DHARMA TALK ON ONE MIND
by Bassui Tokusho Zenji
If you would free yourself of the sufferings of the Six Realms, you must learn
the direct way to become a Buddha. This way is no other than the realization of
your own Mind. Now what is this Mind? It is the true nature of all sentient
beings, that which existed before our parents were born and hence before our own
birth, and which presently exists, unchangeable and eternal. So it is called
one's Face before one's parents were born. This Mind is intrinsically pure. When
we are born it is not newly created, and when we die it does not perish. It has
no distinction of male or female, not has it any coloration of good or bad. It
cannot be compared with anything, so it is called Buddha-nature. Yet countless
thoughts issue from this Self-nature as waves arise in the ocean or as images
are reflected in a mirror.
If you want to realize your own Mind, you must first of all look into the source
from which thoughts flow. Sleeping and working, standing and sitting, profoundly
ask yourself, "What is my own Mind?" with an intense yearning to
resolve this question. This is called "training" or
"practice" or "desire for truth" or "thirst for
realization." What is termed Zazen is no more than looking into one's own
mind. It is better to search your own mind devotedly than to read and recite
innumerable sutras and dharani every day for countless years. Such endeavors,
which are but formalities, produce some merit, but this merit expires and again
you must experience the suffering of the Three Evil Paths. Because searching
one's own mind leads ultimately to enlightenment, this practice is a
prerequisite to becoming a Buddha. No matter whether you have committed either
the ten evil deeds or the five deadly sins, still if you turn back your mind and
enlighten yourself, you are a Buddha instantly. But do not commit sins and
expect to be saved by enlightenment [from the effects of your own actions.
Neither enlightenment] nor a Buddha nor a Patriarch can save a person who,
deluding himself, goes down evil ways.
Imagine a child sleeping next to its parents and dreaming it is being beaten or
is painfully sick. The parents cannot help the child no matter how much it
suffers, for no one can enter the dreaming mind of another. If the child could
awaken itself, it could be freed of this suffering automatically. In the same
way, one who realizes that his own Mind is Buddha frees himself instantly from
the sufferings arising from [ignorance of the law of] ceaseless change of
birth-and-death. If a Buddha could prevent it, do you think he would allow even
one sentient being to fall into hell? Without Self-Realization one cannot
understand such things as these.
What kind of master is it that this very moment sees colors with the eyes and
hears voices with the ears, that now raises the hands and moves the feet? We
know these are functions of our own mind, but no one knows precisely how they
are performed. It may be asserted that behind these actions there is no entity,
yet it is obvious they are being performed spontaneously. Conversely, it may be
maintained that these are the acts of some entity; still the entity is
invisible. If one regards this question as unfathomable, all attempts to reason
[out an answer] will cease and one will be at a loss to know what to do. In this
propitious state deepen and deepen the yearning, tirelessly, to the extreme.
When the profound questioning penetrates to the very bottom, and that bottom is
broken open, not the slightest doubt will remain that your own Mind is itself
Buddha, the Void-universe. There will then be no anxiety about life or death, no
truth to search for.
In a dream you may stray and lose your way home. You ask someone to show you how
to return or you pray to God or Buddhas to help you, but still you can't get
home. Once you rouse yourself from your dream-state, however, you find that you
are in your own bed and realize that the only way you could have gotten home was
to awaken yourself. This (kind of spiritual awakening] is called "return to
the origin" or "rebirth in paradise." It is the kind of inner
realization that can be achieved with some training. Virtually all who like
Zazen and make an effort in practice, be they laymen or monks, can experience to
this degree. But even such [partial] awakening cannot be attained except through
the practice of Zazen. You would be making a serious error, however, were you to
assume that this was true enlightenment in which there is no doubt about the
nature of reality. You would be like a man who having found copper gives up the
desire for gold.
Upon such realization question yourself even more intensely in this wise:
"My body is like a phantom, like bubbles on a stream. My mind, looking into
itself, is as formless as empty-space, yet somewhere within sounds are
perceived. Who is hearing?" Should you question yourself in this wise with
profound absorption, never slackening the intensity of your effort, your
rational mind eventually will exhaust itself and only questioning at the deepest
level will remain. Finally you will lose awareness of your own body. Your
long-held conceptions and notions will perish, after absolute questioning, in
the way that every drop of water vanishes from a tub broken open at the bottom,
and perfect enlightenment will follow like flowers suddenly blooming on withered
trees.
With such realization you achieve true emancipation. But even now repeatedly
cast off what has been realized, turning back to the subject that realizes, that
is, to the root bottom, and resolutely go on. Your Self-nature will then grow
brighter and more transparent as your delusive feelings perish, like a gem
gaining luster under repeated polishing, until at last it positively illumines
the entire universe. Don't doubt this! Should your yearning be too weak to lead
you to this state in your present lifetime, you will undoubtedly gain
Self-realization easily in the next, provided you are still engaged in this
questioning at death, just as yesterday's work half done was finished easily
today.
While you are doing Zazen neither despise nor cherish the thoughts that arise;
only search your own mind, the very source of these thoughts. You must
understand that anything appearing in your consciousness or seen by your eyes is
an illusion, of no enduring reality. Hence you should neither fear nor be
fascinated by such phenomena. If you keep your mind as empty as space, unstained
by extraneous matters, no evil spirits can disturb you even on your deathbed.
While engaged in Zazen, however, keep none of this counsel in mind. You must
only become the question "What is this Mind?" or "What is it that
hears these sounds?" When you realize this Mind you will know that it is
the very source of all Buddhas and sentient beings. The Bodhisattva Kannon is so
called because he attained enlightenment by perceiving -i.e., grasping the
source of the sounds of the world about him.
At work, at rest, never stop trying to realize who it is that hears. Even though
your questioning becomes almost unconscious, you won't find the one who hears,
and all your efforts will come to naught. Yet sounds can be heard, so question
yourself to an even profounder level. At last every vestige of self-awareness
will disappear and you will feel like a cloudless sky. Within yourself you will
find no "I," nor will you discover anyone who hears. This Mind is like
the void, yet it hasn't a single spot that can be called empty. This state is
often mistaken for Self-realization. But continue to ask yourself even more
intensely, "Now who is it that hears?" If you bore and bore into this
question, oblivious to anything else; even this feeling of voidness will vanish
and you will be unaware of anything-total darkness will prevail. [Don't stop
here, but] keep asking with all your strength, "What is it that
hears?" Only when you have completely exhausted the questioning will the
question burst; now you will feel like a man come back from the dead. This is
true realization. You will see the Buddhas of all the universes face to face and
the Patriarchs past and present. Test yourself with this koan: "A monk
asked Joshu: 'What is the meaning of Bodhidharma's coming to China?' Joshu
replied: 'The oak tree in the garden.' " Should this koan leave you with
the slightest doubt, you need to resume questioning, "What is it that
hears?"
If you don't come to realization in this present life, when will you? Once you
have died you won't be able to avoid a long period of suffering in the Three
Evil Paths. What is obstructing realization? Nothing but your own half-hearted
desire for truth. Think of this and exert yourself to the utmost.