Ontario, Canada.

27 May 2011

Bowling Night!

Yes, that's right: bowling night for a Buddhist group. The great master Chih-i taught the importance of meditation in all postures and at all times. Why not in the most American of situations, the bowling lane? Let it be an experiment in mindfulness and group practice.

Since our group is growing, this also represents a time for us to get to know each other better in an informal, ordinary environment, so we can learn from each other in times of need and during formal practice too*.

In the words of historian and avid bowler Walter Sobchak: "Calmer than you, Dude..."


Find us at Annandale Lanes, 4245 Markham Street Annandale, VA, on June 10 2011 at 7:30pm.

***

At the risk of sounding too wonky, the rationale behind this and similar activities is given in Peter Hershock's essay, Family Matters: Dramatic Interdependence and the Intimate Realization of Buddhist Liberation. This is a valuable article.

26 May 2011

Programming Notice

With apologies for the short notice, I am happy to announce a scheduling change for our regular meetings.

Beginning 7 June, our next sangha meeting, we will practice together on the first and third Tuesdays of each month. With this time shift comes a bend in space: we are moving to a larger room as well, the Walden Room at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Arlington.

In a sense this is a homecoming for our group, which has something of a nomadic history.

I look forward to seeing you now on Tuesdays. Thank you for your patience and support.

24 May 2011

Contemplation: One Vehicle

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:


There is only one teaching, that is, the One Vehicle
In the Buddha-worlds of the ten quarters.
There is not a second or a third vehicle
Except when the Buddhas teach expediently.

The Buddhas lead all living beings
By tentative names [of vehicles]
In order to expound their wisdom.
They appear in the worlds
Only for the One Vehicle.


The Lotus Sutra, trans. Senchu Murano, p. 36

Jikan's Office Hour: James River Outreach Edition

I will be hosting an office hour on 4 June 2011 at Black Hand Coffee Company in Richmond, Virginia. It has come to my attention that people are interested in these teachings in Richmond and points south. So, this event is in support of Great River Ekayana's James River Dharma Auxiliary, may they live long and prosper.

The idea for this ongoing event is to give a venue for Dharma discussion beyond what we have time or space for during our Wednesday night sangha meetings. Everyone is welcome. Here is the format:

I will meet with whomever shows up and has an earnest question about Buddhism, and offer whatever help I can, on a first-come, first-served basis. Students, if you are interested in this, please come prepared with at least one good question. It might help to review this thing.

Practically speaking, if only one person is around, then I will work with that person until time is up or I am out of coffee. But I would really prefer to make sure everyone with a question gets heard. The format should be dialogic. If you feel you need to speak with me privately, that can be arranged at another time and in another venue. If you need help understanding something you are reading, please email me in advance what you would like to ask me about, so I can come prepared.


I'll be waiting for you at 2:00pm at Black Hand Coffee, 606 N. Sheppard St, Richmond, Virgina, to finish up around 4pm. Cash donations for fuel and other sangha expenses are warmly accepted but not expected at this event.

17 May 2011

Contemplation: Mind Only

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

It should be understood that [the conception of] the entire world of objects can be held only on the basis of man's deluded mind of ignorance. All things, therefore, are just like the images in a mirror which are devoid of any objectivity that one can get hold of; the are of the mind only and are unreal.


from The Awakening of Faith, p. 48-49.

14 May 2011

Jikan's Office Hour: 28 May 2011

I will be hosting an office hour on 28 May, at 4:00pm (to finish up around 5:30pm, at a Caribou Coffee in Springfield. This event is in support of Great River Ekayana's Fairfax County Dharma Auxiliary, long may they run.

The idea for this ongoing event is to give a venue for Dharma discussion beyond what we have time or space for during our Wednesday night sangha meetings. Here is the format:

I will meet with whomever shows up and has an earnest question about Buddhism, and offer whatever help I can, on a first-come, first-served basis. Students, if you are interested in this, please come prepared with at least one good question. It might help to review this thing.

Practically speaking, if only one person is around, then I will work with that person until time is up or I am out of coffee. But I would really prefer to make sure everyone with a question gets heard. The format should be dialogic. If you feel you need to speak with me privately, that can be arranged at another time and in another venue. If you need help understanding something you are reading, please email me in advance what you would like to ask me about, so I can come prepared.


I'll be waiting for you at 4:00pm at Caribou Coffee, Kings Park Shopping Center, 8938 Burke Lake Rd., Springfield, VA 22151. Cash donations to cover the sangha's expenses are warmly accepted but not expected at this event.

Recommended Reading

If you are just getting started in practice with our group, or would simply like to understand better what we are up to, you will find these books particularly useful. These are books to be read slowly, more than once, with a contemplative attitude and an eye toward practice.

Start with The Awakening of Faith, translated by Hakeda. This is, in some important respects, a foundational text for East Asian Buddhism generally. The Hakeda translation is particularly helpful with notes and other supports.

Next, take a very careful look at The Way of the Bodhisattva, also translated as A Guide to the Bodhisattva Way of Life, by Santideva. (The Sanskrit title for this one is Bodhicaryāvatāra, for clarity's sake.) This book is a necessity for understanding Mahayana Buddhism as practiced in North America especially, and is inherently good.

If these books leave you feeling more confusion than clarity, try Paul Williams' book Mahayana Buddhism, and then give The Awakening of Faith another try.

The most important text in the Tendai school of Buddhism is the Lotus Sutra. It assumes a certain background in Mahayana Buddhism generally, which is why I recommend reading this one after developing some background if you haven't done so yet. There are several translations available to you. The best one for our purposes is The Lotus Sutra by Murano, but it may be difficult to come by. The second best is The Scripture of the Lotus Blossom of the Fine Dharma, by Leon Hurvitz; it was reprinted in 2009, and readily available at bookstores new and used. If neither of these are available to you, get a copy of The Threefold Lotus Sutra by Kato. The Burton Watson translation is less useful than these.

If you want to put these teachings into practice, an understanding of the ethical framework within which we work is essential to the task. Martine Batchelor's The Path of Compassion is a translation of the Brahma Net Sutra, which is the basis for the precepts we have taken in the Tendai school since our founding by Saicho himself.

Finally, if you absolutely must read books on meditation and you cannot stop yourself, consider Chih-i's classic Stopping and Seeing, translated by Cleary.

Last thing: the best tool I have found for locating well-priced used books is called Bookfinder. If you struggle to find any of the above items, give bookfinder a try before you give up and move on.

10 May 2011

Programming Notice

Our next sangha meeting is scheduled for May 18, 2011. The sangha will meet at our usual time and place, but I will not be present (a family commitment). I will lead the sangha once more beginning on June 1.

Also, you can now follow our activities at our meetup group (click this). Please support the teachings and the community by spreading the word. Thanks!

Contemplation: The Bodhisattva Vows

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take these familiar verses as your object of contemplation:

Sentient beings are numberless; I vow to save them.
Desires are inexhaustible; I vow to put an end to them.
The Dharmas are boundless; I vow to master them.
The Buddha-Way is unsurpassable; I vow to attain it.


***

I strongly encourage you to add these verses to your daily practice, if you are not reciting them already. May all beings benefit!

09 May 2011

Retreat in Review

I am delighted to report that our retreat this weekend on the Varieties of Practice in Tendai Buddhism was a fine success: we had a very full room, a sense of commitment and purpose, three sangha members taking refuge, and a delightful time getting to know the teachings and each other better.

We are grateful to Monshin and Shumon Naamon from the Tendai Buddhist Institute for coming down and sharing the teachings with us. And speaking personally, I am deeply grateful to the entire group for all their efforts, material support, and beneficial practices to make this event possible. I am also grateful to Hae In Ernest Lissabet for founding and nurturing this sangha. May all beings share in the merit.

I look forward to more events like this in the future, and to increased growth and development of the group.

02 May 2011

Contemplation: May All Be Encouraged

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

Sariputra rose from his seat, came forward, and recited these gathas:

He perfects the sea of prajna,
And he does not dwell in the city of nirvana,
Just as the exotic lotus blossom
Does not grow in the high plains.
All the buddhas over immeasurable kalpas
Did not forsake all the defilements,
Only after saving the world did they gain [nirvana],
Like the lotus rising from the mud.
Just as those six stages of practice
Are what are cultivated by the bodhisattvas;
So too are those three types of voidness,
The true path to bodhi.
I now abide in nonabiding,
Just as the Buddha has explained.
I will return again to this place whence I came,
And discard [these bodies] only after completion.
Furthermore, I will urge all sentient beings
To join with me [in pursuing this same vow] and not remain apart.
May those who came before and those who will come afterwards
All be encouraged to climb to right enlightenment.


From the Vajrasamadhi Sutra, quoted in Cultivating Original Enlightenment, pages 208-209.

29 April 2011

Thank You!

For the last two weeks, I had the opportunity to lead the student meditation group at George Mason University's Center for Consciousness and Transformation. This was an education for me, and I am delighted to have met some earnest and committed practitioners.

Thank you CCT for inviting me.

26 April 2011

Contemplation: Mind Before Thinking

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

The Mahaparinirvana-sutra says, "All formations are permanent; this is the law of appearing and disappearing. When appearing and disappearing disappear, then this stillness is bliss." This means that when there is no appearance or disappearance in your mind, that mind is complete stillness and bliss. It is a mind utterly devoid of thinking. This is your mind before thinking arises.


Seung Sahn, The Compass of Zen, p. 231

19 April 2011

Contemplation: Pure Lands

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

The Pure Lands mentioned in the sutra include the world we inhabit now. Buddhas and bodhisattvas view this world as a Pure Land. Ordinary sentient beings are unable to see it as such because they cannot overcome their addictions to negative patterns of self-attachment and discover this intrinsic samadhi. On the other hand, practitioners who enter the door of Ch'an would not view the world as impure, miserable, or chaotic. To them it would be a beautiful place. People who reach this level in their practice recognize beauty in everything.

Actually, it is not necessary to enter samadhi to experience such feelings. If you can put aside, for a moment, all anxieties and concerns in your mind, and just gaze upon something without discrimination, you may experience the world as a lovely place--a world that is fresh and alive. But if you have a mind that is plagued with attachment and aversion, then you will always be filled with turbulent and disturbing thoughts; nothing will appear beautiful and serene. Your mind will project an image or atmosphere of agitation which eclipses, engulfs, and keeps you from perceiving the serenity all around you.


From Master Sheng-Yen's commentary on the Sutra of Complete Enlightenment, p. 79.

17 April 2011

If you're at GMU next week & the next...

The Center for Consciousness and Transformation at George Mason University has invited me to lead their student meditation group for the next two weeks. If you happen to be on the Fairfax campus of GMU on the 19th or the 26th of April (Tuesdays), and you would like to learn more about meditation as we practice it in the Tendai school of Buddhism, you are welcome to come on by at 12:30pm in the Multi-purpose room of Piedmont Hall.

12 April 2011

Contemplation: the Waves and the Water

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

Someone once said, "Our sect values illuminating the mind and seeing one's nature, but [you] master are always preaching on the sutras and commentaries. Isn't that at variance with the teaching of 'direct pointing [to the mind, seeing one's nature and becoming a Buddha]?'" Tetsugen laughed and said, "Isn't what you said a little simplistic? Meditation (zen) is the water and the teachings (kyo) are the waves. When you seize onto meditation and throw away the teachings, it is like seeking the water while rejecting the waves. The teachings are the vessel and the meditation is the gold. When you seize onto the teachings and throw out meditation, it is like casting off the gold and looking for the vessel. The waves and the water are not separate. The vessel is itself the gold. Meditation and the teachings are not two things."


from The Deeds of Tetsugen, quoted in Iron Eyes by Helen J. Baroni, p. 60

05 April 2011

Tendai Buddhism in the United Kingdom

Seishin Clark is a lay practitioner of Tendai Buddhism in the United Kingdom. His blog is very much worth your attention. Check it out here.

Contemplation: No Appearance or Disappearance

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

The Mahaparinirvana-sutra says, 'All formations are impermanent; this is the law of appearing and disappearing. When appearing and disappearing disappear, then this stillness is bliss.' This means that when there is no appearance or disappearance in your mind, that mind is complete stillness and bliss. It is a mind utterly devoid of thinking. This is your mind before thinking. [...]

It is not possible to explain this point using words and speech.


Seung Sahn, The Compass of Zen, p. 231.

29 March 2011

Contemplation: The Obvious Shadow

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

As birds glide high above the ground,
Even though their shadow is not seen for a while,
Since, unavoidably, a body cannot separate from its shadow,
Whenever circumstances ripen and the bird lands, its shadow becomes obviously apparent.


Rigdzin Jigme Lingpa, quoted in White Sail by Thinley Norbu, p. 100

22 March 2011

Contemplation: Producing and Extinguishing

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this gatha as the object of your contemplation:

Thereupon, the Lord recited the gatha:
"Objects that are produced by causes and conditions,
Those objects are extinguished and unproduced.
Extinguish all objects subject to production and extinction,
And those objects will be produced and unextinguished."


from the Vajrasamadhi Sutra, quoted in Cultivating Original Enlightenment by Robert Buswell, p. 241

18 March 2011

If you want to help Japan now...

...a good way to do it would be to donate to an organization called JEN, which comes recommended to us by friends in the know in Japan.

Now is a time for practice.

15 March 2011

Contemplation: The Mirror is Just the Mirror

Please review the guidelines for practice, and then take this as your object of contemplation:

You should try to quiet your mind. If you separate your original mind from arising and passing away, coming and going, and clearly realize what is intransient, the images reflected in your mind will also be intransient and unperishing. The reason for this is that the distinctions between all the things in the universe, the arising and passing away of past and present, coming and going, are fundamentally false and illusory. Nothing comes, nothing goes. Nothing arises and nothing passes away. Of course, if nothing arises and passes away, or comes and goes, there is nothing that possesses all the distinctions. You should understand this from the [example] of reflections in the mirror.

When you first see something reflected in a mirror, it's not a matter of the image entering into the mirror. From the beginning, the image has not entered [the mirror], so there is nothing to get rid of. Since originally the object does not enter and leave, or come and go, the mirror is just the mirror, and does not eventually become the image. Since the mirror does not become the image, but reflects it, there is nothing in the universe that ceases to be distinct. It is difficult to say what is reflected and what is not. Various shapes made out of gold are not demons or Buddhas, but the take on the shapes of demons and Buddhas.



Tetsugen Doko, quoted in Iron Eyes: The Life and Teachings of Tetsugen Doko by Helen J. Baroni, p. 106

08 March 2011

Contemplation: The Spark of Energy

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, please take this as your object of contemplation:

Q: In normal life, not caring is associated with boredom. If, as with the bodhisattva, one doesn't care, then will one be a vegetable?

A: Not caring does not mean becoming a stone or jelly-fish; there is still energy. But from the point of view of a person who cares, if we experience desire or anger but do not act them out and instead try to keep ourselves cool, if we do not put our energy into action, we feel let down, cheated, stifled. This is a one-sided view of energy.

Energy does not at all manifest itself purely in terms of being destructive or possessive. There are further energies which are not at all connected with love or hate. These are the energies of precision, of clarity, of seeing through situations. There are energies of intelligence which arise continuously and which we do not allow ourselves to experience properly. We always regard energy in terms of being destructive or possessive. There is something more than that. There is never a dull moment if you are actually in touch with reality as it is. The spark of energy arises all the time which transcends ignorance and the simple-minded one-directional way.


Chogyam Trungpa, Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism, p. 181.

06 March 2011

Ekayana Working Group: Everyone Welcome

I am interested in creating a space in which anyone who is interested in discussing and learning more about the one-vehicle teaching of Ekayana can do so in a democratic, nonsectarian, and informed way. To that end, I have started a discussion forum called the Ekayana Working Group.

The Ekayana teachings arise in a variety of contexts and expressed in different kinds of terminology. I think our understanding of the teachings can only grow if we talk to each other, and learn each other's language. Consequently, everyone is invited: Nichiren Buddhists of all orientations, Soka Gakkai members, Tendai people, Zen and Ch'an and Soen people, students of Madhyamika and Mahamudra and Dzogchen too.

It is true that there are 84,000 Dharma gates, one for everyone out there, to meet people where they are and draw them in. It is also true that once you are drawn into the stream, there is a way in which the whole stream and all its tributaries is of one taste. Dharmakaya is Dharmakaya, skillful means are skillful means. So: let us learn from each other and eat at the one table together.

Jikan's Office Hour: Sunday 13 March

I will be holding office hours on Sunday, 13 March, at Caffe Amouri in Vienna, Virginia, starting around 8am.

The idea is to give a venue for Dharma discussion beyond what we have time or space for during our Wednesday night sangha meetings. Here is the format:

I will meet with whomever shows up and has an earnest question about Buddhism, and offer whatever help I can, on a first-come, first-served basis. Students, if you are interested in this, please come prepared with at least one good question. It might help to review this thing.

Practically speaking, if only one person is around, then I will work with that person until time is up or I am out of coffee. But I would really prefer to make sure everyone with a question gets heard. The format should be dialogic. If you feel you need to speak with me privately, that can be arranged at another time and in another venue. If you need help understanding something you are reading, please email me in advance what you would like to ask me about, so I can come prepared.


Caffe Amouri is located at 107 Church St NE, Vienna, VA. I look forward to seeing you there.

01 March 2011

Contemplation: In All Places

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

I, in all places,
Constantly see all the Tathagatas.
I wish only that all the Tathagatas
Will explain the perpetual Dharma to me.


from the Vajrasamadhi Sutra, published as Cultivating Original Enlightenment, p. 261.

Retreat: Varieties of Practice in Tendai Buddhism

Here is the flier for our upcoming retreat.

Please distribute it. Thanks!

22 February 2011

Contemplation: Your Mind Before Thinking

Review the guidelines for practice, and take this as your object of contemplation:

The Mahaparinirvana-sutra says, "All formations are impermanent; this is the law of appearing and disappearing. When appearing and disappearing disappear, then this stillness is bliss." This means that when there is no appearance or disappearance in your mind, that mind is complete stillness and bliss. It is a mind utterly devoid of thinking. This is your mind before thinking arises.


Seung Sahn sunim, The Compass of Zen, p. 231.

18 February 2011

Upcoming Retreat: Forms of Practice in Tendai Buddhism

We are in the planning stages for a one-day retreat on Forms of Practice in Tendai Buddhism. We have invited Monshin Naamon sensei from the Tendai Buddhist Institute to lead the retreat and offer refuge to committed students.

The retreat will be held on Saturday, May 7 2011, in the chapel of the Unitarian Universalist Church in Arlington, Virginia. More details will be forthcoming.

You can help make this event happen by spreading the word to interested parties, or by making a donation by PayPal to the link at your right or contributing cash. The more hands involved, the more light brought to the world.

Seating is limited, so contact me at JikanAnderson at gmail dot com to reserve your place.

14 February 2011

Contemplation: Trust and Everyday Life

Review the guidelines for practice, and then take this as your object of contemplation:

We should accept a teaching when it seems real and true to us, having stood the test of our scrutiny, and not before. On the other hand, once we have examined a teaching and found it to be satisfactory, we should try to incorporate the teaching into our everyday lives ratehr than just set it back on the shelf as something we accept but do not or cannot apply. The coldness of cynicism can be a terrible obstacle to the cultivation of faith.


from The Union of Dzogchen and Bodhichitta by Anyen Rinpoche, p. 47.

08 February 2011

Contemplation: To Keep This Sutra is to Keep Me

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this passage of the Lotus Sutra as your object of contemplation (Shakyamuni Buddha is speaking):

It is difficult
To keep
This sutra
After my extinction.

Since I attained
The enlightenment of the Buddha,
I have expounded many sutras
In innumerable worlds.

This sutra is
the most excellent.
To keep this sutra
Is to keep me.


from the Lotus Sutra (trans. Sencho Murano), chapter 11, pp. 192-193.

07 February 2011

Jikan's Office Hour: Sunday, 13 February

I will be holding office hours on Sunday, 13 February, at Caffe Amouri in Vienna, Virginia, starting around 8am.

The idea is to give a venue for Dharma discussion beyond what we have time or space for during our Wednesday night sangha meetings. Here is the format:

I will meet with whomever shows up and has an earnest question about Buddhism, and offer whatever help I can, on a first-come, first-served basis. Students, if you are interested in this, please come prepared with at least one good question. It might help to review this thing.

Practically speaking, if only one person is around, then I will work with that person until time is up or I am out of coffee. But I would really prefer to make sure everyone with a question gets heard. The format should be dialogic. If you feel you need to speak with me privately, that can be arranged at another time and in another venue. If you need help understanding something you are reading, please email me in advance what you would like to ask me about, so I can come prepared.


Caffe Amouri is located at 107 Church St NE, Vienna, VA. I look forward to seeing you there.

31 January 2011

Contemplation: No Fear

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this as your object of contemplation:

Thus the bodhisattva lives Prajna Paramita with no hindrance in the mind: no hindrance, therefore no fear.


from the Heart Sutra

26 January 2011

Programming Notice

We will no longer be meeting in Room 11 of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Arlington. Instead, we will be moving down the hall into the Nursery room for future sangha events. See you there!

25 January 2011

Contemplation: Accordance

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this selection as your object of contemplation:

Enlightenment originally has no duality, yet expedients are countless. The countless expedients are summarized in three. Quiescence is like a clear, bright mirror. Illusion-contemplation is like a shoot growing out of the ground. Dhyana is like the sound within the bell. Although these three dharma-gates have distinctions of deep and shallow, in their relation to Perfect Enlightenment, the are all called "accordance." The buddhas and bodhisattvas accomplish the Way based on these. The complete realization of the three is called Great Nirvana.


Kihwa's commentary on the Sutra of Perfect Enlightenment, p. 181.

20 January 2011

Our Sangha is Growing. Now What?

Currently, our little group meets in a basement classroom at the Unitarian Universalist church in Arlington, Virginia. This location has been a very fortunate one for us. It is not a sustainable situation, though, because our numbers are growing and our activities are increasing in scope and in frequency. We will eventually outgrow this space: not soon, but sooner rather than later.

And would it not be most excellent for this group to settle into a permanent physical home after over four years of nomadic life?

So we are presently entertaining alternatives: other locations at the UUCA, and in the neighborhood. Also, we are raising funds in advance of increased expense that a move will involve. There are two ways you can help: you can make a donation by PayPal or otherwise in support of these teachings, or you can suggest possible venues for us to practice in. Sincere invitations will be gladly considered.

This is what we need:

*A room that can seat a dozen or fifteen people on the floor, comfortably. It should be uncluttered and tidy.

*A clean and secure place to store our shrine items (they fit in a medium-sized suitcase), a small folding table, and several zafu and zabuton. An ordinary closet works for this.

*Access to a lavatory.

*Location: somewhere in Northern Virginia, within the beltway, such as Annandale, Falls Church, or Arlington. We would really like to be accessible by Metro rail if we can be.

We are fastidious and courteous, and we pay our rent on time.

Please contact me at JikanAnderson@gmail.com if you would like to help us and in doing so, serve the Dharma in the Washington region.

Namo Buddhaya!

18 January 2011

Some Questions and Answers

This is a series of questions and answers that I had with some students recently by email. I am posting them here in the hope this approach might be of use.
What is the difference in doctrine and practice between Tendai and Zen?

Doctrine: Not much difference between mainstream Zen schools in China & Korea, or the Rinzai school of Japan. Soto Zen's a bit more unique. For our purposes, though, they're very close cousins... much Ch'an and Zen doctrine comes from the Tiantai school of China, which is where Tendai comes from too. Practice: again similar, but there's greater variety of practices in Tendai than in any Zen school. Two examples of this are Mikkyo and Kaihogyo. Mikkyo is Japanese Vajrayana (like Tibetan Buddhism); Kaihogyo... is really something special.
Do you think that a mystical experience requires ignoring scientific facts and requires a belief in religious myth?

No, I think that would be stupid. Mystical experiences are phenomena like any other. I'm not interested in mythmaking except as a means to an end, an upaya.
Is the mystical experience more valuable than observable facts?

No, a mystical experience is an observable fact (a fact of observation, a subjective experience of a specific kind).
After all, you could attain a mystical experience (an altered state of consciousness) by taking peyote, LSD or undergoing sensory deprivation. You don't have to believe in religious myth.

I'm inclined to agree, although I'm not convinced that all insights are of the same nature. Or better put: mot all paths necessarily lead to the same place or in the same way. It's easy to get lost in a muddle, and generally people get along better if they find a path that works for them and dig deep into it.

What is your definition of religion?

Religion is a social institution, like the DMV or any other kind of bureaucracy. It's neither good nor bad in itself. You can do helpful things with it, though, if you operate in good faith and with good guidance. Like a school: you can find means there to be useful to others, and less harmful. Different religions, like different bureaucracies, offer different tools to accomplish this. Some of them overlap.

However, traditions of practice persist in institutions. This is how we make the coffee. Here is how to load the truck. The same is true in religious institutions: this is how we alleviate anger. This is how we support those who are hurting. So there are different levels if you will: a doctrinal or theoretical level, a social or institutional level, and a practical level where productive work can happen.
How is Tendai different from Pure Land?

Pure Land is a practice. It can be found in all Mahayana cultures: Tibet, China, Korea, Japan, Vietnam, all of them. Some schools include Pure Land practices, like one color in a spectrum. Others make Pure Land practice their entire focus. Tendai includes Pure Land practice, significantly. Some Tendai priests do Pure Land practice (nembutsu) exclusively and intensively. Some do it hardly ever; their emphasis is different. For instance: my teacher, Monshin Naamon, is primarily interested in seated meditation. That is his main practice. He also does calligraphy, nembutsu, academic study, and a host of other things. But seated meditation has been his main practice. By contrast, the head of California Buddhist Monastery, Keisho Leary, is primarily an esoteric (Mikkyo) practitioner. He also does Kaihogyo-style practice around the mountain at his temple. Both approaches are fully Tendai. There is much room to find yourself in Tendai, to find a way that is right for your needs and talents.
Thich Nhat Hanh says Pure Land emphasizes seeking salvation from what appears to be an external source. What I understand so far of "real" Buddhism is what the Buddha said when he was dying, "Be a lamp unto yourselves," that the Buddha is already within us. So should we ultimately depend on ourselves or an external source?

This is a great question. The Buddha we seek is not outside ourselves. Where would you look for it? In the Ekayana teachings, our emphasis is on the Buddha-mind within. The enlightened qualities of Amida Buddha are latent within us, as potential. Through practice and attention, we begin to manifest those qualities. That is all. Think of a river backed up behind a beaver dam. If someone methodically breaks the dam, that potential energy of the water is expressed in a rush, a flood. That metaphor might help. I repeat: no Buddha is real until you see it for yourself. When Amida manifests himself to you, it is your enlightened qualities that manifest themselves to you. Nothing "external," because there is no in or out; no corners, no center, no edges. To put it in Thich Nhat Hanh's terms, our practice is to reach out and touch it. Of course this begs the question: what is a "self" in Buddhism again? Where does a self start or stop?

Contemplation: The Display of Wisdom Mind

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this comment on the wisdom of skillful means as your object of contemplation:

Wisdom magic has no grasping mind. It is only a manifestation to other beings who believe in the phenomena of reality, showing what appear to be reality's activities in order to guide them beyond reality and unreality. When sublime beings appear to be wrathful, it is just the natural, limitless display of wisdom mind, occurring as sentient beings' reflections appearing in front of them. Then, through wrathful or peaceful appearances of enlightened display, sentient beings can connect to wisdom and one day attain enlightenment.


Thinley Norbu, White Sail, p. 57

10 January 2011

Contemplation: No Single Thing to Love

Review the guidelines for practice and, remembering that words are not always as they seem, take this as your object of contemplation:


It is due to attachment to the trace of self that we are deluded and unable to enter enlightenment. If you realize there is no single thing to love, you can gradually accomplish enlightenment. If you do not arise sentiments in regards to the teacher, then you are able to reach Peerless Correct Equal Enlightenment.


from Kihwa's commentary to the Sutra of Perfect Enlightenment, page 216

What Is Ekayana?

Ekayana is a Sanskrit word. It means "single vehicle." Buddhism is famous for being of one, two, three, or more (up to nine in Nyingma) -yanas, or vehicles. The Ekayana doctrine claims that all these vehicles are but devices, conveniences, teaching tools, training wheels, or gimmicks: that the real intention of the teaching is single, coherent, subsuming all of the above into one logic. The Buddha's behavior may seem pranksterish in this context, but his pedagogy is relentless, as he expresses it in The Lotus Sutra:

That is why, O Shariputra, I devised the method of teaching
The way to extinguish all suffering through Nirvana.
Even though I taught Nirvana,
It is not the true extinction.
Every existing thing from the very beginning
has always had the mark of quiescence.
The heirs of the Buddhas who practice this path
Whill thereafter become Buddhas in the future.
With the power of skillful means
I have presented the teachings of the three vehicles.
Yet all the Bhagavats
Teach the path of the single vehicle.
This great assembly should now rid itself of bewilderment.
Of those hearing this Dharma
There will be no one
Who will not become a Buddha.
The original vow of the Buddhas,
Was to make all sentient beings universally
Attain the very same Buddha-path
Which I have practiced.
(from Chapter 2, as recited at the Tendai Buddhist Institute)

Fundamentally, Ekayana means that the Buddhist teaching is in its most transcendental moments a contrivance, a method, a means to an end: not a transcendent doctrine.

Practically, Ekayana means that our path is the recognition and cultivation of the Buddha-mind. One can call this "taking the goal as the path."


You should know that the Dharma
Of all the Buddhas is like this.
They teach the Dharma
With myriads of kotis of skillful means,
According to the capacities of sentient beings;
The inexperienced cannot understand this.
All of you, have no further doubts!
Let great joy arise in your hearts
And know that you will all become Buddhas!

This is what our Sangha is about: the Great River, the single stream, of the Ekayana teachings.

07 January 2011

Jikan's Office Hour: Dharma Discussion & Coffee

Some sangha members have expressed an interest in meeting to discuss the Buddhist teachings in a less structured context than our usual Wednesday night meetings. I think this is an excellent idea, and would like to give it a try. Hence:

I am calling it Jikan's Office Hour. The format: I will meet with whomever shows up and has an earnest question about Buddhism, and offer whatever help I can, on a first-come, first-served basis. Students, if you are interested in this, please come prepared with at least one good question. It might help to review this thing.

Practically speaking, if only one person is around, then I will work with that person until time is up or I am out of coffee. But I would really prefer to make sure everyone with a question gets heard. The format should be dialogic. If you feel you need to speak with me privately, that can be arranged at another time and in another venue. If you need help understanding something you are reading, please email me in advance what you would like to ask me about, so I can come prepared.

The first Office Hour will be held on Saturday, 15 January, 2011, at this Starbucks coffee shop. The address: 8104A Arlington Blvd, Falls Church, VA 22042. I will be there from about 9:30am until 10:30am or a little after.

Depending on people's interest level, this experiment may become a regular feature of our sangha's program. My intention would be to make it mobile, so that those who can't reach this cafe might be able to find us at another one.

06 January 2011

About Our Sangha: Re-Beginnings

After about two years of meeting at the Cherrydale Fire Hall, conditions and contingencies led Rev. Lissabet to move the local Tendai sangha to the Walden Room of the Unitarian-Universalist Church of Arlington.

This move was an auspicious one in many respects: for starters, many of our regular sangha members became involved on a walking-down-the-hall basis. Our association with the UUCA has been fruitful for us, and I hope mutually beneficial. We still meet at the UUCA, down the hall from the Walden Room.

I was asked to assume leadership of the Tendai sangha in Washington in the summer of 2010. Although I was not a regular attendee of sangha functions, I had maintained an affiliation with the group since its days in Cherrydale.

The rest of the beginning is here for you to see. Beginnings take time and energy. I invite you to join in an help us advance this story past the introduction.

04 January 2011

Contemplation: The Regarder of the Cries of the World

After reviewing the guidelines for practice, take this section of the Lotus Sutra as your object of contemplation:

If sentient beings are in great adversity,
And immeasurable pain afflicts them,
The wonderful power of the wisdom of the Cry Regarder
Can relieve the sufferings of the world.
Endowed with transcendent powers
And having fully mastered wisdom and skillful means,
In all the worlds in the ten directions,
There is no place where she will not manifest herself.


Lotus Sutra, Chapter 25, as recited at the Tendai Buddhist Institute

NOTE FOR STUDENTS: The Cry Regarder is a translation of a traditional Chinese interpretation of the name Avalokiteshvara. The Cry Regarder in the Lotus Sutra and Avalokiteshvara in the Heart Sutra are identical.

01 January 2011

About Our Sangha: Beginnings


Great River Ekayana Sangha began as Washington Tendai Sangha, under the leadership of Chion Ernest Lissabet. Washington Tendai initially met at the Cherrydale Volunteer Fire Department hall in Arlington, Virginia. This is where the sangha was first consecrated by Monshin Paul Naamon of Tendai Buddhist Institute on December 8, 2006: Rohatsu or Bodhi Day.

In addition to regular meetings at the fire hall for services and meditation, the sangha convened for occasional conversations about Buddhism and Buddhist practice over breakfast at a nearby diner. This was an ambitious itinerary, especially for a small group in its infancy.