4. The Third Step in the Mental Training. To be the
lord of mind is more essential to Enlightenment, which, in a sense, is the
clearing away of illusions, the putting out of mean desires and passions, and
the awakening of the innermost wisdom. He alone can attain to real happiness
who has perfect control over his passions tending to disturb the equilibrium of
his mind. Such passions as anger, hatred, jealousy, sorrow, worry, grudge, and
fear always untune one's mood and break the harmony of one's mind. They poison
one's body, not in a figurative, but in a literal sense of the word. Obnoxious
passions once aroused never fail to bring about the physiological change in the
nerves, in the organs, and eventually in the whole constitution, and
leave those injurious impressions that make one more liable to passions of
similar nature.
We do not mean, however, that we ought to be cold and passionless, as the
most ancient Hinayanists were used to be. Such an attitude has been blamed by
Zen masters. "What is the best way of living for us monks?" asked a
monk to Yun Kü (Un-go), who replied: "You had better live among
mountains." Then the monk bowed politely to the teacher, who questioned:
"How did you understand me?" "Monks, as I understood,"
answered the man, "ought to keep their hearts as immovable as mountains,
not being moved either by good or by evil, either by birth or by death, either
by prosperity or by adversity." Hereupon Yun Kü struck the monk with his
stick and said: "You forsake the Way of the old sages, and will bring my
followers to perdition!" Then, turning to another monk, inquired:
"How did you understand me?" "Monks, as I understand,"
replied the man, "ought to shut their eyes to attractive sights and close
their ears to musical notes." "You, too," exclaimed Yun Ka,
"forsake the Way of the old sages, and will bring my followers to
perdition!" An old woman, to quote another example repeatedly told by Zen
masters, used to give food and clothing to a monk for a score of years. One day
she instructed a young girl to embrace and ask him: "How do you feel
now?" "A lifeless tree," replied the monk coolly, "stands
on cold rock. There is no warmth, as if in the coldest season of the
year." The matron, being told of this, observed: "Oh that I have made
offerings to such a vulgar fellow for twenty years!" She forced the monk
to leave the temple and reduced it to ashes.1
If you want to secure Dhyana, let go of your anxieties and failures in the
past; let bygones be bygones; cast aside enmity, shame, and trouble, never
admit them into
your brain; let pass the imagination and anticipation of future hardships
and sufferings; let go of all your annoyances, vexations, doubts, melancholies,
that impede your speed in the race of the struggle for existence. As the miser
sets his heart on worthless dross and accumulates it, so an unenlightened
person clings to worthless mental dross and spiritual rubbish, and makes his
mind a dust-heap. Some people constantly dwell on the minute details of their
unfortunate circumstances, to make themselves more unfortunate than they really
are; some go over and over again the symptoms of their disease to think
themselves into serious illness; and some actually bring evils on them by
having them constantly in view and waiting for them. A man asked Poh Chang
(Hyaku-jo): "How shall I learn the Law?" "Eat when you are
hungry," replied the teacher; " sleep when you are tired. People do
not simply eat at table, but think of hundreds of things; they do not simply
sleep in bed, but think of thousands of things."1
A ridiculous thing it is, in fact, that man or woman, endowed with the same
nature as Buddha's, born the lord of all material objects, is ever upset by petty
cares, haunted by the fearful phantoms of his or her own creation, and burning
up his or her energy in a fit of passion, wasting his or her vitality for the
sake of foolish or insignificant things.
It is a man who can keep the balance of his mind under any circumstances,
who can be calm and serene in the hottest strife of life, that is worthy of
success, reward, respect, and reputation, for he is the master of men. It was
at the age of forty-seven that Wang Yang Ming2
(O-yo-mei) won a splendid victory over the rebel army which threatened the throne
of the Ming dynasty. During that warfare Wang was giving a course of lectures
to a number of students at the headquarters of the army, of which he was the
Commander-in-chief. At the very outset of the battle a messenger brought him
the news of defeat of the foremost ranks. All the students were terror-stricken
and grew pale at the unfortunate tidings, but the teacher was not a whit
disturbed by it. Some time after another messenger brought in the news of
complete rout of the enemy. All the students, enraptured, stood up and cheered,
but he was as cool as before, and did not break off lecturing. Thus the
practiser of Zen has so perfect control over his heart that he can keep
presence of mind under an impending danger, even in the presence of death itself.
It was at the age of twenty-three that Haku-in got on board a boat bound for
the Eastern Provinces, which met with a tempest and was almost wrecked. All the
passengers were laid low with fear and fatigue, but Haku-in enjoyed a quiet
sleep during the storm, as if he were lying on a comfortable bed. It was in the
fifth of Mei-ji era that Doku-on; lived for some time in the city of Tokyo,
whom some Christian zealots attempted to murder. One day he met with a few
young men equipped with swords at the gate of his temple. "We want to see
Doku-on; go and tell him," said they to the priest. "I am
Doku-on," replied he calmly, "whom you want to see, gentlemen. What
can I do for you?" "We have come to ask you a favour; we are Christians;
we want your hoary head." So saying they were ready to attack him, who,
smiling, replied: "All right, gentlemen. Behead me forthwith, if you
please." Surprised by this unexpected boldness on the part of the priest,
they turned back without harming even a hair of the old Buddhist.1
These teachers could through long practice constantly keep their minds
buoyant, casting aside useless encumbrances of idle thoughts; bright, driving
off the dark cloud of melancholy; tranquil, putting down turbulent waves of
passion; pure, cleaning away the dust and ashes of illusion; and serene,
brushing off the cobwebs of doubt and fear. The only means of securing all this
is to realize the conscious union with the Universal Life through the
Enlightened Consciousness, which can be awakened by dint of Dhyana.
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