a Dzogchen / Mahamudra blog

Three Asparas at Angkor Wat

Month: June 2005

Reflections on Ryokan – At Night, Deep in the Mountains

At night, deep in the mountains I sit in zazen.

The affairs of men never reach me here.

In the stillness I sit on a cushion across from the empty window.

The incense has been swallowed up by the endless night;

My robe has become a garment of white dew.

Unable to sleep, I walk into the garden;

Suddenly, above the highest peak, the round moon appears.

Ryokan

In my early days of Dharma, I was so inspired by Ryokan and his poetry. My hero was Milarepa, and the ideal of the hermit who lived in a cave or hermitage, far from other humans. Solitary, sat in meditation – the idea of this was my source of strength and sustenance. What a beautiful ideal – sitting long hours, looking deep into mind, with only the seasons, animals and nature for company. What more could one want!

Ryokan Taigu
Ryokan Taigu

It’s funny how life pans out. Early on in my Dharma days, my first daughter was born, and my life became the family man. Yet my ideal remained the hermit. The way in which I held these two simultaneously – engaged with family and society, and renunciate of worldly ways was the dynamic and story of my Dharma practice. As the years have gone by, my meditation and practice has become less and less about being in particular conditions, and more and more about simply seeing into the nature of mind, however the shimmering shapes that appear in it may be.

The hermit inside, yet out in the world

More and more I feel like the hermit inside, who lives in the world, yet is somehow not bound by it. How beautiful the image of the Buddha, who thoroughly embodied this – in this world, yet not of it! How must that be like, to fully live that to the core? Not caught on the hooks of desire and ill-will, not grasping at appearances, but able to freely move through them as you would move through a rainbow.

How wonderful it is to have family and friends, to experience the richness of what arises in life, yet not be bound to it through falsely imagining solidity where there is not. As my mind loosens, and appearances slowly release their entrancing grip on attention, I find an openness and freedom to glide and slide. How beautiful this release from the tightness of grasping!

Inspired by Ryokan - At Night, Deep in the Mountains
Inspired by Ryokan – At Night, Deep in the Mountains

Loosening the intoxication of illusory appearances

If the fruits of practice are this sweet with my poor efforts and realisation, then how must the ultimate fruit be!!!!

May all beings find this peace through loosening the intoxication of illusory appearances, and find the freedom of compassion that flows from the mind that is released!

Inspired by Ryokan - At Night, Deep in the Mountains
Inspired by Ryokan – At Night, Deep in the Mountains

Ryokan’s poem

This poem is so beautiful … the wonderful way Ryokan describes how things are … just the bare description, without judgement and interpretation … and as always, the beautiful ending .. the moon appearing …. one feels something of how that would feel in that context … how beautiful, how fitting, how perfect, each thing in its place, just what it is, nothing less, nothing more …. simply ‘thus’ ….

Inspired by Ryokan - At Night, Deep in the Mountains
Inspired by Ryokan – At Night, Deep in the Mountains

Reflections on Ground Mahamudra – Jamgon Kongtrul – Vajra Song

Since no essence exists anywhere,

Its expression is completely unobstructed and manifests everything.

Pervading all of samsara and nirvana like space,

It is the ground of all confusion and liberation,

With its self-luminous consciousness

And its alaya-vijnana.

As for the cognitive aspect of this neutral state,

Its essence is empty and its nature is luminous.

These two are inseperable and are the quintessence of insight.

It is space, ungraspable as a thing.

It is a spotless precious clear crystal.

It is the glow of the lamp of self-luminous mind.

It is inexpressible, the experience of a mute.

It is unobscured, transparent wisdom,

The luminous dharmakaya, sugatagarbha,

Primordially pure and spontaneous.

It cannot be shown through analogy by anyone,

And it cannot be expressed in words.

It is the dharmadhatu, which overwhelms mind’s inspection.

From the Vajra Song of the First Jamgon Kongtrul Rinpoche
The First Jamgon Kongtrul Rinpoche - Lodro Thaye
The First Jamgon Kongtrul Rinpoche – Lodro Thaye

Will I ever tire of reading these types of songs, and allowing them to speak deeply to my being?

Each time I come across another song by a realised master, trying to express the inexpressible, another ray of light illuminates my heart, and opens my mind, just a little.

A glimpse … an opening … a sudden loosening of concepts, and the arising of openness and let-go-ness – expansive luminous openness:

It is the dharmadhatu, which overwhelms mind’s inspection.

These words go deep into the heart, and cut like a knife through my ‘must-know’ mind, allowing a spaciousness of mind to arise, and devotion to fill the heart. How blessed indeed we are, us of fortunate karma, to meet with these excellent teachings, so ever-potent across illusory time and space!

How ‘ever-present’ the gurus, their words endlessly echoing, always there, always being, always resonating. Never not having been, always there. The illusion of arising, seemingly just heard, yet always known, always close, always waiting to be revealed, the thin veil effortlessly lifted.

May these moments of illumination fill all beings mindstreams, and remain endlessly present, until even the word ‘samsara’ is no more heard!

Page 2 of 2

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén