Shobogenzo & 100% Authentic Truth: On Dogen’s Fukanzazengi & Makahannyaharamitsu

The myriad differences
Resolved by sitting,
All doors opened.
In this still place,
I follow my nature,
Be what it may. – Reizan
Let’s Try This Again 
Two years ago I wrote an analysis of Dogen’s Zenki (tr. The Whole Works) chapter of his seminal masterpiece Shobogenzo (tr. Treasury of the True Dharma Eye) with the intention of writing further analyses down the road. Then some things called “a job” and “marriage” and “home ownership” happened, and boy, does that take time away from still pretending like you can do nothing but write articles all the time. However, since today is my last day of summer break before going back to teaching for the 2018-2019 school year, I thought I would give it a crack at writing an analysis of some of Dogen’s lighter fare before I have to be surrounded by teenagers for three months.
Before We Even Analyze…
The last analysis I wrote had a section on the differences between how we understand the nature of philosophy in the West versus the East, mostly from the academic standpoint. This time, I want to make it clear that the translations we use are also important. Shobogenzo is a classical text that was lost to the public for centuries – it was circulated in internal Buddhist circles by and for those who thought they had put in the necessary rigor of practice to understand the text. Only in the late 19th century, as the text was rediscovered and “Religious Studies” and “Oriental Studies” were becoming rigorous academic disciplines, was there even an attempt by lay people to understand, analyze, and communicate the text.
Does this all sound boring to you yet? If so, good, you’re a sane person who likes doing normal person things, unlike me. However, if you’re like me and are interested in studying Buddhism, this kind of information is important to keep in the back of your brain – if you’re a person in a city that does not happen to have a large Buddhist presence, you are going to come to know the philosophy and teachings of Buddhism, it will be primarily through the texts. And if you want a decent understanding, you better get your hands on  decent text.
The Shobogenzo, depending on what translation you are reading, can seem like a mish-mash of philosophical jibber jabber or some of the most profound spiritual/intellectual teachings from the other end of the Pacific Ocean. So, instead of making you wonder where the hell I am getting this all from, here are a list of the most accessible translations you can find of Dogen’s master text:
1. Treasury of the True Dharma Eye: Zen Master Dogen’s Shobo Genzo – Kazuaki Tanahashi (the big book you may see in most Soto Zen monasteries and zen centers in the States)
2. Master Dogen’s Shobo Genzo Series – Gudo Nishijima & Chodo Cross (one of the more definitive translations out there)
3. Shobogenzo: The Treasure House of the Eye of the True Teaching: A Trainee’s Translation of Great Master Dogen’s Spiritual Masterpiece – Rev. Hubert Nearman, O.B.C. (a free translation in PDF format by the Shasta Abbey – just in case you don’t want to pay for it)
4. Shobogenzo: Zen Essays by Dogen – Thomas Cleary (a translation of thirteen of the more seminal chapters of Dogen’s work – if you want an hope of studying the Shobogenzo during a bus ride to and from work, this is the book you buy).
Be my guest and take your pick – any four of these translations holds the spirit of the text as best as they can given the strains of translating Classical Japanese into English. And in analyses such as our own, it’s important to know we are using a reliable translation, or at least one reliable enough to be used in a college textbook. With all that said, we will be using translations by Thomas Cleary from Shobogenzo: Zen Essays by Dogen and Yuho Yokoi from the Zen Sourcebook traditionally used in college classrooms. In any future analyses, these are most likely the two guys whose translations I will be using. Plus, Fukanzazengi is not the only chapter we are using for this article today, but also Dogen’s Makahannyaharamitsu (Great Transcendent Wisdom) chapter from Shobogenzo as well. Since both chapters are so succint, but somewhat tie into each other, it will help shed more light on Dogen’s take on the importance of meditation to Buddhist practice. Now, without further ado…
Dogen’s Five-Star Yelp Review on Meditation
That’s not the actual translation of the term Fukanzazengi, but it could be. What it actually means is A Universal Recommendation for Zazen. Zazen is the term used most often in Japanese Zen Buddhist communities to describe the act of sitting meditation. It literally means “sitting meditation.” But there is a difference between meditating the way you may in a yoga class or in a Taoist circle somewhere on a college campus, and the way you do seating meditation in a zen center. For Dogen, zazen was more than just meditation. It was the act of enlightenment itself shining through the individual practitioner. Dogen, and Buddhists in general, adhere to the principle of non-duality, and therefore interconnectedness.
These two ideas culminate in the concept of interdependent co-origination. This term, to sum it up here as best as possible means that all arise, and are no separate from, each other. You arise from your parent, and your child arises from you, the same way a table may rise after carving a tree, and in the end, maybe your child will one day set a drink on that table the tree has become. Not only is everything connected, but their mutual creation and existence are inherently intertwined and a major part of the fabric of the universe.  By realizing this, we learn to accept that things are also not put into neat categories or separated from each other as easily as we may believe. “Ordinary People” and “Buddhas” are not two different things. In fact, they are the same thing. This nonduality, this interconnectedness regarding the conceptual frameworks in how we see ourselves and others is at the heart of zazen.
Ordinary People = Enlightened People
Enlightened People = Ordinary People
That’s Buddhist math, for you. Now, you may ask, where is zazen in that equation? Well, zazen itself is the equal sign. As Dogen himself said in Fukanzazengi:
Zen is not “step-by-step” meditation. Rather it is simply the easy and pleasant practice of a Buddha, the realization of the Buddha’s Wisdom. The Truth appears, there being no delusion. If you understand this, you are completely free, like a dragon that has obtained water or a tiger that reclines on a mountain. The supreme Law will then appear of itself, and you will be free of weariness of confusion. 
In the eyes of Dogen, to practice meditation is inherently the quality of an awakened being. If you had not been able to see your own Buddha nature in the first place, you would not have even started doing zazen in the first place. There is nothing to attain to or work towards because, due to the sheer fact of you existing in that very moment within the state of zazen, means you have attained the supposedly unattainable. As the last Bodhisattva vow states in Zen Buddhism: The Buddha way is inconceivable; I vow to attain it. The fact you are meditating while there are others that may seem much wiser and more put together than you does not mean you are somehow deficient. Earlier in Fukanzazengi, Dogen has this to say to that very thought possibly arising in your mind:
You should pay attention to the fact that even the Buddha Shakyamuni had to practice zazen for six years. It is also said that Bodhidharma had to do zazen at Shao-lin Temple for nine years in order to transmit the Buddha-mind. Since these ancient sages were so diligent, how can present-day trainees do without the practice of zazen? You should stop pursuing words and letters and learn to withdraw and reflect on yourself. 
The practice of the art of zazen does not mean we are deficient in our buddha-nature, but that we are learning how to fully embody it and realize it is there. Because it is by our own nature we forget we are enlightened and awakened beings in the first place. That is how we fall into delusion and craving. We believe there is something missing from us that needs to be filled either with expensive and fancy gadgets, with people, or even with drugs and alcohol. But that’s not true at all. You are already 100% Buddha because you are already 100% yourself. However, as Dogen pointed out, just like for Siddhartha and Bodhidharma, it’s going to take work to realize the 100% authentic truth we all are.
Dogen Thinks Wisdom is Dope
Wisdom is a big deal in all religious traditions – it is seen as that which is greater than any other type of intelligence, emotional or rational. Wisdom allows us to see things as they are, intuit as to the nature of the world and the actions of individuals, and may even give us a small glimpse into the infinitude of the divine if we are able to grasp the deeper knowledge of both texts and faithfulness. In certain religious and philosophical terms then, wisdom is in-and-of-itself the ideal. A quality or essence we can only grasp by learning not only the truth of human nature but that which we were attempting to grasp in the first place. But, as with all things cryptic and mystical, wisdom is not what we may at first believe it to be. This is where we get to the Socratic Paradox (yell that in your heads for added affect). While Socrates himself may have never said the words, what we gather from the writings of Plato is that, after constant searching, questioning, and debating, those who employ the Socratic method of philosophical inquiry are bound to come to the ultimate conclusion that I know that all I know is that I do not know anything.
Dogen just so happens to agree with the Socratic Paradox in his Makahannyaharamitsu chapter:
The time when the Independent Seer practices profound transcendent wisdom is the whole body’s clear vision that the five clusters are all empty. The five clusters are physical form, sensations, perceptions, conditionings, and consciousness. They are five layers of wisdom. Clear vision is wisdom. In expounding and manifesting this fundamental message, we would say form is empty, emptiness is form, form is form, emptiness is emptiness. It is the hundred grasses, it is myriad forms. 
As for the present monk’s thinking to himself, where all phenomena are respected, wisdom which still has no origination or extinction is paying obeisance. Precisely at the time of their obeisance, accordingly wisdom with available faculties has become manifest: that is what is referred to as precepts, meditation, wisdom, and so on, up to the liberation of living beings. This is called nothing. The facilities of nothing are available in this way. This is transcendent wisdom which is most profound, extremely subtle, and hard to fathom. 
When the monk or Buddhist practitioner realizes that wisdom is something to be obtained towards and pays respect and deference to it in the form of the Three Jewels (Buddha, Dharma, Sangha), then wisdom manifests itself. Wisdom is known in its conceptual and intellectual foundation as a thing. Through enough practice and insight into our original nature – that “100% authentic truth” I mentioned earlier – we start to realize wisdom has no inherent nature. In the same way in which we have no inherent nature. The five clusters/layers described in the passage – physical form, sensations, perceptions, conditionings, and consciousness – they are what we believe to comprise our true self. But we are not what we taste, touch, and feel. The “100% authentic truth” goes beyond the sensations we have that are all too willing to deceive us.
Clear vision is the only true faculty of wisdom Dogen knows we can aptly apply to it in our lifetimes. Especially through Buddhist practice. As Dogen essentially says later in the chapter, “The only way you even know wisdom is a thing is because you have the precepts, meditation, and metaphors of wisdom we talk about here in Zen Buddhism.” But wisdom does not exist because those things exist – wisdom is already there! Just as buddha nature is our ordinary nature, wisdom is inherently there in all aspects of the practice. Buddhist practice – and by extension wisdom in all of its varied forms – is the actualization of what you have always had inside you but doubted was there because either you or someone or something else told you it was not there in the first place. And to realize it, we need to learn to see it in every other aspect of our lives and the world – the hundred grasses/myriad forms Dogen points out.
One is All, All is One
Dogen starts to wrap up Fukanzazengi with one of the few succint statements of his eternally present nondualistic thinking patterns:
Zazen is a practice beyond the subjective and objective worlds, beyond discriminating thinking. Therefore, no distinction should be made between the clever and the stupid. To practice the way singleheartedly is, in itself, enlightenment. There is no gap between practice and enlightenment or zazen and daily life. 
If we think we know a lot, and start to examine those aspects of life we are not that knowledgeable about, we end up learning in the end we did not know as much as we think we did. Therefore, who is truly clever and truly stupid? If wisdom is something we can manifest through the different types of practice and discipline, then why are we looking outside ourselves for wisdom when it was there all along, in our day-to-day lives? Practicing the constant internal investigation that zazen is gives us the tools necessary to go beyond our opinions and notions of right and wrong, what is and what is not, and start to see the world with clear vision for the first time. Only when we have such clear vision, the essence of wisdom inherently within our “100% authentic truth,” can we start to see there is no division at all.
Zazen isn’t just meditation, it’s the here and now. It’s our unobstructed buddha-nature expressing itself effortlessly in every precious moment of this life.
Don’t know; just go straight. – Zen Master Seung Sahn

Relating to the World: A Reflection after a Decade of Buddhist Practice

Don’t be distracted by inner peace. Don’t be distracted by anxiety. Don’t be distracted by anything. What are you doing right now? What is in front of you right now? Pay attention, see clearly and act correctly. It’s simple, but not easy. – Zen Master Bon Hae

Stay Alive and Be Awake

“The Practice.” That’s what we call it. I learned that soon enough, even before I met any other Buddhists that were part of a meditation group. How is your practice going? Has your practice been strong or weak lately? Remember, that important part of our practice is (you guessed it) to just practice. Whether it is for five or thirty minutes a day, find the time to practice.

These are the pieces of advice and the voices in your head you hear over and over again. “The Practice,” insofar as you practice a specific way, is what makes a Buddhist a Buddhist (I suppose). You cannot say you’re Buddhist and not meditate or chant or be mindful in the same way you could probably say you’re Christian, but have not attended church or even read the Bible in years. A Buddhist cannot be “Buddhist” without “Practice.” And what is practice exactly? Well, that depends on where you are mentally, spiritually, and physically. As is often said, “our karma leads us down different paths.” Which I suppose is true. But there is one path you start to see again and again as you become more ingrained in the vagaries of being a Buddhist in your every day life – that path includes Buddha statues (the fat happy dude is NOT Buddha, but Wikipedia could have told you that for me), robes, zen centers, incense, a lot of comfortable cushions, and a ton of tasty vegetarian food.

I’m sorry to say there is a noted lack of bloody crosses, guilt, and rock music that sounds eerily enough like the Dixie Chicks in Buddhism, but if you crave at least two of those three things, boy do I sure have a lot a vaguely similar Christian denominations for you. However, the path I have been going down for a while is different than the path I was raised on for most of my life. It is less about relating to a divine power outside of yourself, memorizing one very specific text, and feeling a sense of repentance and more about relating to the world around you in an optimal manner.

Let me repeat that again: Relating to the world around you in an optimal manner. After ten years of studying and practicing Buddhism, I believe that’s the one sentence that really gives you a taste of what it is all about. Sure, there are the verses and chants in the sutras and in the meditation hall about becoming a buddha, or realizing our buddha-nature, or paying homage to the larger Buddhist community and the ideals we hold, and so on and so forth. If you ask me though, Siddhartha Gautama saw some really terrible things – sickness, old age, and death – and was utterly honest with himself: “I’m not ready to handle this.” Totally unprepared. As I would think most people would be who are raised in a mansion and (as it has been written in the scriptures) are so engrossed in sex with their wife that they supposedly fell off a roof while doing it. Now, as a new home owner, I could get into the pros and and cons of unintentionally having sex on your roof (…I really hope those tiles were rubber…) but that’s not why I am writing this essay. To admit you are unprepared for what life has to throw at you in the way Siddhartha did is not to say, “Oh, I don’t have healthcare and I’m not sure what will happen if I ever break your hip,” but like, make sure you have healthcare and stuff. What it means to admit you are “not ready to handle this” is to admit quite a lot honestly.

I am not ready to grow up and assume responsibilities for my actions.

I am not ready to admit that I have to take better care of myself.

I am not ready to grow old and feel the creaks and aches in my bones.

I am not ready to admit to myself that I actually am old and will one day die.

I am not ready to admit that maybe, just maybe, I have wasted my life. 

When Buddhists say the world we see is an illusion we have to wake up from, we are not saying the things you see, hear, and taste are not real, but that they are colored by a certain perception. YOUR perception. That you need to put aside your opinions, grudges, ideas, and experience aside for a second (as much as you possibly can) and just LOOK AT IT ALL. Stop what you are doing for a while, sit down, take a deep breath, and just be a part of the world without the intrusion of your own thoughts and ideas. Find that stillness within you and fully inhabit it. It’s okay not to move a million miles a minute and doing a hundred different things and travel a ton of different places to keep yourself busy or to be a “success.” Doing those things gives us a greater knowledge of the world around us and of ourselves, but it does not always give us a chance to actually be a part of the world. Siddhartha saw this. As a man in his late twenties with a wife and child on the way, he had a lot of roles to fulfill: To be the future leader of the Shakya clan, conquer other lands, and lead his kingdom into a golden age, and be a father and wife on top of all that. Siddhartha felt the same types of responsibilities and pressures we may feel today, and just like we do today, he found a way to distract himself.

Whether it was with women or entertainment, Siddhartha had many avenues open to him to forget his true self. We have similar distractions at our disposal too, whether it be a relationship, a vacation, or a video game. There are so many more distractions today than there were during the time of the historical Buddha – hell, we don’t even have to participate in actual reality if we don’t want to any more, all one has to do is go online. But Siddhartha realized he was empty, that he was running towards the wrong stuff and not towards that one thing that mattered above the rest – our true nature. Our 100% goofy, ridiculous, imperfect person we truly are behind the opinions, distractions, and jokes. The more you run away from it, the more you are steeped in illusion and desire. If you are not relating to the world in an optimal manner, you are not relating to it in a healthy manner. And Buddhist meditation, more than any other spiritual practice I have participated in before or since, has the ability to give you the tools and framework necessary to just be still, or in the words of the Korea Zen Master Seung Sahn, to “put it all down.”

Clear Direction

“Put it all down.” Another phrase I have heard quite a lot over the past seven years. I started practicing with a meditation group when I was eighteen affiliated with the Kwan Um School of Zen, an American school of Zen Buddhism founded by Seung Sahn, a certified Zen master from the Korean school known as the Jogye Order. Seung Sahn made the phrase “put it all down!” famous among his first students, and the members of the Kwan Um School of Zen hearken back to it even forty years later. As to what it means, you will have to find out for yourself because each person relates to it in a different manner than another person does. If anything, it means to put down and put aside all that which is unnecessary in our minds and hearts. Here’s a famous story illustrating what I mean:

A senior monk and a junior monk were traveling together. At one point, they came to a river with a strong current. As the monks were preparing to cross the river, they saw a very young and beautiful woman also attempting to cross. The young woman asked if they could help her cross to the other side. The two monks glanced at one another because they had taken vows not to touch a woman. Then, without a word, the older monk picked up the woman, carried her across the river, placed her gently on the other side, and carried on his journey. The younger monk couldn’t believe what had just happened. After rejoining his companion, he was speechless, and an hour passed without a word between them. Two more hours passed, then three, finally the younger monk could contain himself any longer, and blurted out “As monks, we are not permitted a woman, how could you then carry that woman on your shoulders?” The older monk looked at him and replied, “Brother, I set her down on the other side of the river, why are you still carrying her?”

If you caught on, you realize this is not a debate about monastic precepts, but exactly how we see the reality of the world around us. For the younger monk, the woman he sees before him is exactly that – a woman. No amount of thinking can divorce the fact of what he sees before him from the idea he has of what a woman is supposed to look and sound like. However, the older monk, due to his longer years of practice, isn’t clinging to the idea of the woman. Sure, the person in front of him is indeed a woman, but she’s also a human being. He does not have to be attached to any of the thoughts and feelings that may arise from the idea of a woman a male monk such as himself may have. He may have picked the woman up, but he “put down” any attachment to certain thoughts and feelings he may have about the woman or women in particular. In essence, he was able to relate to his world in a way that was compassionate, wise, and optimal – he didn’t get bogged down in any of the thoughts that may make it impossible for us to handle the world as it is.

“Putting it all down” is a process. It doesn’t happen in a day or a week, especially not in a month. We have to work at it. Siddhartha did. He went through a lot of trial and error, needless asceticism, and just plain dumb diet choices before he found the Middle Path and eventually enlightenment. The thoughts, ideas, opinions, words, and biases we may hold have to be examined and traversed. As long as we practice, we are realizing our true nature, but that does not mean we get to leave behind all the messy stuff that makes us who we are. Hell, I’m not a perfect person. I have made mistakes, and am probably making a mistake right now by writing this and not trimming the weeds in my front yard, and will continue to make mistakes. I will say and do things that are always imperfect and not in accordance with what I want to put out into the world. But that’s okay. The practice is not about being perfect. It’s about saying “I AM ready to handle this.”

I am ready for constant change and all the good and bad that brings.

I am ready for the gray hairs and the aching bones and the awesome senior discounts.

I am ready to do better not only for myself but for my family and for all beings. 

I am ready to admit I could have used my time more wisely.

I am ready to admit that I will one day die and that there are definitely a few relatives that I’m scratching out of my will. 

Buddhism does not say you need to accept Buddhism (whatever “Buddhism” is). Buddhism says you need to be ready to accept yourself, because who you are and what the world is are the same, and by opening up yourself to that will make you a better person. And don’t forget to add a dash of wisdom and compassion to boot.

Those who see worldly life as an obstacle to Dharma
see no Dharma in everyday actions. 
They have not yet discovered that 
there are no everyday actions outside of Dharma. – Dogen