-
Part #3 -
Excerpts
- "Three Steps, One Bow" journals
With
One Heart, Bowing to the City of 10,000 Buddhas
The Records of Heng Sure & Heng Ch’au Bowing
Part - 1 |
2 |
3
Offering:
lunch and money for meters and phone
After
lunch a bird came and sat in the doorway. We gave it some
bread but after eating one small piece it kept refusing and
just watched us intently. Heng Ch’au told it was
a bird because of retribution and that it should resolve its
heart on Bodhi and take refuge with the Triple Jewel.
Heng Sure gave it the Triple Refuge and Bodhisattva Vows and
closed with “gate, gate, paragate, parasumgate, bodhisvaha.”
The bird left and later came back and chirped something or other
and disappeared.
So
far twenty lady bugs, one bird and one fly.
HENG
SURE:
May
29, 1977
- Whatever your religions, it’s okay for you to
follow your spirit and become a Buddhist. Your God and
saints are all Buddhists already, they know all about it and
they think it’s worth bowing to. They all took refuge
many lifetimes ago.
HENG
CH’AU:
May
29, 1977
- If you want to turn up the temperature a few degrees
in the foundry, try closing one of the vents. Talking.
Not talking has intensified the pitch and energy. Like
a spray-to-laxer nozzle of a water hose--hard to handle at first,
so focused and potent. More heat in the firing, more vajra
result.
Out
bowing a long, monotonous stretch through L.A. Country Club
I reached appoint where I left I was going crazy--floating and
disintegrating away, losing my body and identity. Sitting
in full lotus after that hour at a deserted bus stop learn-to
I felt tingling on top of my head.
There
was no walkway on our usual side so we crossed over and went
against the flow. The traffic was coming at us now. After
awhile the discordance and erratic waves subsided. The
cars were like the endless variety of false thoughts (go against
the flow and they really pond and bombard.) some holder,
honk, cheer, and curse. Some beautiful, plaint attractive,
absurd. Soon they flow by without notice, without moving.
A scream and a horn, I don’t jerk or tense--just goes
through, doesn’t stick. When one finally does get
me I feel it start from way inside my kidneys and lower stomach
and shake in waves out.
A
strange thing is starting to happen. While bowing, I am
returned, brought back and reliving experiences long forgotten
and buried. At least I thought they were. I find
myself at the exact point and place where I went wrong and then
all the suffering and karma set in motion by that choice unfolds
before me and I relive not just remember, but feel the pain
and the loss. For an hour or so I could barely hold back
the tears. In contrast to the screaming well-to-do kids
and grown-ups racing to somewhere past us for Memorial Day,
I’m crawling along the ground crying and aching in my
own “day of remembering.”
“Did
ya lose something, stupid, ha, ha, ha.” If they
only knew how true that was.
Specifically
I went back through my family and followed the steps of cause
and effect back to the family farm in Wisconsin. Deeded
in the 1840’s, the farm is still going strong with Joe
and Betty and their boys. One branch splintered into the
city, the others stayed near the farm in a little village
called Freedom. Just before leaving home I returned partly
to check out my path--retrace steps. The relatives in
the city were a mess. Divorce, problems with their children,
ill health, over-weight, smoking, drinking, and a deepening
sense of loss and of having missed the boat was creeping in.
As kids we only sensed bits and pieces of these trends.
Now they had matured, come to fruit and it was so painful to
see. Beautiful, warm people who got lost by choosing what
seemed “the best life” “good jobs” something
more exciting and worldly than the dull drudgery of the farm.
And
the farm? What an oasis! Joe and Betty, a young
couple in their 30’s with three sons have restored the
old house and property. They are vibrant, clear, without
a trace of guile or cynicism. They sparkle and radiate
health, good vibes. They love what they’re doing.
They do it together and they do it well.
Joe
says “Well we don’t drink or smoke and can’t
stay up too late. We have to mil ‘em at 4:30 a.m.
Besides, we don’t want to go out, people get souped and
talk stupid. Can’t tell their words from their rattling
ice cubes after awhile. No we just stay and mess with
the kids. It gets more and more silly out there and the
farm—well that’s my life. We like it; it keeps
us happy and honest. Wow. I’d sell it in a
minute that I ain’t never found anything else worth doin’.”
Just got a letter from them. Joe and his son are going
on a religious retreat together.
“You
know,” Joe told me, “I don’t hunt or fish
so I’m pretty much a loner that way.”
That
day we split wood, milked the cows, went over family albums,
and absorbed all the pure undefiled energy they had and that
they sparked in us. When we left all of us felt turned
on and cleansed, younger and without the “shadows that
cross our minds.”
Every
session or lecture at Gold Mountain I left with a similar feeling
of well-being. It’s the farm and then some. Return
to the one first; then find the zero.
How
far I had gotten away from these roots really hit yesterday
while bowing. I clearly saw and relived every step away
from what the farm represented and more. I began to see
how and where I had moved away from a pure, genuine self-nature.
It hurt. Like a river having turned to go back to the
pool, I had to walk through all the defilement and mud I had
stirred up in each step taken from the source.
Yesterday
was early childhood and specifically my first love--my wife.
I feel like I am reliving and purging a lot of mud.
How many lives does it take to return? How easy to follow
the stream away. A single thought? To reverse is
hard. To return slow and painful. Hard work and
patience.
Persistent
and complicated dreams of my wife. My mind moves and I
wake up spent from the effect of these false thoughts.
I am cold in the a.m. Need more clothes to stay warm.
Heavier on fleet--lost the feeling of lightness.
Whatever
happened to my wife’s aspiration to be a nun? Karma
upon karma. How many have been moved and effected by my
steps away from my true face? And they in turn effect
others, endlessly. From the one, the many. It builds,
accumulates, wells up, and spills into disasters, calamities,
wars. How to measure all the ripples created by a single
stone tossed into a still lake.
Leaving
the mountains (one’s original face) for the valleys (desire
and false thoughts), it’s hard to return. The higher
one climbs the more dangerous, narrow and steep. Less
room for errors, greater consequences and tumbles.
The
blackspire. A fall? Maybe the fall in not leaving
home last year. Have to reclimb and yet its all in a single
thought—not linear. So it is with the history of
group collective karma; waves making waves making waves.
Stop the stone-throwing, stop the thought.
How
many lives have I repeated this? Who was my wife and so
many people? Affinities, causes, and conditions, tests,
failure, more karma all take us further from our true nature.
The wheel doesn’t stop, you must!
I
Saw a Church Today
In
Europe and many countries once upon a time much effort and skill
went toward construction cathedrals and churches of magnificent
size and beauty. Towering above all other worldly structures,
they served to remind people daily of the impermanence of life
and of a higher, spiritual existence. I saw a church today
in L.A. I almost didn’t see it except I was going so slow
and going so low I caught sight of it. It was buried between
towering corporate banks and skyscraper Insurance Plazas and
wedged between two high-rise apartment buildings.
“No
matter whether people understand or not, if you understand,
you should speak.” -Master Hua.
“You
should not only explain the doctrines which I explain, but take
the principles and express yourself according to your wisdom.
Since Americans speak about the development in freedom, you
can develop your own freedom in this way. Then there can
be a new and creative development.” -Master
Hua.
If
words and looks could kill we would have been minced monks by
now. “Get off the sidewalk or…Move on, the
sixties are over.” Shouts a really angry, violent voice.
With
cramps and diarrhea on a Sunday on Wilshire Blvd. in an area
where lawns are manicured and even dogs use toilets, patience
is tested with every body.
People
tend to look lie what they eat and do. This area smalls of pork.
It permeates the air, but no one hears the squeals anymore.
“The 60’s are over” the wars continue as do
the barbeques, but it’s a quiet Sunday here; easy, lazy.
The
60’s are Over
A
decade ago I was finishing my Ph.D. dissertation on “bringing
the war home,” trying to get at the root of the problem
by analyzing American culture. But every time I dug behind
the facile generalities I found people. I found people
like my parents, teachers, friends and their parents.
How did these regular people (they were not war mongers, running
dog imperialists, Daddy Warbucks or fat cats), how did these
folks come to generate so much suffering and conflict, so much
unequality, so much hate and violence? It wasn’t
simple. It also wasn’t the kind of questions an
aspiring “professional” historian asks. Too
“unscholarly” and “interpretive”--too
general and “recent.” I quit school and went
looking elsewhere. This tool had lost its edge.
I
found the answer about four years later in a Buddhist monastery
in San Francisco. I’m finishing my dissertation
now on the road between L.A. and the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas,
bowing once every three steps with a fellow Buddhist monk.
As we bowed past a serene, lazy street in L.A. angry words shot
out from behind a screed window, “Get off the sidewalk.
Move on. The sixties are over.” She was so
right! The answer? I found it in a quote whose source
is over 2600 years old. It really brings the “war
home.”
“All
male beings have been a father to me in former lives and all
females have been my mother. There is not a single living
being who has not given birth to me during my previous lives,
hence all beings are my parents. Therefore, when a person
kills or eats any of these beings he thereby slaughters my parents.
Furthermore he butchers a body that was once my own, for all
elemental earth and water has previously served as the substance
of one of my bodies and all elemental fire and air has formerly
sustained the life of one of my bodies. Therefore I shall
always cultive the practice of liberating beings, awakening
to the eternal nature of Dharma (truth) in every life, and its
instruction others to liberate beings as well.”
Too
much to swallow? Ancient sages and early Greek philosophers
intuited it. Einstein argued it. And modern practical
terms the thrust is this: everything comes from the mind
alone. Look within for wisdom and for the cause, the beginning
of greed, hatred, and stupidity.
What
is stealing if it isn’t misusing and wasting water, air,
and food? What is greed if not consuming more and better, “all
you can eat” and still never being satisfied? Greed
gone big makes war.
Regarding
anything short of all beings as relatives and family is discrimination
and it breeds hatred and resentment. “Bring the
war home,” to the mind! Watch carefully what comes
from your mouth, your body, and your mind and you will find
the cause of hurt, strife, jealousy, and pollution. Follow
it further and find the cause of wars, disasters, nuclear stockpiling,
and acts of destruction. Follow the small to the large.
Take the large back to the small. Back to the mind.
It all comes from the mind. This disease is one disease.
It respects neither age, nor class, nor race, nor country.
We’ve all got it.
“For
all past karma created from body, mouth, and mind and born from
beginningless, greed, hatred, and stupidity I now repent entirely.”
This
is the heart of my Ph.D. The war came home to my mind
and hopefully the peace will too. So “move
on, the 60’s are over.” The real revolution
is within one single thought right now, inside. Seize
it!
HENG
SURE:
May
30, 1977
- You don’t have to ask any experts, or join anything
or buy anything to find the Holy within you, pure and complete.
It starts with doing good, with avoiding doing evil and then
clearing out your mind. Give things, give yourself away
and make others happy. Don’t eat meat and watch
your tongue. Pay attention to your deeds good and bad
and see their results. It’s all talking about your
own life and who is really in charge of it. You are.
Don’t give away the final responsibility for your life.
On
the vehemence and hatred in a screeching female voice from behind
screed windows: “Get off the sidewalk you creeps!
Go on, move on. The sixties are over!” Each
phrase a crescendo to hysteria. Heng Ch’au:
“If words were bullets, we would be Swiss Cheese.”
When
this is all over and we arrive at the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas,
what will we have to say? What will be our very
first words? “It is most important to hold the five
precepts which prohibit killing, stealing, lying, sexual misconduct,
and intoxicants. Without a firm foundation in proper behavior
all other cultivation is like pouring water in a cracked vase:
it won’t stay in. Return the light and shine within
at all times.
“Everything
is a test to see what you will do. Mistaking what’s
before your eyes, you’ll have to start anew.” –Master
Hua.
‘For
all post karma created from body, mouth, and mind and born from
beginningless greed, hatred and stupidity I now repent entirely.”
Homage
to the sea-like assembly of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas in the
Avatamsaka Assembly.
Homage
to the Avatamsaka Sutra.
HENG
CH’AU:
May
30, 1977
- When I see the most clearly there are no words.
Sometimes I can tell a little of the feeling, the state behind
the silence: the only thing that seem “real,”
not cartoons or mirages floating by on clouds, are (1) the Avatamsaka
Sutra. It feels like home; like a true friend who really
knows me in and out without asking or judging. (2) little
openings into “my own” wisdom, which really isn’t
mine. It’s difficult to explain. It’s
a place inside and beyond “me” that merges with
the friend of the Sutra. The Thus Come One and “I”
are the same, but there is no “I.” It’s
here that my identity spins out and I feel like some kind of
rag doll without boundaries or form. One false thought
and “I” is back in the movie on Wilshire Boulevard.
Ode
to a Cultivator (apologies to Christopher Robin and Pooh)
“If
I were a bird that lived on high
I’d
lean on the wind, when the wind came by
I’d
say to the wind as it took me away
Now
that’s where I wanted to go today!”
Freedom--“getting
away from it all” “hitting the road” “Let’s
get out of here”--freedom is America’s biggest and
oldest resource. Everybody knows that. Say “freedom”
and people say the U.S. and it’s always “out there”
or just a “little further.” The more we worship
it the less we really enjoy. And not a few Americans are
sorely coming to the realization that no amount of campers,
clothes, money, snowmobiles, “a place in the mountains,”
airplanes, or vacations satisfies the itch for freedom. But
to be like the bird is hard for Westerners--you’ve got
to be light; without attachments. You can’t fly
with a T.V., Winnebago, two dogs, and a couple of cocktails
or a couple of “hits.”
The
wind is the Way. It you can put down the false, the empty,
and the heavy, then the wind can take you “where you want
to go.” The pure land is your land; it’s my
land. From California…and it’s made for you and
me.
We
can’t fly with greed, hatred, and stupidity. Trade
in your afflictions for some wings (morality, concentration,
and wisdom) and let the wind take you away. Stupid?
Maybe, but out here bowing along the sidewalks of dream city
we can feel a pulse, we can see the faces and feel the longing.
People are getting hungry for some meaning, something real to
shake the nightmare. It’s just a question of time
and a single thought.
We
saw it in the hesitating fascinated faces of two men our age
who stopped to ask. What did they see? Why did they wonder
and come out right in the middle of their lunch in a restaurant?
They with their L.A. Fabion haircuts, shiny shoes, were slick,
but they couldn’t cover their curiosity. The empty
macho crap that usually kills honest talk cracked for a minute
and we were just boys, brothers, sharing feelings and wishes
you learn later to smother and hide as men. For a minute there
was a “letting go” and everybody was touched.
Sunday
morning early, bowing alone through fancy Beverly Hills/Westwood.
I was suddenly filled with greed and fantasies of myself in
the big houses driving the biggest cars, golfing at the finest
country clubs, running with the handsome dog, escorting the
finest women--all these photos flashed in y mind at once.
I recoiled immediately, saw the state, and felt how foreign
it was to the environment of bowing, counting, reciting the
Sutra’s name, and learning to use my energy. The
desire thoughts came like a sudden wind, invaded my head like
a piece of sky falling through the house roof. I continued
to bow and said to myself “The thing to do with these
foreign, uninvited, and afflicting desirous thoughts is to have
patience with your mind, have compassion on your poor tired
little head and turn those thoughts into defiled wisdom.”
So I have gave up my alarm at the presence of the defiled idea,
I resolved to concentrate on the bowing, and left the thoughts
take care of themselves. I put all my faith into the principle
of unmoving thusness. To help the situation I stood at
one point and said, “I don’t want any of those foolish
attachments. They are impermanent and not meant for me.
I am not interested. Take my name off the list.
I want freedom from all of that, freedom from real afflictions,
freedom over birth and death and I will get it this time.”
As I made this vow, the thoughts vanished, my head cleared on
the next bow and I continued working and pacing along as before.
Smooth
Sailing
One
of the laypersons, an L.A. resident for many years, told us
at the start of the trip: “You will have a rough
time at first going through these tough neighborhoods but once
your clear Lincoln Heights things will improve a lot, you’ll
see. It’ll be smooth sailing from then on.”
We did have to work our way through Lincoln Heights, but we
found the people open, honest and easy to impress with our bowing.
When we reached the “good” neighborhoods, however,
we found a lot of repressed, latent hostility, a kind of flash-point,
unpredictable violence right on the edge of exploding.
Ultimately the various streets are all the same, some people
bless us, some curse us, but the quality of the response in
the fancy neighborhoods was in no way better or “smoother
sailing” than in the poorer ones.
In
fact you could say, the first leg of the trip was rough but
wait until get to the coast, then it will be “smooth sailing.”
The
coast highway was deserted and that starvation and dehydration
was rough but wait till you get to San Francisco, then it will
be okay, you’ll see. Smooth sailing.
Well,
the shots they fired at you in San Francisco were hard to take
but wait till you get to the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas, then
it will all be okay. Just wait. Smooth sailing.
You’re
still cultivating back at the monastery, but wait till you get
enlightened, then you’ll see how good it can be. It’ll
all the smooth sailing.
If
you think the Saha world was tough, wait’ll but wait till
you get transferred to another corner of the Dharmarealm to
start over again as a Bodhisatta, then it will be smooth sailing.
North,
south, east, west, when you truly let go. It’s all
okay. When you untie yourself from your afflictions then
even if you don’t have a boat, it’s all smooth sailing.
There
will come a time in America when the Sangha member’s robe
and sash will bring smiles to the faces of old people.
When the Buddhist principles of filiality and reverence towards
seniors and elders are well-known in this country, old people
will be glad in their hearts to see a left-home person approach.
They will not be afraid, they will not be upset. To see
two monks bowing down the sidewalk will remind them of the compassion
of the Buddha and they will be at peace with their age and their
future. Amitabha! Let it be so!
As
a student I often dreamed of freedom from classrooms, tests,
assignments, and schedules. I fancied a life of an artist,
a traveler, an athlete, a writer, someone who had the whole
world before him and when he woke up he could set his face towards
any direction and be totally there, free and alive. I
wanted most of all to be working for the present moment, to
be as good as I could be right now right here. To not
eternally be preparing, treading water, passing time, waiting
to grow up. Freedom then was to pass beyond the classroom
doors, to climb the staircase and walk away.
Now
I live in a world beyond books and schedules, beyond bells and
grades. In my new world everything’s a test.
I am invited, urged to be my best every minute. I am as
free as I can be right now. Am I happy? I’m
the only judge. I can choose to pass or fail my own tests.
Free
to walk anywhere at any speed, I chose to pace north, three
steps and one bow later, I stand up and take three more steps.
I have external restriction than a school boy waiting for the
bell to end class but the difference? Ah, the difference.
When the bell rings on this class that I’m enrolled in
voluntarily, I can graduate from the school of living beings,
and that degree, my friend, is worth having.
HENG
CH’AU:
May
31, 1977
- Checked out twice during the night by University of
California police. No problem, in fact they even stretched
the rules and let us camp in a corner of a parking lot overnight.
Stopping
the mad mind at times seems impossible. By comparison
it makes the whole Three Steps, One Bow look like sneezing.
On the other hand that’s true only because of impatience
and laziness. Once resolved on enlightenment it is just
the beginning. Each minute is a small step; how many steps?
Only one! Countless! Only one because looking ahead
or behind is false thinking, counting is false thinking.
With no thinking, who counts the steps? Who steps?
Who is enlightened? Discriminating and impatience need
a who.
Countless
steps because with no who counting and looking back and forth
and forward, expecting and rejecting, anticipating and disappointed,
with no who doing the steps, the steps are without beginning
or end, without a fixed number or amount.
Realizing
this is properly inconceivable, I only go on faith right now.
And having left home just recently many of the little niceties
that buffered my ego and comforted the “me” are
gone and raw faith and whatever resolve I can muster gets sorely
tested.
The
mind resists the medicine partly out of beginningless bad habits
and cumulated garbage but partly too because it’s just
plain strong and afraid.
Patience
and hard work! These are cracks and openings now and then
but mostly just steps, countless steps. It helps to remember
at times like these what exactly I “left” (Oh yeah,
right, I remember now, always I knew and felt inside it was
nowhere, impermanent. I kept putting it down, searching
for more ultimate goals. So now you are really trying
to break through. You can’t go back--to what? So
be patient and smile). It also helps a whole lot to notice
that my teacher is right behind me smiling, “Patience,
Kuo T’ing. Hard work and patience. Everything
is OK.”
The
other side of the complexity is the harm I caused other people.
I was like a predatory animal. I chose to afflict whoever
I felt prompted to harm.
Surely
there are past affinities that must be untied, and much attention
shall be given to whom one relates to, and the quality of the
relationship. Compassion, services, kindness, beneficial
deeds, giving shall be the guidelines. In this way, the
future meeting with these beings will not be for mutual exploitation,
mutual harm, mutual wasting of energy, but rather for shared
benefits, for teaching and learning, for the inspiration to
cultivate and become enlightened.
When
the Master was head of the Vinaya Academy at Nan Hua Monastery
he made it his practice to personally send off each departing
Dharma Master. He would go borrow money and give the department
monk the sum he had borrowed. Then the Master would carry
the monk’s luggage a mile or so down the road. His
purpose? To tie up affinities, to “establish conditions”
with as many people as possible. That is to say the Master
wanted to make a positive connection with a great many people
so that in the future, when there is a great deal of work to
be done, all those with wholesome affinities will join together
and aid in the progress of the work.
HENG
CH’AU:
June
1, 1977
"When
your meditation reaches the point that the mountain are leveled,
the seas disappear, and you doubts that there’s a way
at all, then suddenly, there beyond the dark willow and the
bright flowers is another village."
-Master
Hua
My
t’ai chi teacher said, “From the unnatural you find
the natural, the Tao. From something you reach nothing
and then maybe in nothing you truly find something.”
I used to think being “natural” was pretty laid
back, indulging whims and desires, doing what felt good.
I know differently now.
To
develop the supple, graceful balance and ease of t’ai
chi requires months of unnatural stretching, hard work and clumsy
postures. Moreover to really make it natural involves
a regular schedule of meditation and practicing everyday.
“When you feel good and want to do four sets and two hours
of meditation, do two sets and one hour of meditation. When
you feel not so good and want to do only one set and skip meditation,
do two sets and one hour of meditation. Then you will
make progress.”
Bowing
along Wilshire between rows of dead soldiers on one side and
rows of commuting cars on the other there seemed t be nothing
natural going in this artificial scene.
To
live in harmony with nature is simple living and hard work.
It’s also being nose to nose constantly with birth and
death (your own and others). We are all in a very precarious
state of being. Ultimately what is the natural nature,
anyway? I used to think it was some idyllic pre-industrial
garden of eden. And what is harmony with nature?
Who really knows? What we call “natural”
is ultimately bound up with our minds, not some state independent
of us. It’s pretty obvious what it isn’t but
a long, hard trek back to what it is and you do it alone, solo
in the finale.
To
be born and die seems “natural” but then why have
sages and wise men for aeons maintained that to be free of birth,
not to be reborn, is the true nature? No karma,
off the wheel, and the twelve conditioned links and suffering--that’s
natural. Ultimately the natural is freedom-freedom from
birth and death, death and birth repeating without cease.
This is described as a state of purity, genuiness, and bliss.
And in the end even that is gone--voluntary extinction.
Wonderful existence; true emptiness.
Well
I don’t know about all this; just glimpses now and then.
But the glimpses are strong and more “natural” than
anything else going. Enough so to make me cultivate the
bitter, unnatural to explore it. Enough to stop eating
meat, smoking weed, and trade in my nice “easy life”
and clothes for the life and clothes of a monk. Enough
so to be out bowing with Heng Sure through Los Angeles to the
City of Ten Thousand Buddhas in Mendocino. Like T’ai
chi, what at first seemed very unnatural now seems second nature.
So too with bitter practices. My t’ai chi teacher
said once, “Some day you will know that after t’ai
chi, after all of it, Ch’an is the highest.”
Just
before leaving home my oldest sister Cece visited San Francisco.
This was our last conversation together in a vegetarian restaurant
in North Beach about being a monk and about Buddhism:
Cece:
“Well I still don’t understand.”
Me:
“Understand what?”
Cece:
“What you are doing. I think you are still just
searching. It’s just that you aren’t sure
yet and you’re searching, right?”
Me:
“Aren’t you?”
Cece:
“What?”
Me:
“Searching.”
Cece:
“Well no. I mean I’m pretty settled. We have
our house and the kinds and financially we’re finally
getting to a place where...”
Me:
“What about dying?”
Cece:
“What about it?”
Me:
“You got that settled?”
Cece:
“Well the way I see it, you die and that’s it.
Not much you can do about it, right?”
Me:
“How should I know. I’m searching, remember?”
Cece:
“Let’s eat.”
Me:
“The food’s not here yet. Really, honestly,
does that way of dealing with your death…I mean how does
that feel to you?”
Cece:
“It terrifies me. I sit in bed some nights trying
to imagine being dead and it scares me. I don’t
know: I would like to not feel terrified but…”
Me:
“So you are searching.”
Cece:
“Well, yes, but…” (squirming)
Me:
“So when mother and dad ask you what I’m up to with
all this Buddhist stuff don’t sit back and say, ‘Oh,
he’s still just searching…doing his own thing’
(Cece smiling) because if you say that then you had better be
ready to tell them that you’ve found the answer to the
problem of dying, so now you are not searching. You know
mother isn’t satisfied with the whole issue of her own
death, right?”
Cece:
“I know.”
Me:
“ Make you a deal.”
Cece:
“What?”
Me:
“We both keep searching and whoever finds out first promises
to tell mom and the other.”
Cece:
“It’s a deal. But I still don’t understand.”
Me:
“What?”
Cece:
“Well you’re going to become a monk and give up
all these nice things you have--your job and friends and clothes,
good food, and it’s so cold there too. It’s
like all the things you used to do you don’t want anymore.”
Me:
“Do you want your tricycle or old boyfriends back?”
Cece:
“Well no, but that’s different.”
Me:
“How?”
Cece:
“Let’s eat.”
Me:
“Let’s talk. It will be our last time for
a while.”
Cece:
“Well what if you find out you gave all that up
for nothing?”
Me:
“That’s it!:
Cene:
“What’s it?”
Me:
“By getting rid of all that, you get nothing and from
nothing…well it’s like if what you got his cold
tea in your cup there and you want fresh hot ea, you got to
empty to cup first right?”
Cece:
“Right, I suppose so.”
Me:
“Well?”
Cece:
“Let’s eat.” (smiling)
Me:
“Remember our deal?”
Cece:
“OK.”
Bowing
through the smog and hostile vibes that also seem to follow
people home from their jobs the other day, I began to get down
on how unhappy people seem to be. At that moment an old
eccentric wrinkled lady came up, beamed a genuine happy deep--inside
alive smile, patted me on the should and ambled on.
“What
You See is What you Get.”
There
haven’t been any reaction to three steps, one bow that
are identical. People see what they want, what they can,
and sometimes not at all. Some seeholy men, some see morons,
some see weirdos, some see prophets, some see hate, some see
compassion, some see “cute dresses” (our robes),
others freak out over shaved heads. “Hey, I got
shoes just like his-easy walkers, neat!” Others
ask if we are sick, trying to find the beach, kissing the ground.
They try to convert, divert, run over, and ignore. Some
try to make us laugh or tremble--it’s endless. They
all get what they see and what they see is mostly themselves.
Today
as I rounded a corner after parking the van, I saw tow men gesticulating
widly and slowly pacing off steps, jabbering and arguing all
the time. Heng Sure was down half a block from them slowly
bowing. As I got in range here’s what I heard.
(One man was huge with a handlebar mustache named Mario, the
other was short and squat named Pepe--brothers connected with
the Italian restaurant they are arguing in front of.)
Mario:
“I a tell ya it’s a four--a four steps.”
Pepe:
“No, no, no, no--I counta tree, tres. No more.”
Mario:
“Whadya know? Nothin’, you don’t know
a nothin’ Watch! One, duo, tres--see!
Quatro!” (pointing to Heng Sure.)
Pepe:
(imitating Heng Sure) “Open your eyes, Mario. Wow
look. One, tro, tres, fine. Sometimes you a so stupido.”
(hands fly in the air)
Mario:
(grabs me and lines me up between himself and Pepe, pointing
to Heng Sure). Nowa you tell us. Watch real close.
You a playin too--witha that guy right? (I nod).
Okay, so now watch. (I can’t move pinched in between
them staring down the street, waiting, sweating with anticipation-what
a sight!) They count. When Heng Sure does his three
steps Pepe peels off dancing and shouting, “Three, see?
I told you. It’s a three. Ha!
Thre steps.” When Heng Sure brings his foot forward
to complete the third step Mario peels off on the other side
yelling, “Quatro, quarto! I’ma right.
I’ma right.” Turning pleadingly to me, “I’ma
no right, huh?” I hold up three fingers. Peple
slips into a smug teasing sigh. Mario flips and stamps,
“You don’t know nothin’ either. You
all can no count, can no see. I, Mario, say it’s
four.” He imitates again. Pepe contradicts.
And around they go again. I would like to say something
profound or even explain a little but they could care less.
All the space is filled with their things. “Three!”
“Ia tell ya it’s four.”
I
sneak towards Heng Sure--their brotherly battle fades like everything
else we encounter. I’m smiling because they were
so accepting, unusually so, of us-more than most we encounter,
and yet they had no idea what or why we were bowing. It
didn’t matter--all they saw was a chance to bet and compete.
They have probably been doing it all their lives.
I
thought of a line from Shih Fu’s gatha in the Prajna Paramita
Heart Sutra:
Because
of the finger, gaze at the distant moon; the finger is not the
moon.
These
guys were fighting over a hang nail. They never even saw
the finger, much less the moon.
Mario:
(distant but distinct) “Nobodya knowsa nothin’.”
Disciple
of Billing Bright stopped (Campus Crusade for Christ).
“I saw you all workin’ so hard here to get to heaven,
I thought I’d do you a favor. Here, now, read this.
It’s a shortcut. No need to work so hard.
Just take hold of Jesus here.”
The
problem with shortcuts is they usually leave you short.
No one saves you but yourself, Billy, even Jesus had to do it
himself.
HENG
SURE:
June
2, 1977
- More on the song. When you work with the mind,
the mind becomes sensitized to input, to the environment, to
ideas and subtle shadings, nuances. The difference between
affliction and Bodhi is as thin as a reed.
By
singing a non-Dharma song yesterday I trashed the sensitive
mirror of my thoughts and planted the stupid, mundane lyrics
and tune of the song in my head for a long time. I’ll
be hearing the song long after I should have been enlightened.
It’s
like bowing hard to polish a crystal tray, getting every bit
of dust off it and then turning around and dumping the morning
sweepings of garbage and dust on it. How silly!
All the day’s work wasted!
Another
way to view the mistake of singing after cultivating silence
is like a mountain climber who slips off the trail, falls a
few feet and bruises his ankle. It will take a while for
the bruise to heal, it makes walking all the harder and I must
be really careful to avoid taking a big fall and doing real
damage. Dumb!
The
Bodhisattva goes where others cannot go to complete his work
of bringing the Dharma to the world. Bowing beneath the
San Diego freeway is such a place. Toxic, foul, evil,
uninhabitable, foreign to the planet, the underpass and the
roads that feed it were made by human hands and strength, but
did they know that in the future, the space they created would
be destructive to human life? Heng Chau and I did not
have the protective armor of an automobile when we dared to
traverse the area. As we bowed through the thunder and
poison of the exhausts from thousands of buses and trucks, we
lost our breath, lost our minds, our hearing, our sight, our
sanity. White faces, short of breath and fading, if we
had to stay there for one hour instead of twenty minutes, we
would have collapsed and died of the poisonous vapors.
So congratulations, modern people. We have made our cave
truly uninhabitable. Only this time we can’t leave
it and go further West. We’re stuck with it.
Unless your thoughts get really daring: say, use fewer
cars?
We
do not bow across intersection. We pace across, counting
the steps, with hands in “palms together” position,
to bow the right number of bows on the far corner. Walking
slowly, mindfully with palms together startles the motorists
we cross in front of.
On
lady, however, picked up on the purpose of palms together crossing
of streets right away. At the busy Gayley and Wilshire
intersection I crossed with palms together, slowly pacing and
counting the steps. When I reached the other curb, the
hour was over so I made a half-bow, mentally marked the spot
and the number of bows to do and turned around to look for a
drinking fountain. I met the smiling face of a 40ist woman
who happily said, “See, you made it, safe and sounds.”
HENG
CH’AU:
June
2, 1977
- In the last two weeks or so some drastic and powerful
things have been going on inside. At first I noticed my
t’ai chi was much stronger, like every pore and corner
of my body was charged with almost too much juice to contain.
Then I went through a couple of days where sexual desire was
running wild. I felt like fifteen or sixteen years old.
Every sight and sound was a potential threat. Even though
I could see what was happening the pulsing yearning was still
hard to control because so much came so fast and I felt it hormonally,
like an animal instinct. Finally I got some leverage on
this runaway energy.
In
the last week my sitting meditation is more concentrated; less
distracted. When I sit and fix on the tip of my nose a
wave of warmth spreads from my waist and hips (inside though)
up my spine and throughout my body. Any pain or discomfort
disappears. I feel light and at ease, aglow. Regardless
of how cold or hot it is I feel comfortable in light clothes.
After sitting I feel as if I had just taken a hot bath--refreshed
but not hot or heavy or dull.
This
morning waves of anger and edginess hit. I was really irritable,
almost like pre-flu skin sensitivity, only emotionally as well.
Patience,
patience, got to have patience, don’t get angry, Swo pe
he.
This
low follows an incredible high energy peak last night where
I literally felt like I was nine years old again—boundless
light energy without afflictions of sexual desire, adult worries,
cares, and attachments. Just got to hang on and let it
go where it goes. Don’t be moved. The only
thing true is hard work and patience.
Where
does the energy outflow go? Waiting patiently waiting
for the slow kiln inside to transmute this new energy.
To woman and pastry shops it goes, checking out the sugarland.
To anger and short temper (hurry up kiln I am about to explode).
Cross it over, don’t spill it. Patiently sweating
it out at a foundry in the oven! We both feel like we
are smelting a pure substance in a super hot furnace in a small
room--all around the furnace are open barrels of gun powder.
One mistake, broken rule, too serious a slip and boom!
Three
straight days of diarrhea and hot pavement, bad smog and more
Jesus converters. (The one this A.M. kept shoving his
crucifix into our face “See this, see this?”)
All little tests it seems. Now we are in Santa Monica
nearer the beach. “Really nice there…smooth
sailing.” And yet we are both just fine. Nothing
to be happy about or sad about either. No reason to get
angry or impatient. No cause for doubts or enthusiasm.
Three steps, one bow. Through the picket line of construction
workers, three steps, one bow, three steps, one bow.
Orange
Juice Bomb
We
usually eat promptly at 11:30 A.M., but for some reason today
we decided to eat later and instead use the time to contact
the Santa Monica police and let them know about three steps,
one bow. We pulled into the police parking lot, got out,
and closed the door. As the door closed…Boom!
There was an explosion and I saw the curtains shake. We
looked inside. Orange juice was dripping and running all
over and the half gallon glass bottle it came in was scattered
about the van in jagged hunks and splinters.
The
bottle was in a box we always set right between us when eating
and the time of the explosion? We looked at Heng Sure’s
watch. 11:32 A.M. The force of the explosion and
the glass projectiles would have left two bloody bhishus or
taken something more serious like an eye or major artery.
Tonight
our Verse of Admonishment will have a special reality to it:
The
day has already passed, life is shorter. Like fish in
an evaporating pond what joy is there in this? Great assembly:
take heed, be vigorous. As if your head depended on it.
Be mindful of impermanence and never lax for an instant.
The
Flies Get in
During
certain weeks of the hot, muggy dog-days of summer in Wisconsin
the flies and mosquitoes get pretty thick. Screen doors
and windows are essential. But they are useless if left
open. Running in and out all day and night, we kids were pretty
thoughtless of cause of effect and so always left the door and
windows open. My mother would yell, “Close the door
behind you or the flies will get in.” We never listened.
At night harassed by all manner of bugs and sometimes bats,
we would holler and cry. All my mother would say is “Not
much good closing the barn door after the horse is gone.”
Yesterday
afternoon I couldn’t seem to keep my doors closed.
All my energy and concentration was going out mostly at one
particular gigantic billboard with an attractive woman serving
a cool drink. This is what’s known as outflows (letting
your light leek out, moving away from the Buddha nature within).
So I said, “You got to stop this. For this next
hour all you are going to look t is the back of Heng Sure’s
shoes. This is it. Plug your leek. Shut the door.”
I
was good for awhile and then without even noticing caught myself
looking at the billboard again. Right at that moment a
car pulled alongside with one of the meanest, baddest men in
it I’ve run across. He was carved and tattooed on
his face and sneering a sick smile. The door left open,
the flies were in. My stomach tried to hide and right
then I understood the principle my mother tried to get across:
what you create you must endure; leave your doors open and you
are vulnerable to the outside. Live by the Way and there’s
no hole for death to enter.
HENG
SURE:
June
3, 1977
Upasika: “How long have you been with Shih Fu?”
Heng
Ch’au: “A year.”
Upasika:
“Only a year?”
Heng
Ch’au: “Time time.”
Upasika:
“You were with him before?”
Heng
Ch’au: “Sure. Lots. Weren’t
you? If I were really smart I wouldn’t have come
back this time, because I never would have left.”
Upasika:
“When I first came to Gold Mountain years ago with my
mother, I wasn’t too impressed, you know. Excuse
me for saying this, but it was so dark and there were all those
American people and I didn’t even see Shih Fu. My
mother just went in, bowed to the Buddhas and jetted back out
of there.”
Heng
Ch’au: “You know the saying, ‘False
outside, true inside’.”
Upasika:
“Right. So why won’t the Shih Fu advertise?
He’s such a great man, you know, and yet he’s always
telling us not to talk about him. How come so few people
know about Gold Mountain?”
Heng
Ch’au: “Basically it’s not Buddhism
to talk about personalities. If it were advertised like
that then everyone would come expecting to be entertained--climbing
on conditions--like going to a movie. In Buddhism you
have to really cultivate. ‘You yourself must walk
the path, the Buddhas only show the way’.”
Upasika:
“Well nobody will ever find it then.”
Heng
Ch’au: “You did. Besides, when you’ve
got the real thing, you don’t have to advertise it.
The people who really recognize you will come anyway.
It’s just a matter of time. We’ve only begun
Buddhism--the true Dharma--here in the West. But it’s
going to be here in this land for centuries. We’ve
got to start slowly and surely.
Upasika:
“How come you are eating so little?”
Heng
Ch’au: “It’s funny, but I want to eat
less because I want to bow more.”
Upsika:
“But if you don’t eat enough then you can’t
bow at all.”
Heng
Ch’au: “So the answer is to eat just enough
and bow just enough.”
I
see clearly that once you begin to cultivate and really do it,
the only thing that can sustain you, actually save you, is continued
vigorous cultivation. As soon as you let down or relax,
all the energy you have built up can go the wrong way.
In
the mornings I have to struggle to keep ahead of my new energy.
It wants to go the wrong way already. It is potent,
hard to resist, and requires a total dedication of will and
then constant, mindful effort to keep it from flowing out the
old channels. That would be a total loss, a tragedy, a
waster, and a situation of real danger.
I
just wish that my old habits were not so strongly burned in,
and I wish that I hadn’t shortened my life-span and taken
the deviant for the proper for so long. How can I avoid
it in the future? I vowed to cut it off in this life and
in all future lives. That will have to cover my early,
forgetful years when the bad habits begin. It must work!
This is too wrong!
The
good-timers breakfast club in the Country Chicken Café
in Santa Monica called the police on Heng Sure at 7:25 Friday
morning-told the police that there was a crazy loose who was
trying to climb buildings on Wilshire Boulevard. They
were disappointed when Officer Kaiser, and three squad cars
arrived, found everything in order, read his transit papers,
said good morning, and left.
On
The Edge
Feeling
grouchy and irritable. “Don’t touch me!”
“What do you mean, ‘get off the sidewalk’?”
It’s the old/new energy rising and Heng Ch’au and
I have to be alert every minute to keep it intact. We
hope that we don’t explode and waste it before it goes
where it is supposed to. Got to keep the work up but not
more than we can absorb or else it’s start-over-again
time. When we feel like this, the streets are an affliction
griddle--the roaring metal river is gritting, broiling to head
and hands, long and blinding, smoky with exhaust, fumes, dazzling
with reflected sun, and noisy with whistlers, honks, cat-calls,
stares.
I
remind myself that no one put me here but me myself. All
I have to do is stand up and walk away and I can have all the
sense pleasures there are in the world, without having to leave
my own condominium pool. Don’t be such a sap.
The
worst part is doing the form right and then losing your concentration
for one instant when a woman walks near you and you feel your
energy change involuntarily. You feel cheated, betrayed,
robbed of all your treasures. Oh, my, no, the Dharma is
not easy to master. Not at all.
Patience
is number one. Compassion, and vows to take them all across.
If thee were no self, who would there be to get angry?
Just grow up and work hard.
The
Mysterious Exploding Orange Juice
The
layperson brought two half gallons of Vita-Pakt orange juice
(from concentrate, no sugar added) for lunch “This should
hold you until Friday,” she said. “Forget
that one bottle. It’s fermented already.”
(Orange juice? Fermenting?) I took up the bottle,
shook it, and it gushed up all over my arm like orange soda
on a hot day. Son of a gun, carbonated orange juice.
Well, it didn’t start out that way. What makes it
fizz? I wondered.
Innocently
I capped the bottle and set it back in the box intending to
give it to the layperson to take back for a refund.
The
next afternoon we took the usual lunch hour and visited the
Santa Monica police to report in and check out. As we
got out of the van at 11:30 when we normally eat, there was
a “punt” “tinkle” sound and the side
curtains were suddenly wet. And orange. Heng Ch’au
had not even taken the key from the door he was locking, so
we opened the van to discover the force of the gaseous orange
juice had shattered the heavy glass half gallon container and
had sent shards and missiles of glass and spits of orange juice
all over the rear of the car. Had e eaten at the usual
time we would have been picking glass from our eyes for days.
HENG
CH’AU:
June
3, 1977
- During the last part of morning recitation this A.M.
during the visualization of the Patriarchs, I had my eyes closed.
It was very dark inside and out. In coming up from a bow
I “saw” a Buddha head rise like from behind a hill
or mound or something. But since it was so close it felt
like from behind and within, out of some place in me, as if
my heart were a shaded mound. From below and behind came
this glowing, bright head with a reddish golden hue around it.
A
Morning
False
thinking: Bowing along feeling tingling on top of my head
like a scurrying hub in a circle. The difference between
inside and outside is not a difference. It is false.
The thinking self creates barriers, separations, here and there,
inside and outside. Where is the Buddha? Where are
the demons and Bodhisattvas? The gods and ghosts?
Wherever “you” are. Nothing very spectacular
really. Your share, your light is the key to turning from
the dream to the source. “Being one substance with
everything is called compassion.” It is also real.
Does each cell of the body maintain its autonomy and “ego”?
Do air molecules discriminate a “me”? In a
very real, tangible, ultimate way, all is thus, the Buddha,
unbounded and one. The Avatamsaka Sutra is within like
the light, light the Buddha, and totally without. There
is no difference. Only the false thoughts create the illusion
of difference.
Literally
in every way imaginable and inconceivable all is just one and
the differences are masses and chains of false thoughts bobbing
and splashing the pond. The nature, the pond, needs to
be moved and splashed to create waves. The mind moves;
the waves follow. Stop splashing and the pond returns
to stillness. It takes work, effort to crate waves.
Like those paper weights with liquid and snowflakes inside.
You have to shake them to snow. As soon there’s
no movement there’s no more snow--stillness. The
physical sensation that accompanied this state: everything
was the same texture, consistency--sidewalk, air, me--all the
same; light and soft, round. Not pleasant or unpleasant
just easier to concentrate because of lack of contacts.
Every
day the sequence repeats. We see and feel the waves disturb
the pond about 5:30 A.M. or so--a couple of cars start, the
birds crescendo into peak chatter, dogs start barking, a backfire,
sirens, rush hour. Rush hour in Los Angeles is anywhere
from 7 A.M. to 9 P.M. “Coming into being”
and “dwelling.” The karma flows and shifts.
Old and new. Lots of room. By 5 or 6 P.M. “decay”
sets in and by 9 or 10 P.M. “stillness.” All
from the mind, from a single thought it turns and we, in turn,
are turned. Stop shaking and it all settles eventually,
clear and unmoving. “Thus, thus, eternally bright.”
“One
thought produced, the entire substance manifests.”
My fake thoughts are interrupted by two women and two kids (one
in arm) who have quietly fallen behind us bowing along. I glance
around. They are sincere and absorbed. No words
or even glances--just bowing. A few minutes later I look
again. Nothing. The streets empty for blocks.
Who were those people? Were they?
A
pickup truck passes. I hear a whizzing behind my head
and see something land in the grass of the empty lot we are
bowing next to. Just missed. I hear a snicker and
see a head crane out to see if he hit the target as the truck
speeds away.
An
upasaka drives up with some juice and bread for lunch.
We were low on food but wanted it that way to starve the diarrhea
and do a little purging.
A
whole bunch of women and children come up. The kids are
bearing arms and handful of fruit and carrots. Everyone
is bowing. The two women and two kids who bowed along
this A.M. are with them. The men in the Jaguar-Triumph
Sports Car showroom, whose main window this scene is taking
place in front of are staring in stunned silence--can’t
even find their smug grins at present. The group says
they are for “the unity of all paths.” They
live somewhere in the mountains nearby in a Sufi community.
They read the release. One says “My husband saw
two monks about 3 or years ago doing this. I remembered.
We are from Seattle.” After they finish reading
one says, “I hope your message touches many hearts.”
The
little one named Juniper Serra grins and says goodbye.
More food, goodness!
As
we are resting and waiting for lunch I hear this knocking on
the window and “Amito fwo, amito fwo.” It
is a upasika who lives in the area with a box full of food and
an offer to be available for anything while we are in her area.
Wants to do our laundry. “No thanks, we wash our
own.”
An
Afternoon in Santa Monica
A
yellow VW bug pulls up, “Hey brother, what order?”
Us:
“Buddhist monks.”
Man:
“Far out!” varoom.
Not
far enough. If we were a little farther out of our “selves”
then it would really be far out.
An
older lady with cane and dark glasses slowly strolls by, stops,
quickly rushes up. She tightly grasps my folded hands,
puts her face inches from mine and says “Faith in me,”
squeezes an extra to make the point and leave.
She
walks about 20 yards, stops, turns, and watches us intently.
Returning she zeroes in again and says in a heavy European accent,
“I’m a devout Catholic, but your prayer is beautiful.
My priest was in Asia and the taxi driver he was with asked
if my priest minded if he stopped and bowed. My priest
was very impressed. How many people think to humble themselves
to pray every day.” She was starting to crack a
little in voice and control. “I need your prayers.
Please help me. Pray for me.” (start to cry)
“And especially for my grandson, please.”
Me:
“Everything is ok. Don’t worry.”
Bowing
near the curb where there’s a Mercedes parked ahead with
the door open to the sidewalk. An older woman has her
legs stretched out to the walk smoking a cigarette. She
watches us surgically. She looks like Gabby Hayes only
with lipstick and no beard. Her voice matches. Tough
and gravely.
Woman:
“What order?”
Monk:
“Buddhist monk.”
Woman:
“You’re going to need a bath when you’re finished
with this.” (terse, jabbing, testing, cool.)
Monk:
“This is our bath.”
Woman:
pauses--a little softer, “Cleansing the soul.”
Monk:
“Right.” Smiles all around.
A
busy man, across between Karl and Groucho Marx dives between
us near a row of newspaper stands. He violently jerks
the door of each and then stabs his fingers into the coin return.
He’s carrying a briefcase and talking to himself.
As he walks away, he slaps three 13 cents stamps in my hand
and says, “There, 50 cents…”
Two
people are bowing behind us. They are young with beads
around their necks and grinning an unfathomable smile.
I give them a release and say, “I’m going back to
bow. There’s too much hate in the world. If
you have any questions, just ask.” The woman opens
her arms in a gesture of “We’re yours.”
Oh, no you’re not. I went back and started bowing.
A few minutes later I glanced around. They were gone.
“Nobody saves you but yourselves…”
Right
after, a careful of rowdy, loud boys pulled up and piled out.
They ran over and began mock bowing and ridiculing behind us.
We kept bowing. They left.
We
are getting near the ocean (8 blocks). It’s windy
and everything is slightly more raw, in flux, unpredictable.
The land ends and if you’re looking outside for answers
all you see is the sea…and yourself. The road becomes
a mirror.
A
woman with a cane stops us outside Fish & Chips.
Woman:
“What faith are you?”
Us:
“Buddhist monks..”
Woman;
“Oh, Buddhists. Where do you meet, on 7th Street?”
Us:
“Everywhere. Right now are meeting here.”
Woman:
“What does Buddhism teach?”
Us:
“Be compassionate. We are all one substance, one
family. Be more peaceful and stop knocking each
other around.”
Woman:
“Who is the Buddha?”
Us:
“All things have the Buddhanature. The ground we
are standing on, the ants, you, me--all are the Buddha.
All we need to do is wake up.”
Woman:
“Well now me, I’m of Jewish faith.”
Us:
“If you wake up then you’re a Buddha. If we
wake up then we’re Buddhas. It doesn’t matter
what faith.”
Woman:
“Well now my husband, you see he’s a rabbi…”
Us:
“ If he wakes up then he’s a Buddha.”
Woman:
laughing, “Ah, wonderful! I’ve always wondered,
wanted to know what he really was. Have a good pilgrimage.”
Us:
“You, too.”
Young
woman: “Beautiful!”
Passing
care: “Are you weirdoes still bowing? God!”
Older
woman: “Pray for my wrists. Both my wrists
are sprained. I know they’ll get better if you pray
for them.”
From
across the street, “Hey, they’re disappearing.”
Don’t we wish “we” were disappearing.
That’s it in a sentence.
“Hello,
God.” from a passing car. That’s not it in
a sentence.
The
Last of the 9th
In
cultivation, unlike baseball games, there are no innings.
You are always at bat, always fielding. Try to turn your
cultivation into a game and it quickly falls apart. Rained
out.
It
was the end of the day, Friday on Wilshire Boulevard.
Santa Monica. Because of diarrhea stops we had “lost
time” bowing. (1st mistake--cultivation is qualitative,
a constant state of mind, even with diarrhea. Cultivation
isn’t just bowing, it’s sleeping, eating, and resting--no
loose ends. No dugouts. I was physically exhausted.
Fighting cramping and more diarrhea. My whole body was
aching and I had a sunburned bald head. Moreover an unusually
large number of people had engaged us today and some were pretty
needy, draining.
So
when Heng Sure suggested we do some extra time I agreed.
(2nd mistake--don’t force cultivation. Can’t
make corn grow faster by pulling it up from the tops.
Force it and it breaks.) There are really no goals in
cultivation. Seeking a goal is just seeking obstacles
to “true letting go.” It is an attachment.
Accord with conditions but don’t change (i.e. be mindful
at all times, without false thought); do not change but accord
with conditions (i.e. don’t force your way, yielding properly
timed is an advance). At Gold Mountain it’s said
“Don’t go too fast or too slow and you’ll
get there right on time.”
So
when a lady got out of her Cadillac at a gas station and came
striding over I was pushing and forcing, false thinking, “This
is the last of the 9th. If I can make it through, put
out one more burst, then I can relax. The game will be
over.” She was hostile, antagonistic, and articulate.
I ducked, smiled, and let the bad pitch pass. Then I swung
at a wild pitch. Woman:
“Well
I don’t see why you have to show off like this, making
a public display of yourselves on Wilshire Boulevard.
Buddhism is getting off to a bad start in America as far as
I’m concerned.”
Me:
“Well what you see is what you get. If that’s
all you want to look at…” (3rd mistake--gas
tossed on the flames.) She fumed and got indignant and
launched into a lecture about the humble monks she saw in India.
When she cooled a little I slipped away.
Realizing
I had made an error--shouldn’t make people angry; don’t
fight and contend--I felt vulnerable and ashamed. I thought
if I could have another chance to correct, compensate then I
could end the day on a good note. (4th mistake--think ahead,
looking behind, one can’t see now.) So when a Mercedes
pulls up and asks the same questions, “Why don’t
you do it in your back yard? Why do you have to make a
spectacle of yourselves? Do it in your church.”
I
answered, “Well, we don’t want to make a show.
We just took the most direct route to our destination.
Besides this is our church, our home. It’s all we
have.” Being so eager to compensate for the last
strike with the woman, I overlooked the fact that this man was
drunk or drugged, smoking, and wouldn’t even get out of
his car to talk. In short I should have ignored him.
(Strike two: 5th mistake.) The conversation went
nowhere.
The
day’s bowing ended, we transferred the merit but all I
could think about was what a mess I had made (strike three:
6th mistake--indulging in “self”.) Game over.
No runs, no hits, 6 errors, some karma left to face. Oh
well, there’s always…now.
HENG
SURE:
June
4, 1977
- This is the last bow of the first day of the rest of
your life. No…uh, that’s…this is the
first bow of the only day to last the rest of your life.
Today
after lunch I felt totally here for the first time. It
has always taken me time to adjust when traveling. Very
slow, like mud, it takes a while, but today I arrived.
Felt all here and relaxed, ready to go to work. The trip
has really begun and tomorrow the Abbot comes to start us all
over again.
There
is a constant low-key fear in our bodies. We can function,
our minds would stay loose, but deep in the spinal muscles,
in Heng Ch’au’s shoulders and in Heng Sure’s
guts there is tension. Actually it’s all in the
mind, natch, but it shows up in the deep parts.
On
one hand you could call it really dull and uneventful, slight
fuzzy, occasionally impure, occasionally clear and tranquil.
On the other hand you could call it the mellow, even, state
of mind of a Gold Mountain cultivator. Not many hassles,
not many highs. The frequency range, if I were a radio goes
from 850 to 920, highest in the early AM, just before lunch,
and past 4 PM. Lowest just after lunch and from 3 to 4
PM and just before bed.
Someone
who looks for thrills and space-outs would probably feel unsatisfied.
It’s too constant, back-burner on medium heat day and
night and day.
Something
in that pot will be cooled though, by and by, sure as sure can
be.
The
job now is to keep the kitchen clean, watch the post, adjust
the flame, tend the fire, thank the cook, and patiently wait.
I
can see the beach for the first time. Nearing the end
of the trip’s first leg. Fought a bout with fear
this morning during the first hour. A test to try to move
me using my old weak bowels habit. I got the boiling guts
urge all of a sudden and it was hot and fearful. I was
full of fears--the streets threatened this and that…I
was ready for it and recognized it as a state, a test, because
I had been feeling fine up to that time.
I
wanted to bow more than I wanted to find a bathroom. So after
struggling inside to overcome the fear with logic and reason,
blank-outs, and low-energy coercion, I gave up and yielded.
I said, “I don’t care what guts full of acid, I
kept on bowing. After making this resolve, my wandering
eyes found my nose and rested there, concentrating. Suddenly
it all changed. My whole state fell into order.
The test was over. My breath caught up and returned, my
shoulders relaxed, my energy fell to where it should be.
Everything relaxed, straightened, and breathed. Control
your eyes. Bow!
HENG
CH’AU:
June
4, 1977
- Liberated two tiny frogs trapped in an empty casting
pool in the park this AM while we were doing t’ai chi.
Heng Sure gave them the refuge ceremony and away they hopped,
with the hope that they will come back as Bodhisattvas and cross
over countless living being. We were going to Gold Wheel this
AM. End of Wilshire.
HENG
CH’AU:
June
5, 1977
- Slept as Gold Wheel last night and cleaned up.
Really dirty. So good to see Shih Fu and the Sangha again.
Family.
Returning
the Light Within
Received
some criticism about sense of superiority and lack of humility
in our letters. In looking over the last month’s
essays and entries in my heart I find some truth in that.
It’s too easy for me to float away, leave the ground.
This helps to see things as empty and break attachments but
hinders compassion and humility which I equally feel--the need
to cultivate. The aloofness is partly to defend and stay
on guard to dangerous people and situations and partly because
the very act of slowly bowing and meditating in the midst of
mundane activity we easily settle into a kind of invisibility
and separateness, but there’s more to it than that.
The
criticism of things I’ve seen was coming from an awakening
perspective that there is an alternative, another way to deal
with suffering, freedom, and birth and death. That alternative
is within and Buddhism offers another way to discover it.
I dwelled upon criticism and didn’t say enough about the
compassion, giving, and kindness I’ve seen. So what
I recorded became lopsided and critical.
Yet
underneath and through all this I was hurting and feeling the
suffering within all these places and of all these people.
It was from a wish to end my own and other’s suffering
that I came to Buddhism. Perhaps that doesn’t come
across because I stiffen and distance my heart from the inconceivable
agony of what I see and feel. The hardness and intolerance
with which I look at and criticize myself, my weaknesses, laziness,
and stupidity lacks humor, especially self-humor. It also
is cold and looks at the negative a lot. If I am not that
way I have found I can easily slither out of changing my bad
habits, let myself off the hook too easily and end up repeating
mistakes. My ego is strong and keeps finding new guises
and ways to show its ugly face. I have to keep on it constantly.
All
of this is to say that I often end up generalizing this hardness
and distancing to others which can come across as superiority,
lack of humility, and arrogance. To stop my own suffering
and afflictions I need to be relentless, uncompromising, critical,
and impersonal, I have discovered. Since I am so easily
and deeply empathetic with others, I have talked about and written
about their lives and problems from that stance and perspective.
But now that it’s been pointed out to me, I realize
that 1) maybe I don’t really know what they are going
through or are like 2) to be hard on yourself is ok but don’t
lay that on others unless they want it. You chose it,
let others choose, too. 3) other people may learn and
change and grow differently than me-more easily. Mine
is surely an extraordinarily large ego to contend with.
4) I’m hard on myself because I too easily indulge and
feel sorry for myself. Sink into the Pices blues, wallow.
I need to be kicked, prodded, own. What I share with others
really is the struggle and desire to end suffering, be joyous
and light and truly enlightened and peaceful. It’s this
which I ought to project rather than my faults and ways of contending
with my “self.”
Summarize:
Be hard on yourself; compassionate and soft in criticism of
others. Emphasize the light, the positive, the proper.
Make bridges, alternatives to greed, hatred, and stupidity.
You are not a teacher. If you were an enlightened teacher
and these people were your disciples then scolding, prodding,
severe criticism, etc. has a place but I don’t know anything
of that. Most important, don’t be arrogant, forgetting
that you are able to see and know only because you yourself
have just recently begun to “reverse” it and only
because you receive countless others’ patience, compassion,
and teaching. This is being Bodhisattva--to truly help
others, to repay your parents and teachers (numberless), to
transform and cross over with empathy. Don’t be
distant and pull away from it. Doing that is just small
vehicle--“save myself--everyone for himself.”
I resolve to eliminate all arrogance and “self”
from body, mouth, and mind and writing and replace them with
compassion and gratitude.
Excerpts
- "Three Steps, One Bow" journals
With
One Heart, Bowing to the City of 10,000 Buddhas
Records of Heng Sure & Heng Ch’au Bowing
Part - #1,
#2, #3
"
Three Steps, One Bow" -- Photo
Album
- Highway Dharma Letters -
To Order > Click Here
From 1977 to 1979 American Buddhist monks Heng Sure and Heng Chau undertook the ancient ascetic practice of bowing once every three steps on a two and a half year pilgrimage up the coast of California. They took with them only their faith and a wish for world peace as the inched their way from Los Angeles to the newly established City of Ten Thousand Buddhas in Mendicino County. Traveling about a mile a day, they bowed, studied, and wrote letters chronicling their experiences to their teacher, Tripitaka Master Hsuan Hua.
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