Zen: The Authentic Gate
By Yamada Koun
4.5/5
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About this ebook
Why practice Zen? What sets Zen apart from religion? What are its different practices?
These questions, and more, are examined and answered by Zen Master Koun Yamada, whose Dharma heirs include Robert Aitken, Ruben Habito, and David Loy. Through compelling stories and a systematic approach, he guides the reader through creating and sustaining a lifelong practice. Warm and ecumenical in tone, Koun uses the insights of Zen to bring a deeper understanding of faith.
Zen: The Authentic Gate is an easy-to-follow guide to creating an effortless and natural practice regardless of background, tradition, or religion.
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- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Kōun Yamada is an important voice in the landscape of Zen Buddhism as this story continues its unfolding in the West. He has played such an important role in pointing the way for familiar, contemporary practitioners such as Robert Aitkens, Philip Kapleau and Ruben Habito. This book is an invitation to explore the wisdom of a modern master.
Book preview
Zen - Yamada Koun
WHY PRACTICE ZEN?
WHAT SETS IT APART FROM RELIGION?
WHAT ARE ITS DIFFERENT PRACTICES?
These questions and more are examined and answered by Zen Master Kōun Yamada. Using compelling stories and a systematic approach, he guides the reader through creating and sustaining a lifelong practice. Warm and ecumenical in tone, he uses the insights of Zen to bring a deeper understanding of faith.
Zen is an easy-to-follow guide to creating an effortless and natural practice regardless of background, tradition, or religion.
Kōun Yamada (1907 — 89) became a Dharma successor to the renowned Zen master Haku’un Yasutani while maintaining a prominent career in business and public health. He guided the Zen practice of many students from various religions and backgrounds, and his successors include Robert Aitken, Ruben L. F. Habito, and David R. Loy.
Nowhere else have I encountered such a clear and comprehensive account of the Zen path.
— David R. Loy, from his foreword
An authoritative, convincing, and readable insider’s view of the path of awakening, by one of the great Zen masters of the twentieth century.
— Ruben L. F. Habito, author of Healing Breath
A welcome and dense primer that has much to offer novices as well as experienced practitioners.
— Publishers Weekly
Contents
Foreword by David R. Loy
Preface to the English Edition
Joan Rieck and Henry Shukman
Second Preface to the English Edition
Ryōun-ken Masamichi Yamada
Author’s Preface to the Japanese Edition
Kōun Yamada
ZEN: THE AUTHENTIC GATE
1.Suffering and Modern-Day Humanity
2.The Zen View
3.The Principle of Salvation in Zen Buddhism
4.The Three Great Aims of Zen
5.Types of Zen Practice
6.Koan Practice and Just Sitting
7.Finding an Authentic Teacher
8.Depth of Enlightenment
9.Cause and Effect as One
10.Deceptive Phenomena
11.Belief, Understanding, Practice, Realization, and Personalization
12.Eight Great Tenets of Mahayana Buddhism
13.On Private Interview
14.Three Necessary Conditions for Zen Practice
15.Zen Practice for People of Other Religions
16.The Actual Practice of Zazen
17.Practical Matters
Translator’s Afterword
Table of Japanese Names
Notes
Index
About the Author
Foreword
Ihope that readers will forgive some self-reference, because meeting Yamada Kōun Roshi literally changed my life.
In 1972 I was living in Honolulu, reading books about Buddhism and wondering about the experience called enlightenment. A friend learned that there was a small Zen center near the university, so one evening we went to check it out. During tea after zazen we were told that a Japanese Zen master was arriving the following weekend to lead a seven-day meditation retreat. We looked at each other. Cool! Could we come? Well, I think there are still a few places available …
Unfortunately — or was it fortunately? — neither of us knew what a sesshin was. Some zazen, presumably, but also enjoying tea with the master, perhaps, while discussing the nature of awakening?
It was the most difficult week of my life, yet also, in retrospect, the best. I still remember my reaction when Yamada Roshi appeared that first night, to formally open the retreat. He simply walked into the dojo and up to the altar, and I thought: if Zen practice makes someone like that, it’s for me. That thought helped me survive the next seven days.
Although we didn’t talk about it, others must have experienced something similar. It was easy enough for a philosophy major like myself to sit around discussing D. T. Suzuki and Alan Watts, but making the leap to serious practice — actually sitting on a cushion facing the wall for hours on end — required deeper motivation, and Yamada Roshi inspired it.
Soon after that first sesshin I discovered The Three Pillars of Zen, edited by Philip Kapleau, which offered a detailed description of the type of Zen that Yamada Roshi taught. It included introductory lectures on Zen practice by Yasutani Haku’un and transcriptions of private interviews (dokusan) with practitioners. It turned out that Yamada was Yasutani’s successor as spiritual leader of the Sanbō Kyōdan (now Sanbō Zen).
Most interesting, however, were the Contemporary Enlightenment Experiences
toward the back of the book. The first account was by Mr. K. Y., a Japanese businessman.
He was reading on a train when he came across something Dōgen wrote after his own awakening (quoting an early Chinese text): I came to realize clearly that mind is nothing other than rivers and mountains and the great wide earth, the sun and the moon and the stars.
Sleeping later that night, Mr. K. Y. suddenly awoke and that quotation flashed into his mind:
Then all at once I was struck as though by lightning, and the next instant heaven and earth crumbled and disappeared. Instantaneously, like surging waves, a tremendous delight welled up in me, a veritable hurricane of delight, as I laughed loudly and wildly: Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha! There’s no reasoning here, no reasoning at all! Ha, ha, ha!
The empty sky split into two, then opened its enormous mouth and began to laugh uproariously: Ha, ha, ha!
Mr. K. Y. was Mr. Kyōzō Yamada: Yamada Roshi.
In retrospect I appreciate how this celebrated example of a profound satori can also be problematic: such a dramatic story can encourage gaining ideas
and expectations that complicate one’s Zen path. Nevertheless, it remains an invaluable reminder that enlightenment is not some antiquated metaphor but a genuine possibility for us today. We are encouraged not to set our sights too low.
Eventually I left Hawaii but kept in contact with Yamada Roshi. After I had made some visits to his San’un Zendo in Japan he invited me to move to Kamakura and devote myself more single-mindedly to Zen practice, including koan study. Observing him at home, I was even more impressed. He was neither a monastic nor a temple priest but a layman with a family and a demanding job administering a private hospital (his wife Kazue was the head doctor).
They were a formidable team. They had torn down their home to make room for a zendo that could accommodate the increasing numbers of students who came to practice with him, many from overseas; later they added a second floor, again at their own expense. And he never asked for a penny from any of us: all he expected was serious commitment to Zen practice.
Even at an advanced age he maintained a punishing schedule: commuting all the way to Tokyo almost every day, and then usually offering dokusan to students after he returned in the evening. The only thing that ever slowed him down was his accident — a bad fall — during a trip to Kyoto, which left him bedridden until he died a year later.
Yamada Roshi remains for me the best example of a true bodhisattva, and I continue to be inspired by him as a model of how to live compassionately and selflessly. I am eternally grateful to him, and to the Sanbō Zen tradition that continues his work. I am grateful too for this opportunity to add my appreciation for the very special teachings contained in Zen: The Authentic Gate. Nowhere else have I encountered such a clear and comprehensive account of the Zen path. It is wonderful that this treasure-chest is now available in English, to motivate and guide future generations of Zen students around the world.
David R. Loy
Niwot, Colorado
Publisher’s Acknowledgment
THE PUBLISHER gratefully acknowledges the generous contribution of the Hershey Family Foundation toward the publication of this book.
Preface to the English Edition
During the 1970s and ‘80s a small but steady flow of non-Japanese seekers arrived at San’un Zendo in Kamakura, Japan, to train in Zen under Kōun Yamada Roshi. He and his wife, Dr. Kazue Yamada, warmly welcomed them as family into the Japanese sangha, tending not only to their spiritual needs but, not infrequently, to their material ones as well. A number of these seekers were Christians or Jews who the roshi left free to continue the practice of their own religion, with no pressure to become Buddhists. One day Kōun Roshi was asked how someone could bring the practice of Zen meditation together with a Christian background. He replied, Put your questions on the shelf and practice zazen; you’ll get your own answers.
And with time, for many this proved to be true. Indeed, it was the proof
of his own experience that allowed the roshi to accept everyone who came to him for guidance and to be absolutely confident that Zen practice could help them.
Kōun Roshi’s deep enlightenment shone through him. He was a powerful and compassionate presence, a person who naturally evoked feelings of respect and affection in those who knew him. His main wish was to help all people find peace by looking into themselves and realizing who they are. In this book he explains how the intrinsic nature of every human being is the common ground
where people of all races, nationalities, and beliefs are one reality. He teaches that by practicing Zen and coming to the same experience as Shakyamuni Buddha — the realization of the empty-oneness of all beings — we can transcend the divisions that separate us and find true peace in our hearts and in this world.
Much of the Zen practiced in the West today derives from two sources: the Sōtō Zen of Shunryu Suzuki and the San Francisco Zen Center; and the Sanbō Zen of Harada Dai’un and Yasutani Haku’un, which blends their Sōtō Zen background with Rinzai training in a broad koan curriculum. The teaching lines of Robert Aitken and Philip Kapleau, and in part Taizan Maezumi, for example, derive from Sanbō Zen, and in the West the successors of these teachers number well over a hundred. As the chief successor of Yasutani, Kōun Yamada was the abbot of Sanbō Zen from 1970 to 1989, and his influence on Western Zen has therefore been considerable.
These two streams of Zen each had a flagship book — The Three Pillars of Zen (1965) and Suzuki’s Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind (1970) — and that fact may account in part for the prominence of these lineages in a culture where books are an important means of disseminating ideas. Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind is a collection of luminous talks given by Suzuki; The Three Pillars of Zen is a compilation of Zen texts, both old and recent, pertinent to the training methods of Sanbō Zen. But beyond The Three Pillars of Zen, comparatively little of Sanbō Zen’s written teachings is widely available in English, nor are many teachers in America today directly connected with the lineage, in spite of its far-reaching influence. Zen: The Authentic Gate, Kōun Yamada’s own introduction to Zen practice, not only in some measure redresses these deficits but also offers a chance for those whose Zen is connected with Kōun Roshi’s, however distantly, to taste the water at the source. And for all readers, we hope these teachings by a great twentieth century master may be inspiring and encouraging.
Special thanks to Dr. Migaku Sato for checking the accuracy of the edited translation and making valuable suggestions. We are happy to assist in bringing Paul Shepherd’s translation of Zen: The Authentic Gate to English readers and trust it will help us all to discover and know more deeply the common ground of our true nature, the common ground that unites every being and is the central message of Zen — something of precious importance in today’s divided and wounded world.
Joan Rieck and Henry Shukman
New Mexico, USA
Second Preface to the English Edition
It is my great pleasure to see this book, Zen no Shōmon ( The Authentic Gate of Zen ), written by my father Yamada Kōun Roshi, now being published in English under the title Zen: The Authentic Gate . It is a unique book, in that it was written by a person whose Zen enlightenment experience was, I believe, unusually profound in the modern history of Zen. I happened to be with Kōun Roshi myself at the actual moment of his deep awakening. I was a ten-year-old boy at the time, and was suddenly woken up by the great laughing voice of my father coming from the room next door. Frightened by his loud and continuous laughter, I opened the door and saw my mother trying in vain to cover his mouth with her hands to stop the sound. I was shocked and scared, and wondered if he had gone insane. But that was the occasion of his coming to full enlightenment, and I myself would go on to be nourished by the wisdom flowing from it during twenty-five years of Zen practice under his guidance, eventually succeeding to his Dharma.
What is Zen? Simply put, Zen is a practice of discovering one’s true self by direct experience, and personalizing that discovery in day-today life. The discovery occurs in what we call an enlightenment experience. Buddhism and Zen began with the enlightenment experience of self-discovery by Shakyamuni Buddha some 2500 years ago in India. Shakyamuni did not leave anything written down, but his discovery has been conveyed over generations by disciples of his teaching who shared the same experience. Buddhist sutras are the explanation and description of Shakyamuni’s enlightenment, which were memorized by his earliest disciples and later written down. Today in the West there is increasing interest in Zen and Buddhism, and many books have appeared in English by contemporary authors. The particular value of this one, I believe, derives from its author’s having been a person of unusually profound experience. I am sure it will serve as an authentic pilot and guide for those searching for the truth about Zen, and will make a lasting contribution to the body of Zen literature. I feel proud that my father wrote this book, which I hope will someday qualify as a classic of Zen literature.
This English version is the result of great effort on the part of four people: Paul Shepherd, Joan Rieck, Henry Shukman, and Migaku Sato. Paul did the first draft of the overall translation. Joan and Henry edited and streamlined the draft, making it more focused on the essence of the Zen Way, which is so badly needed in our contemporary world. In this process, they condensed the manuscript and, in some cases, cut parts of the original Japanese text not directly related to the fundamentals of Zen. As a result, the English version is more concise, focused, and easier to read than the original. Finally, Migaku Sato checked the English translation line by line against the Japanese to confirm that it conforms to the message Kōun Roshi wanted to convey. I would also like to note that these four are all Zen masters of the Sanbō Zen Organization, who have been practicing Zen for more than twenty years, and in some cases more than twice that duration. In this place, let me express my deepest gratitude to them for their effort and compassion in making this important book available to English-speaking readers.
Ryōun-ken Masamichi Yamada
Author’s Preface to the Japanese Edition
Over a period of several years, I wrote a series of articles under the title An Introduction to Zen for Laypeople,
which appeared in Sanbō Zen’s bi-monthly magazine, Awakening Gong ( Kyōshō ). Soon after I completed the series, Mr. Ryūichi Kanda of Shunjusha Publishers asked permission to release the articles in book form. I was most happy to comply, and the book The Authentic Gate of Zen (Zen no Shōmon) appeared in May 1980.
Subsequently the book was translated into English by Paul Shepherd and edited by Dr. Roselyn Stone, both longtime students of mine living in Japan at the time. Certain passages, especially those relating to current events in Japan in the 1970s, have been omitted in the English translation, and others have been added in response to the questions of non-Japanese readers — the relationship of Zen to non-Buddhist religions, for example. In addition I have included some further thoughts on matters addressed in my original lectures.
It is my hope that this book will be a true aid to people around the world who are earnestly seeking a way to spiritual peace, and that it will inspire many to set out on the path of Zen practice. It is my particular wish that the book will provide sound information on matters concerning Zen and Buddhism that heretofore may have been given incomplete treatment in other books.
My sincere thanks go out to many people: to Paul Shepherd and Dr. Roselyn Stone for their unstinting work in translating and editing The Authentic Gate of Zen, to my foreign students, who were the first to suggest an English translation, to Robert and Margaret Tsuda, who gave a careful reading to the original manuscript, and to all those who have offered to help bring the translation to the public. I reserve my special thanks for my wife, Kazue, who has always been my pillar of support and strength.
Kōun Yamada
Kamakura, Japan
1983
Zen: The Authentic Gate
1
Suffering and Modern-Day Humanity
HUMAN SUFFERING
When pondering the suffering of humanity in the modern world, it may be helpful to remember that it was in a quest for deliverance from what he called the four sufferings
— birth, death, sickness, and aging — that Shakyamuni Buddha left home to seek the Way more than two thousand years ago. Suffering was not unique to his time. Humans have always lived out their lives in suffering. Buddhist terminology refers to this world as saha , a Sanskrit expression, which could be translated as the world of enduring
or the land of bearing indignities.
This world of ours could be seen as a process of enduring hardship. From the time we are born and become aware, right up until we enter the grave, our lives confront an unending stream of difficulties. We suffer internally from myriad passions and externally from things such as cold, heat, war, and famine. An ancient verse runs:
The troubles of life,
The troubles of life,
Look out for yourself!
Today we live in an environment far more complex than that of Buddha’s time. We worry about getting into the right school, applying for a decent job, and earning a living. Add to these challenges traffic jams, noise pollution, and the degradation of air and water, all of which contribute to high blood pressure, the horror of cancer, and war. We hardly have time to catch our breath between one calamity and the next. In the midst of an ever more intense struggle for existence, we have to come to grips with cultural expectations that demand we suppress and deny ourselves. We live out our lives assailed by fears, anxious in the face of threats to our very existence as a species.
In addition we suffer because of our material conditions. Even though poverty is less severe than it once was in modern industrial nations, nevertheless, the anxieties of life have failed to diminish. Working people are overwhelmed by the demands of each successive day pressing in on them. In spite of the advances of science and technology, and a corresponding economic progress, anxiety concerning material life still makes up, as in the past, the greater share of modern humanity’s unease. No matter what our material condition may be, an abyss of spiritual suffering remains. Before committing suicide, the famous writer Akutagawa Ryūnosuke left a farewell note in which he wrote, I am beset with a vague, undefined anxiety.
Akutagawa was certainly not alone in feeling this vague, undefined anxiety.
This kind of spiritual angst, which has always existed in all ages and all civilizations, could well be called the fate of humankind.
The Gateless Gate, a well-known Zen text, presents the koan Bodhidharma Puts the Mind to Rest
:
Bodhidharma sat facing the wall. The Second Ancestor, standing in the snow, cut off his arm and said, Your disciple’s mind is not yet at peace. I beg you, Master, give it rest.
Bodhidharma said, Bring me your mind and I will put it to rest.
The Ancestor replied, I have searched for my mind but have never been able to find it.
Bodhidharma said, I have finished putting it to rest for you.
Here we have the fundamental key to freeing ourselves from suffering. If we were to listen to a Zen master’s teaching, or teisho, on this koan with a mind free from preconceptions and concepts, we would become enlightened on the spot. I wish to approach this topic gradually, however, and will not delve further into it at present, except to emphasize that anxiety has always been with us. In the koan just cited, the Second Zen Ancestor, Eka Daishi, beset by this same anxiety, cut off the root of that distress when he heard Bodhidharma’s words and attained liberation. But his anxiety was certainly not his private store. It has existed throughout human history.
Life could be called a display of all the different forms of suffering and anxiety. Yet most of us make no serious attempt to confront our anxiety head on; instead we attempt to escape it, seeking momentary distraction in the outside world through liquor, gaming, betting at the track, sexual misadventures, the glare of neon, and the blare of loud music in the streets.
Momentary intoxication of the senses, however, will never solve the problem of spiritual anxiety; this anxiety is limitless, a bottomless pit. When we awaken from our inebriation we still suffer from that same desolate, dreary emptiness, and can find nothing to fill it up. The famous Chinese poet Li Po left the following lines:
I cut the water with my sword and watch it flow anew.
I raise my cup to drown my pain but it, too, flows anew.
In similar fashion, as we seek ever-stronger stimuli, the initial feeling of emptiness may turn into an attitude of nihilism and the sense that our existence is meaningless.
IGNORING MORTALITY
Denial of death is a sickness of the modern age. Aside from those faced with the immediate prospect of death — someone with incurable cancer, for example — most of us ignore death as a definite and pressing reality. Perhaps throughout history we have tended to avoid the fact of our mortality. Yet in our fast-paced world, we are so involved in our daily routines, we barely have time to think of our mortality. We are aware somewhere in the back of our minds that we all have to die, but are unable to imagine with any real force the moment when we will disappear from the face of the earth without a trace.
Dying was always something other people did;