On Pots and Hummingbirds

Good Morning Everyone,



Yesterday at the El Paso Sangha, I offered at teiso on everyday life. I used a portion of Master Dogen's Tenzo Kyokun (Instructions for the Cook), translated by Uchiyama-roshi of the Soto tradition,.and a portion of the book, Novice to Master by Morinaga-roshi of the Rinzai tradition. One of the fundamental tenets of our practice -- Soto or Rinzai-- is this: there is no trash. The second fundamental derives as,: everything is sacred, but nothing is special. This means we should honor the everyday, finding in the everyday everything we need.



Yet, we human beings go around marking things as special. We invest things with meaning.



This is why we suffer so: Everything, special or ordinary, dissolves over time and returns to the Source.



So, on the one hand, we should recognize the sacred is the everyday, and on the other hand, we should not endeavour to hold onto it. We should practice with the knowledge that everything is transitory. Everything.



How do we do this practice? By opening ourself up. Or, as Uchiyama-roshi suggests, opening the hand of thought.



Its rather like scrubbing out a pot caked with pudding residue. We just scrub, noticing the transformational nature of the process. Or like holding out our finger at a hummingbird feeder, generating warm and loving thoughts, and remaining very still. A hummingbird will perch on the finger offered. We can only witness this; feel the tiny, lovely body on our finger, but we cannot grasp it.



So, as we add "lovely" and "warm" to our experience of the hummingbird, it is fleeting and no more special than cleaning a pot. Both are in the moment experiences both are transitory, both are special, and both are everyday..



Be well.



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Reply #1 Top
What you say makes sense but it is hard for me to not hold on to somethings, especially those that are very special and evokes pleasant memories. Even after the person is gone from our world, memories are all we have, sometimes.

I get what you're saying though, it is a way to live and thus maybe find more accepting and peaceful because you don't get tied to anything. But it is unrealistic because we humans 'feed" on our possessions.
Reply #2 Top
That sort of feeding is sort of like vampirism, I suspect. The dead looking alive, you know? Caring for something out of a deep respect, love, and reverence is not the same as being attached to it. In the first case its all about the 'other' in the latter, its all about the self.

Sometime you may want to take a look at Uchiyama's Opening the Hand of Thought.

A bow to you.

So Daiho