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Questions & Answers [HOW TO DEAL WITH FANTASIES ] [HOW TO DECREASE ONE’S WORRIES] [MY DISCIPLES SHOULD DEFEND AND PROPAGATE DHARMA] [Reciting the Diamond Sutra can Remove One’s Negative Karma] [No “Resistance” Results in Better Effect ] [Bearing Me in Your Mind, You Can Receive My Blessing] [“Wisdom Sees Through Agony” Is A Witty Way of Preaching] [The Invaluable Four Statements by Master Geng-Yun] [It Is Not Suitable to Publicly Ask Questions About Supernatural Perception] [The Mind of No-Thought Appears in a Flash] [Besides Implementing the Practice of Prajna, Do We Have to Do Sitting Meditation] [To Live with An-Hsiang Equates to Living by The Golden Means] [“Attempting to Empty One’s Mind” Is Not Right] [When I initially attained An-Hsiang, I could not fall asleep. What can I do?] [How to Strengthen Your Mentality] [How to Effectively Correspond to “The Method of No-Thought”] [The Meaning of “Removing Worries Results in More Worries; and Seeking for Reality is Evil”] [The Meditation Practice of the Sixth Patriarch Is Not Sitting Meditation] [The Meaning of “The Intention to Practice is an Illusive Attempt; To Hold onto it is not the Main Doctrine.] [The Meaning of “Following What One Sees and Get Lost in the Flow of Change”] ※HOW TO DEAL WITH FANTASIES ※HOW TO DECREASE ONE’S WORRIES Q: I have many worries. I wish to stop thinking of them, but I can’t. How should I practice to minimize these concerns in my mind? ※MY DISCIPLES SHOULD DEFEND AND PROPAGATE DHARMA ※Reciting the Diamond Sutra can Remove One’s Negative Karma ※No “Resistance” Results in Better Effect ※Bearing Me in Your Mind, You Can Receive My Blessing ※“Wisdom Sees Through Agony” Is A Witty Way of Preaching A: The Dharma is vivid, and he (the Sixth Patriarch) applied a witty way to preach it. How to interpret it? He talked to people in a way specific to what they were. He gave people the prescription that could cure their individual illness. ※The Invaluable Four Statements by Master Geng-Yun A: Your realization is superficial and shallow. The implication of my statements of“To shiver when resisting a chill; to sweat when struck by heat; to drink when feeling thirsty, and to eat when feeling hungry;” is much deeper than that of“The nature of which is dependently originated is empty; to me, that which is dependently originated is empty.” Though you have realized “the nature of which is dependently originated is empty; to me, that which is dependently originated is empty”, you have not yet seen the true nature, neither have you been liberated. Meanwhile, you are unable to attain the genuine view and the genuine perception. ※It Is Not Suitable to Publicly Ask Questions About Supernatural Perception A: Life is very short; therefore, what we can learn and know is very limited. Generally, people are living within the scope of general knowledge; however, doing practice is supernatural. Consequently, during the process of practice, many of your perceptions are supernatural. All our members here, please bear this in mind, the scenario similar to this should avoid publicity. At most, you can ask privately, but should not tell anyone; otherwise, it will be harmful to your personal practice. It is inevitable to go through this experience, and there are more to come in the future. Nevertheless, I hope that you do not become attached to this, namely, not to be excited, disgusted, worried or suspicious about it. Simply try to forget about it, and not take it seriously. In the long run, you will be enormously upgraded. ※The Mind of No-Thought Appears in a Flash Q: When I was reflecting on those Ch’an anecdotes and could not find answers, I often retreated for a while. Then, at that very moment, I confirmed the saying“the mind of no-thought appears in a flash, and that exactly comes from the original mind.” Please verify my realization. A: In fact, a flash equates to eternity. We should avoid discussing this kind of issues here. However, because you mentioned it, I am giving you an answer. If there are consecutive happenings afterwards, your realization is correct. If there is nothing happening after that, your realization is not incorrect either. The point is that you did not catch the “flash”. You should try hard to catch the “flash”, and try to digest that “flash”. Then, it is correct. This is the only way I can answer it. ※Besides Implementing the Practice of Prajna, Do We Have to Do Sitting Meditation Q: As the saying goes -“There are six Paramitas to take people to the other shore.” As we know, besides implementing the practice of prajna-paramita, there is also the paramita of meditation. Therefore, do we have to do the sitting meditation as well? A: I often make the comment, for those who have already possessed An-Hsiang, their practice of sitting meditation is likened to attaching an accelerator to a rocket. It makes one’s practice more efficient and helpful. With regards to people without An-Hsiang, sitting meditation can only train the strength of their minds, and be good for their health. However, they need instructors to guide their practice. One should not do sitting meditation by oneself, because one may encounter some states, physical response, or mental reflections that one does not know how to deal with. If there is no one there to guide at the moment, one may get into trouble. If people can maintain their An-Hsiang to practice sitting meditation, it will be likened to attaching an accelerator onto an ICBM ( inter-continental ballistic missile) or a space rocket, it will facilitate their practice to be better and quicker. Above all, it surely will not go wrong. The reason is that An-Hsiang equates to the genuine perception and the genuine view, and you can see clearly with the genuine view to avoid getting into trouble. Under these circumstances, sitting meditation is truly favorable. ※To Live with An-Hsiang Equates to Living by The Golden Means ※“Attempting to Empty One’s Mind” Is Not Right A: It is because you have made a mistake; namely, you always think of emptiness. Buddhism is not emptiness. If there is no realistic life, Buddhism definitely will not be needed. Buddhism grows root into the true reality, but not emptiness. What you need is An-Hsiang, but not emptiness. ※When I initially attained An-Hsiang, I could not fall asleep. What can I do? A: When you have reached the state of possessing An-Hsiang, you will feel like getting something new. It is also like a year one student who just gets a new and imported electrical toy, and he will be too excited to sleep. To a person who initially attains An-Hsiang, he will enjoy the drifting and drunken feeling and be unable to sleep. Why? Firstly, it is the joy of the Dharma, and secondly, it is the increasing strength of the living power. ※How to Strengthen Your Mentality Q: Is the inconsistency of the state of An-Hsiang caused by the neutral mind? During the process of practice, my focus has always been on and off. Is it because of the weakness of my mind power? Master instructed that “asceticism is not ultimate.” Is it possible that a practitioner will completely adapt himself to ascetic practice? How to effectively practice in a mobile environment? A: It is a good question, and I just gave you the answer. The “inconsistency of the state of An-Hsiang” is not caused by “the neutral mind.” “The neutral mind” refers to a mind which does not bear any cause or effect, nor good or evil. In other words, it is like being unconscious and asleep. “The neutral mind” is not the cause of mistake of our practice, and it is simply a kind of natural physiological phenomenon. The true mistakes of our practice are those mistakes I just mentioned. During the process of practice, the reason why you are always deviating from your focus is due to lack of mind power. People without mind power cannot achieve anything in the realistic world, let alone having practice. Look at those successful people. They, like the lotus painter Wang Mian and the inventor Thomas Edison, are all very determined. They were not forced to do their work; on the contrary, they regarded their work as their greatest amusement. People who enjoy doing what they are doing will always feel happy and become healthy. In addition, they will become very creative and brilliant. On the contrary, people who feel stressed, upset and resistant to their work will be deprived of their health, joy, wisdom and the glory of life, as their work becomes a kind of punishment to them. The critical point lies on how you deal with it. How to make us enjoy ourselves in working? Firstly, you need to acknowledge the fact that you are committing yourself to your responsibilities and obligations. Though you are busy and tired, you have a clear conscience and you are creating positive values. If you wish to gain ten million US dollars monthly without making any efforts but sleeping at home, you are creating negative values. If everyone has the same wish, the earth will definitely be destroyed and human beings will be starving to death. Is what I just said related to your question? It is a matter of whether you possess your magnetic nature. When we are filling in an application form for the personnel department, we always need to fill in the column of aptitude. What is aptitude about? It is about telling people what is magnetic to you. In other words, it shows people which arena attracts you most, and where you will definitely be successful. Picasso is a painter; therefore, art is attractive and magnetic to him. However, if you asked him to study computer, I am afraid he would have failed in doing so. In the same way, do you have good capacity for possessing the Dharma? It all depends on whether the Dharma or Ch’an is magnetic to you. Is the Dharma your sole interest in your life? Is it the most indispensable thing to you? You never give it up, and no one can take it away from you. If you have this kind of interest and passion, you naturally have the mind power to acquire Ch’an. Generally, most practitioners intend to gain without paying off, to harvest without cultivation, to succeed without making efforts, and these are all wrong concepts. In our life, bearing this kind of wrong concept in mind, you will surely make mistakes and become the person to be blamed, no matter what profession or business you are engaged with. We find those bank clerks, who steal money from banks, all expect to gain but not pay off, and to harvest without cultivation. You must not cultivate yourself in this way. You must work hard, and be interested in it. It should be amusement instead of restraint to you. If you feel practice is a kind of burden, you should quit as soon as possible because you will never succeed. The feeling of burden is that of resistance. Consequently, you will resist the Dharma. If you intend to “practice effectively in the states of activity”, in the Buddhist teachings there is a method called “the prolonged meditation”—by walking constantly without sitting or resting for days. Why doing so? It is for seeking one’s peaceful mind and the effective way to enlightenment. I believe many of you here had this experience: If your mind is in the state of An-Hsiang, it seems there is no one else while you are walking along the street. Meanwhile, you do not crash into a car, step into a ditch, or run down anyone. That is the “effective practice in the states of activity”. As long as you can maintain An-Hsiang in your mind, your practice is always effective no matter what activities you are engaged with. It is not only effective, but also relaxing. There is an old saying, “Whenever it is effective, it is relaxing.” This is my answer to your question. ※How to Effectively Correspond to “The Method of No-Thought” Q: The “Chapter on Wisdom” of the Platform Sutra states, “People who have realized the method of no-thought can realize all things, and can perceive the state of all Buddhas and reach the status of a Buddha as well.” Would you please tell me how to practice to achieve the above-mentioned status? A: The prime guideline of the Platform Sutra is “No-thought, No-form, and No-attachment”. The Diamond Sutra says, “One’s mind should not attach to anything.” The “Method of No-thought” is the core of the Dharma as well as the life of the Dharma. What is No-thought? Having a thought is equivalent to having no thought, because the Dharma is the truth that is non-dualistic. All conflicts are united into the realm of the Dharma. What does No-thought mean? It means having thoughts. How can having thoughts mean having no thought? Though there are thoughts in your mind, you are not attached to them. These thoughts are not generated from yourself. This kind of thought equates to no thought. It seems that you are having a thought; however, you are not attached to it. Now, you all sit in front of me, and you can clearly hear my talk. If you want to talk, you surely can talk. Nevertheless, when you do not talk and listen—let us hold for a moment—this is the original mind, the original state of mind. When you think with your original mind, the thought you have equates to no-thought. If you do not recognize the original state of mind (namely, you have not yet seen your true nature), every thought of yours sticks to your mind. To you, every thought is real and it contaminates your mind. When you have seen your true mind and can regularly maintain An-Hsiang, your thought would be like a piece of cloud in the sky. It is like being and not being there, and it does not disturb you at all. This is exactly “the true no-thought”. This is the state of all Buddhas. As far as all Buddhas are concerned, it does not mean that they do not have any thought; it means that they are not attached to any thought. Both being and non-being are united into the state of An-Hsiang, and only An-Hsiang can unite them. Some people make the statement that one can have no thought at all. Please do not miss out the statement from the Platform Sutra, “People who have no thought in their minds are virtually dead and will be reborn in some other places. To practice in this way is a great mistake.” It means that “a person without thoughts should mean that he is dead and has lost all his functions.” Therefore, having thoughts and no-thought are not two separate states. All that are separated into two violate the non-dualistic doctrine. You asked about “How to quickly correspond to the state of no-thought?” As we know, the greatest business takes time to achieve. The sprouts of beans grow quickly; the sprouts of soya beans grow slowly. But even the sprouts of beans need to take one week to grow. As far as the attainment of Buddahood is concerned, one needs to take three incalculable aeons to achieve it. Even having merits accumulated through lives and lives without regression, one will still take one hundred thousand years to achieve it. Nevertheless, the Buddha has a method out of compassion—people who have seen their true nature can become a Buddha. That is to say, when you see your true nature, you can immediately correspond to the state of no-thought. This is the quickest way. Moreover, I would like to talk about “What is meant by seeing the true nature?” The nature of water is being humid, no matter it is in the form of steam, liquid or solid. Water as H2O can never be changed, neither its nature of being humid. The nature of fire is being hot. Whether the fire is 200 degree or ten thousand degree as the surface of the sun, it is always hot. Fire cannot be called fire if it is not hot; water cannot be called water if it is not humid. Then, with regards to the nature of life, what cannot be missed out? To see the true nature means you see the common attribute of life. Having seen the true nature, you need to acknowledge it and claim that it is your original self, the immortal self, the eternal self, the non-dualistic self and the self in which living beings and the Buddha are equal. If you can acknowledge it, it is your Dharmakaya. When you have seen it, you can sustain An-Hsiang in your mind in every second and constantly be in the state of no-thought. This is the quickest method. ※The Meaning of “Removing Worries Results in More Worries; and Seeking for Reality is Evil” Q: How to Explain “Removing worries results in more worries; seeking for reality is evil” from “A Poem on Perceiving the Way” written by Zhang-Zhuo of the Tang Dynasty? A: Why did Zhang-Zhuo write this stanza? It is because he had perceived the true nature and become enlightened. What is the state of being enlightened? It is the state of An-Hsiang. To a fully enlightened person, two things happen on him simultaneously: he acquires right view and right perception. In this, what is the state of the combination of right view and right perception? It is the state of An-Hsiang. To a person of An-Hsiang, the scenario of “Removing worries results in more worries” does not apply to him at all. It is because he has virtually nothing to worry about; so what is it to remove? With regards to “Seeking for reality is evil”, when one has already reached the reality, it is needless to keep searching for it. If he does, he would be psychotic. It is likened to someone looking for the horse that he is riding on. Zhang-Zhuo was a fully enlightened person, and he sustained An-Hsiang in every second. Speaking of “removing worries”, worries are unreal and have no substances. Originally there is no worry. There is no worry after all. Thus, what is it for him to remove? With regards to “seeking for reality”, An-Hsiang is the reality. [In Chinese] “Zhen-ru (reality as it is) is Ru-zhen (as the reality)”. [The word “Zhen” is enough to convey the meaning of reality], so why adding the word “ru” [which means “as” and can be extended to mean “like”]? It is because people who claim to have attained the reality actually only reach to about ninety percent of it. It is impossible for people to completely attain one hundred percent of the reality. Therefore, the word “ru” (“like”) is added. It is because when the Buddha was alive, he was in the state of “nirvana with remainder”. It is when he died and abandoned his body that he attained the “nirvana without remainder”. As human beings are still having their bodies, their skin bags, we add “ru” [meaning “like” and “not totally equivalent”] onto the truth they have attained. Zhang-Zhuo had attained the state that “there is no worry to remove and no reality to seek for”; therefore, he could claim so. If he had not been enlightened and claimed so, he would have been talking nonsense. ※The Meditation Practice of the Sixth Patriarch Is Not Sitting Meditation Q: In the “Chapter on Meditation Practice” of the Platform Sutra, it states that “The meditation practice of our School teaches that one does not attach to one’s mind, neither to purity or motionlessness.” May I ask how to interpret it? A: “The meditation practice of our School” refers to the meditation practice of the Sixth Patriarch. The Sixth Patriarch defined his meditation practice as “Ch’an means not attaching to external forms, namely, not to identity with the forms outside; and “stability means one’s internal mind is not disturbed”. He called this meditation practice, and therefore this is not sitting meditation. With regards to “meditation practice does not mean to be motionless”, it is likened to the state that “after having fully applied all your strength to fulfill your commitments, you do not feel losing any energy.” Yes, you have been busy for whole day; however, your An-Hsiang is still there without any change. An-Hsiang is Ch’an. Without An-Hsiang, there is no Ch’an. It is as simple as that. “Walking is Ch’an; Sitting is Ch’an”means that in walking, working, eating, sleeping, moving.... one is in the state of An-Hsiang; this is exactly the Ch’an that the Sixth Patriarch meant. The Ch’an has always been defined by the heretics and other schools as “sitting meditation”. Though the Ch’an School does not resist sitting meditation, it does not advocate sitting meditation either. It emphasizes the practice of one’s mind and “the transmission of mind” so as to receive An-Hsiang and maintain it. Therefore, the meditation practice of the Sixth Patriarch is different from that of the other schools. ※The Meaning of “The Intention to Practice is an Illusive Attempt; To Hold onto it is not the Main Doctrine. Q: The “Chapter on Opportunity and Condition” of the Platform Sutra states, “The three bodies are actually in me; the four wisdoms are manifestations of the original mind. The bodies and wisdoms interpenetrate with one another, and one lives flexibly with any change. The intention to practice is an illusive attempt; to hold onto it is not the main doctrine. It is the great master who teaches us all these wonderful ideas, and we can avoid being contaminated”. May I ask: it is stated that the intention to practice is illusive and to hold onto is not real; however, not to intend to practice and not to hold onto may let us fall into the state of indifference. How can we deal with this problem? A: The so-called “Practice” is a conditioned dharma. When there is a condition, there is formation. Formation brings deterioration. It can not avoid the phenomenon of formation, existence, deterioration and annihilation. With regards to Buddhahood, it can not be attained through “practice”. It does not ask you to add anything to it; on the contrary, it only requires you to give away the extra things you do not need. When you keep throwing away things that originally do not belong to you, it will come to the time when you have nothing more to throw away, and you are left with your original belonging. Your “original belonging” is “true”; because “the true” is “the original”. The truth is original. Consequently, what you finally possess is something that is true and original; it is not gained through practice. The outcome of any effort will eventually deteriorate, such as the Great Wall and the A-Fong Palace. They were built, and they will deteriorate. Nevertheless, Buddhahood is not the outcome of efforts; it is the revelation of the original mind and the recovery of one’s original state of mind. “To intend to practice”; what is it to practice about? When you have a thought of practice in your mind, the thought is a conditioned dharma. “To hold onto it”; what is it to hold onto? There is no need to hold onto anything; holding onto is attachment. If there is something to hold onto, there must be something to attach to. As a result, there are the two hindrances of principle and fact. It is likened to hold onto “the routines of reciting how many sutras a day, to kowtow how many times, to eat what sorts of vegetarian diets and how many precepts to abide by”. That is “holding onto”. The authentic practice has nothing to hold onto. Though we say there is nothing to hold onto, you still need to maintain it and monitor it at the beginning of your practice. What does “maintain” mean? It means to keep it and to trust it. What does “monitor” mean? It means to manage it and carry it. What to manage? It is to manage your mind. What to carry? It is to carry your An-Hsiang and not to lose it. There are the Cowherd diagrams drawn by Ch’an masters in the past, which is about the taming of cattle [representing the mind]. The way to tame cattle is just like taming horses in the western America. In the beginning, it is not obedient, nor attentive or cooperative, and it will run away at any time. After having been trained and modified for a certain period of time, it will gradually become stable and do not run away. Indeed, only when you reach the stage in which “you are An-Hsiang, and An-Hsiang is you,” that you can say “to hold onto it is not the main doctrine.” By that time it is not necessary to keep holding on anything. Statements of this kind are all made by people who have attained enlightenment; therefore, they may sound a little awkward to us. In fact, as long as you can keep and maintain An-Hsiang for a month, you will have intimate feeling to these statements. You will feel like these statements are spoken by yourself. ※The Meaning of “Following What One Sees and Get Lost in the Flow of Change” Q: The “Chapter on Opportunity and Condition” of the Platform Sutra states, “Views arise without reason, and one is attached to searching for Bodhi. Passion exists in a thought of enlightenment, and how can this thought transcend the state of illusion? One’s own nature is the source of awakening, but following what one sees enables one to get lost in the flow of change. If one cannot enter into the room of the Patriarch, one will be lost at both ends.” Please interpret the statement “following what one sees enables one to get lost in the flow of change.” A: “Following what one sees enables one to get lost in the flow of change” If you follow what you see and focus on the external objects and do not reflect on your own mind, you regard the external forms as real and become lost in the flow of change. The qualities of your Dharmakaya will be lost. “If one cannot enter into the room of the Patriarch, one will be lost at both ends.” “Both ends” refers to annihilation or permanence, success or failure, ordinary or sagely beings etc. etc. Nevertheless, “the room of the Patriarch” refers to that which is absolute, in which you cannot find anything dualistic. “The room of the Patriarch” is the non-dualistic truth. Once you enter into the non-dualistic truth, you are away from discrimination, duality, the two extremes and plurality. You will only live in the world of the original mind, which is free from any discrimination. |