San Francisco Zen Meditation
  • Home
  • About Us
  • FAQs
  • Calendar
  • Koans
  • Zen Teachers
  • Zen Reading
  • Dharma Talks
  • Contact
  • Blog
  • Thanks
Making Sausage 04/28/2010
0 Comments
 
Tonight's game was called "Making Sausage".   The koan to which it will be keyed is "Go straight down a narrow mountain road with 99 curves".  The saying from which I get the title is  "no one likes to see how sausage is made".  Well, the path of zen has been a lot messier than I honestly anticipated- so I find this saying liberating...and I really like sausage. 

The experiment was run like this--- sitting zazen, the koan was spoken into the room.  After some time,  I asked people to pay attention to how the koan is affecting them.  How their mind works with it, how it works with their mind, how their body responds, how their heart responds, what parts are being answered by "them", and what parts are being worked on outside that identity.  Are they bored? Angry? Peaceful?  Does the koan lie there, does it find them?  Does it resurface? After we ring the bell, we were invited to share our process and also what we noticed about the path. 

As usual, it was unusual, and unexpectedly great. 

A: Noted how she noticed separate reactions, one she felt was false, another true, or deeper.  She mentioned how her experience with the koan was dream-like, noticing twisting-ness in her body and following its many curves. 

B: Talked about how the koan was, for him, a visual representation.  A series of curves, bisected by a straight line.  How that image kept resurfacing from the murk and rising to the top.  He also discussed how visceral the experience was.  How he could feel the rocks under foot and the breeze passing by.  He mentioned how this process is something familiar, that it leads him in his art, a certain honesty in the curving road through a project.

C:  Told how his experience was one where he could feel his tormentor- the koan author, drafting a cunning trap.  He noticed how he approached it cautiously, aware of the seeming paradox, and waiting for the snap. 

He also shared the fear, he said, that awaits with this koan, and has since he first worked on it.  Confounding the mind to set the body free. 

D: Talked about how she worked with a koan exactly like she engaged life.  There was commentary, the desire to share insights, practicing responses.  There was  that experience of following a sock in a dryer, watching it disappear, and reappear amongst the spinning chaos of thoughts.  There was a sense of trying it on. 

What did we notice about the koan itself?  That we were home, that we were going easy down a hill, not up, that like a strip of colored paper, it was continuous with no mistakes. 

Chris Wilson later spoke on the process of zen, and of the art of mistake making.  His talk can be found on the dharma talk page.

The cool thing for me about tonight, is noticing how it seems there is no one straight path.  That everyone works on koans differently, and everyone works on koans the same, and no matter how far away from the path I feel I am, I am probably going straight on a path with 99 curves. 

And, like the pig says, t-t-t-thats all folks. 




 


Comments




Leave a Reply

    Author(s)

    This blog collects the poorly edited ramblings of urban zen students, finding the teacher underfoot.  We will type until someone tells us to stop.  We hope you learn from our mistakes

    Get posts as they are published:

    RSS Feed

    Archives

    January 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    October 2011
    June 2011
    May 2011
    April 2011
    March 2011
    February 2011
    January 2011
    December 2010
    November 2010
    October 2010
    September 2010
    August 2010
    July 2010
    June 2010
    May 2010
    April 2010
    March 2010
    February 2010
    January 2010
    December 2009
    November 2009
    October 2009

    Categories

    All

    What We Read

    Shoshin
    Zenosaurus
    Eugene Koan Blog
    A Zen Jesuit's Blog
    Christian Koans

Create a free website with Weebly