5. Zazen, or the Sitting in Meditation.
Habit comes out of practice, and forms character by degrees, and eventually
works out destiny. Therefore we must practically sow optimism, and habitually
nourish it in order to reap the blissful fruit of Enlightenment. The sole means
of securing mental calmness is the practice of Zazen, or the sitting in
Meditation. This method was known in India as Yoga as early as the Upanisad
period, and developed by the followers of the Yoga system.2 But
Buddhists sharply distinguished Zazen from Yoga, and have the method peculiar
to themselves. Kei-zan3 describes the method to the following effect:
'Secure a quiet room neither extremely light nor extremely dark, neither very
warm nor very cold, a room, if you can, in the Buddhist temple located in a
beautiful mountainous district. You should not practise Zazen in a place where
a conflagration or a flood or robbers
may be likely to disturb you, nor should you sit in a place close by the sea
or drinking-shops or brothel-houses, or the houses of widows and of maidens or
buildings for music, nor should you live in close proximity to the place
frequented by kings, ministers, powerful statesmen, ambitious or insincere
persons. You must not sit in Meditation in a windy or very high place lest you
should get ill. Be sure not to let the wind or smoke get into your room, not to
expose it to rain and storm. Keep your room clean. Keep it not too light by day
nor too dark by night. Keep it warm in winter and cool in summer. Do not sit
leaning against a wall, or a chair, or a screen. You must not wear soiled
clothes or beautiful clothes, for the former are the cause of illness, while
the latter the cause of attachment. Avoid the Three Insufficiencies-that is to
say, insufficient clothes, insufficient food, and insufficient sleep. Abstain
from all sorts of uncooked or hard or spoiled or unclean food, and also from
very delicious dishes, because the former cause troubles in your alimentary
canal, while the latter cause you to covet after diet. Eat and drink just too
appease your hunger and thirst, never mind whether the food be tasty or not.
Take your meals regularly and punctually, and never sit in Meditation
immediately after any meal. Do not practise Dhyana soon after you have taken a
heavy dinner, lest you should get sick thereby. Sesame, barley, corn, potatoes,
milk, and the like are the best material for your food. Frequently wash your
eyes, face, hands, and feet, and keep them cool and clean.
'There are two postures in Zazen -- that is to say, the crossed-leg sitting,
and the half crossed-leg sitting. Seat yourself on a thick cushion, putting it
right under your haunch. Keep your body so erect that the tip of the nose and
the navel are in one perpendicular line, and both ears and shoulders are in the
same plane. Then place the right foot upon the left thigh, the left foot on the
right thigh, so as the legs come across each other. Next put your right hand with
the palm upward on the left foot, and your left hand on the right palm with the
tops of both the thumbs touching each other. This is the posture called the
crossed-leg sitting. You may simply place the left foot upon the right thigh,
the position of the hands being the same as in the cross-legged sitting. This
posture is named the half crossed-leg sitting.
'Do not shut your eyes, keep them always open during whole Meditation. Do
not breathe through the mouth; press your tongue against the roof of the mouth,
putting the upper lips and teeth together with the lower. Swell your abdomen so
as to hold the breath in the belly; breathe rhythmically through the nose,
keeping a measured time for inspiration and expiration. Count for some time
either the inspiring or the expiring breaths from one to ten, then beginning
with one again. Concentrate your attention on your breaths going in and out as
if you are the sentinel standing at the gate of the nostrils. If you do some
mistake in counting, or be forgetful of the breath, it is evident that your
mind is distracted.'
Chwang Tsz seems to have noticed that the harmony of breathing is typical of
the harmony of mind, since he says: " The true men of old did not dream
when they slept. Their breathing came deep and silently. The breathing of true
men comes (even) from his heels, while men generally breathe (only) from their
throats."1 At any rate, the counting of breaths is an expedient
for calming down of mind, and elaborate rules are given in the Zen Sutra,2
but Chinese and Japanese Zen masters do not lay so much stress on this point as
Indian teachers.
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