"Everything in the universe is subject to change.
There's only one exception: death always follows life.
Isn't it strange that people haven't noticed this, that
they conduct their lives as though they're going to live
forever, that death is nothing to worry about? Of course
if they really want to live as long as they obviously
expect, they'd better pursue the Dharma. Life, death,
and change itself are transcended in the Dharmakaya."
- Grand Master Han Shan (1546-1623)
If
there is one word with which we can summarize the beauty
of Buddhist thought, that word is Dharma. We cannot read
a book about Buddhism without encountering this term,
yet its definition is as slippery as its appearance is
ubiquitous. In which sense is Master Han Shan using it
when he talks about pursuing the Dharma in order to
transcend life and death?
Of course
we all know we're mortal, but how many of us choose to
live with that knowledge, in full consciousness, day by
day, moment by moment? Only the few who are truly
enlightened. The rest of us unwittingly fight to
distract our attention from the reality of our short
lives: we attach ourselves to a career, seek
friendships, join social groups, keep occupied with
sports or hobbies or sex or reading, eating, talking or
watching television -- anything to help us forget
that we are mortal and that our existence in this world
is so sadly brief.
But when
the knowledge of death presents itself to us consciously
and fully we are led inevitably to a final act of
surrender. What we surrender is the unsustainable fight
against what's real; through surrender we find salvation
and we discover Dharma, that state of awareness that
frees us from fears that arise from an imagined
separation of self. Of all the definitions Han Shan
could have used, he chose the most difficult one: the
Dharma of this changing universe. He never studied
physics and knew of no nuclear structures but he could
observe the constancy of change and this, he decided,
was one way in which we could transcend Samsaric Change
and enter Nirvanic Permanence.
It is
perhaps useful to look at a few of the more common
definitions of Dharma -- doing so may help clarify Han
Shan's meaning.
In its
most ordinary sense, Dharma refers to things that are,
of themselves, independent of our judgments. For
example, a fried egg is a fried egg no matter what we
might think or feel or believe of it. This notion of
"fried egg reality" is outside our limited senses of
taste, touch, smell, sound, sight, and thought. In
Buddhist terminology, we would say it is outside the
skandhas, those groupings of forms comprised of the
material, the sensual, feelings, reflexes or instincts,
and conscious acts such as thoughts. "Fried egg reality"
is a transcendental reality, one that can only be
visited directly with the mystic's inner eye. To the
rest of us, it challenges the imagination to consider
that there may be something beyond our interpretation of
reality, something that does not depend on our senses to
exist, something that is outside our mind's literal and
temporal modalities. To act in accordance with Dharma,
in this sense, is to act according to a higher principle
or Law, one that is above our personal interpretation
and evaluation. We might access "fried egg reality"
exactly as we would access anything in the Platonic
realm of Perfect or Ideal forms. And in this sense,
also, we find our "nature in and of itself", that we are
sentient beings, and privileged to be so. In addition,
Dharma means that it is our duty to fulfill this nature
in accordance with the specifications of that ideal. To
do less than that is to immerse ourselves in samsaric
illusion by limiting ourselves to frail sensory
definitions. And this is exactly the problem: those
senses are inherently limited. Even our thoughts
are dependent on all previous thoughts and experiences
and are thereby as limited as any other sense
perception. Seldom do we break through these barriers
into the realm of originality, the realm of genius,
which already, by its name, seems a strange and
mysterious spiritual state.
In the
second sense of the term, Dharma is the law, the truth
conveyed by the Buddha Himself. These are his teachings
and when we follow them we follow the Buddhadharma: the
path of virtue and righteousness that we recognize as
the Eightfold Path: Right Understanding, Right Thought,
Right Speech, Right Action, Right Livelihood, Right
Effort, Right Mindfulness, and Right Meditation. The
Buddhadharma gives us the law and we follow it. This
brings us back to the meaning Han Shan had in mind when
he spoke of a universe in flux; for through
contemplation of this Dharma, we are able to distinguish
Shakti from Shiva, Illusion or Maya from the Eternal;
the changing from the changeless: we begin to understand
life and death as elements of this flux and
consciousness itself as the divine Will that is aware,
permanent, and unmoved.
To Han
Shan, to understand the ephemeral nature of phenomena
(dharma-things) as they slip into and out of existence,
and to understand the Logos of Power and that which
obeys the Law through its very act of changing, was to
apprehend Dharma in its most sublime meaning. Here, in
what physicists still call "flux", we can begin to
appreciate Master Han Shan's words. By looking inside
the nature of this flux and not simply at the external
manifestations, that part that we experience with our
senses, we begin to transcend the very nature of change
itself and thereby experience directly a
changeless, formless, and timeless reality. In this
reality we make a fully conscious discovery that we are
immortal, i.e., that we are not separate, distinct,
"individuals" but more like a hologram of which any
fragment contains the whole. The entire universe is
likewise "contained" within even the smallest part.
So, taken
together as meaning ultimate reality -- as truth
conveyed by the Buddha's teachings, and as
righteousness, virtue, and duty -- Dharma means, simply,
"reality." Not the reality we westerners tend to think
of in empirical terms, as "of the senses" and of
knowledge and memory, but rather as described by St.
John of the Cross as the complete and total Reality that
combines what cannot be known by the senses and mind
with what can be known, i.e., the eternal and the
ephemeral.
Our
western approach to understanding reality has
traditionally been through the study of science. We
refer to the action of Dharma as Power -- the forces
that create the "10,000 things" as Buddhism quaintly
describes the myriad changing objects of the
material/energy world. We then refer to the rules that
govern the way that this Power is directed as Law.
Together, they are one inseparable unit -- Power and the
Law Power obeys -- for we note that forces are not
self-directed, that they conform to the habit of
behavior, i.e., to physical Law. While we admit to not
knowing all the laws, we have no doubt that the material
universe conforms to clear and concise rules of both
predictability and unpredictability. So accustomed are
we to this, in fact, that we tend to take the connection
between law and its enactment for granted. We think of
an airplane, for example, kept aloft by both the burning
fuel (power) and by the lift created from the resultant
wind or propulsion. The laws that govern the plane's
takeoff and lift and keep it airborne are the laws of
aerodynamics. Come safe landing or disaster, the plane
can violate neither these laws nor the essential
connection between Power and Law, a connection which is
not phenomenological, but mystical.
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Dance of the dharmas
-- While we will never be able to directly
observe subatomic particles, we are aware that
they exist through their short interactions with
matter. We can imagine their cosmic dance as
they enter the universe for brief moments by
looking at the trails they leave behind in this
photograph of an electromagnetic shower taken in
the Fermilab 15-foot Bubble Chamber in 1978.
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It is in
this intermediate realm that physics meets metaphysics:
the interplay of Shiva and Shakti. Out of this
consciousness new insights have led physicists into new
areas of exploration such as quantum physics and string
theory, each of which, in their own way, acknowledge
this cosmic dance of the dharmas.
One of the
earliest examples of a "flux dharma" in our western
culture appeared in the literature of the early Greeks:
"Everything is made of smaller things so there must be a
smallest. We'll call this fundamental constituent an
atom." Of course there were no laws governing the
behavior of these atoms -- they were simply there in our
minds to explain the existence of matter in ways that
enabled us to conceptualize this nebulous thing called
matter. The atom fit this need in the psyche for
hundreds of years until, during the conclusion of the
19th century, revolutionary scientific thought and
experiments from people like Michelson, Röntgen,
Becquerel, Thomson, Plank, Millikan, Rutherford and
Einstein overthrew the notion of an atom as the
fundamental constituent of matter and set the groundwork
for today's indescribably complex science, a science
replete with distinct physical laws.
Yet the
scientific community, at large, still seeks to find the
lowest common denominator -- the smallest building block
that it hopes will lead to a Grand Unified Theory, one
that will explain the behavior of all phenomena, and
consolidate all the known laws into one. Some theorists
think it may come from Superstring Theory, or M-Theory,
which considers all matter to be, ultimately, composed
of exceptionally small, string-like multidimensional
"bubbles", whose shapes, or properties, are dependent on
the specific resonance, or energy-state, of the string.
The mathematics that describes these strings tells us
that they do not exist in our physical universe, the
universe of the senses, but cross over into
multidimensional spaces which can only be concieved
through complex mathematics, or exceptionally deep
intuitive insight.
History
shows us that, regardless of how small we manage to
conceptualize the essential constituents of matter, we
can (and do!) always go smaller. We have gone so small,
in fact, that we no longer have any tangible sensory
input (e.g., from experiments) to even hint at a
scientific validation of Superstring theory. We are told
by the experts that there is not enough raw energy on
our planet to allow us to test Superstring theory with
present technology. But Dharma says it doesn't matter
since the quest of finding the Grand Unified Theory in
Superstrings, or any other model of any kind, is like
the dog chasing its tale. We're still stuck with outward
manifestations which, while no longer limited to our
sensory perceptions, are still limited to our mental
ones. Thoughts, too, are part of the skandhas... the
"heaps" of mechanisms and patterns by which we perceive
and appreciate the illusions of the changing universe.
The
Dharmakaya, literally, "truth body", is the principle
that governs phenomena and is one of the three bodies
comprising the Trikaya in Mahayana symbolism. Although
physicists acknowledge that reality cannot be perceived
directly by the senses alone since the senses are
limited to functioning within three-dimensional space,
they often fail to acknowledge that the mind, itself,
and the thoughts and theories it construes, are limited
in the same way. Yet something new has been evolving in
recent years that is leading some scientific theorists
to reconsider the old propositions of traditional
scientific inquiry and lean toward a more intuitive
approach toward an understanding of reality, an approach
that begins to dovetail with venerated mystical
spiritual practices, like Chan.
Michio
Kaku, in Hyperspace, has suggested that
Superstring theory can be considered capable of being
validated based on its intrinsic beauty and mathematical
elegance alone, rather than relying on the more
traditionally accepted sensory "observables". He further
conjectures that this "beauty", in and of itself, may be
the underlying essence of reality. And Itzhak Bentov,
who wrote in everyday language about the relationship
between phenomena and consciousness in Stalking the
Wild Pendulum, has added a new twist, bringing the
Dharmakaya directly into the equation: "Our objective
reality is composed of a void filled with pulsating
fields. If we stop the pulsations of the fields, we get
back to the absolute."
It doesn't
require an understanding of modern physics to pierce the
veils of the mind and get a glimpse of the Dharmakaya,
yet science does show the Dharmakaya's footprint to
those whose minds are adequately freed from constraints
imposed by models and knowledge. When we see all
physical and mental forms as constantly changing, the
mind gains the ability to either grasp or release any of
those forms. We see our friend, Sally, on the street one
day and identify her as the same Sally we saw five years
ago at a party, but, in fact, since that time most cells
in her body have died and been replaced with new ones
... is she really the same Sally? The microcosmic flux
may be less easily seen in the macrocosm on our
time-scale, but it is only our degree of perception that
is the limiting factor. We must even be careful when we
say "I think …" when our thoughts are equally subject to
the vagaries of change.
This
changing universe is what must be transcended in order
to gain independence from change itself. It is a
mystical journey rather than one of the mind or body.
And how we venture out on that journey is the domain of
the numerous mystical traditions that have been
preserved for thousands of years by many of our great
world religions.
While
conventional physics allows us to define the problem of
Dharma, it doesn't allow us to solve it. Physics remains
self-limiting in describing reality simply because it is
constructed from our limited sensibilities and
reasonings. We are all in our own "Black Box" from which
our enlightenment wishes to free itself but cannot
simply because the methods we so often use to try to
free it are confined to the scope of the mind. So we
turn to alternate methods. Many of those we look to are
rooted deep within the symbolism of ancient yogic
traditions dating back several millennia; some of them
have embedded themselves in our Chan tradition.
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Shiva sitting alone in lotus |
A glance
at some photographs of art objects (2600-1900 BC)
excavated from the ancient Indus River Valley
civilizations shows us the time-honored symbols of
Buddhism: the wheel of the Dharma; Shiva
(Law/Yang/Logos/Male) sitting alone and Shakti (Power in
the form of the tiger/Yin/Eros/Female) standing. We note
also that words accompany these icons, and we can only
imagine that they are sacred words . . . mantras. The
elephant, for example, suggests Airavata, that is
commonly depicted on the earth or root Chakra, the abode
of Shakti, and is associated with the mantra Lam,
the aindra-bija or sound element of that Chakra.
Of the
most time-honored traditions in all Buddhist schools and
many non-Buddhist schools alike, there is a common and
highly esteemed practice for the spiritual inquirer who
seeks deeper insight and understanding into the realm of
the Dharmakaya: sound. The Surangama Sutra alludes to
notion that even the Buddha taught techniques of sound
meditation as his own preferred methods for entering the
Dharmakaya.
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Relief carving shows the wheel of the Dharma,
one of the most common symbols of Buddhism.
Airavata, the elephant symbol, is commonly
depicted on the earth or root Chakra, the abode
of Shakti, and is associated with the mantra
Lam. |
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Sound
meditation techniques encompass a wide variety of forms,
from chanting various mantras and scriptures, to
listening to the pulsating rhythm of the heart. Some
techniques are more common than others depending on the
specific school or sect; in the Chan tradition we
acknowledge all forms as legitimate but emphasizing that
it is the effort of the will to concentrate on
sound that holds the key to success.
In order
for the mind to transcend duality, it must first,
through sheer will-power, become self-aware and view the
macrocosm in the microcosm. It must engage the universal
eye of Pure Consciousness: the Will behind vibration. It
must discover the connection between Power and
the Law Power Obeys. This is the Doctrine of
Recognition: through practice of these techniques we
transcend the illusion of fixed physical forms and
perceive directly the flux of the Dharmakaya. The mind's
inner eye no longer sees birth and death, but the
essential nature of change itself.
While the
Mahayana describes ultimate reality in terms of
"voidness", the Doctrine of Recognition formally
refers to it as Parispanda, a divine pulsation of
consciousness or, as Paul Muller-Ortega describes it, as
"the ecstatic throb that stirs the stillness of the
absolute." Sound meditation through the chanting of
mantras is the chief vehicle used to achieve the state
of liberating wisdom, a state in which the practitioner
becomes one with Shiva (Pure Consciousness).
While this
model may be highly evolved and complex, it differs on
the surface from the traditional Mahayana techniques
used to bring the devotee to union with the absolute …
but, model aside, the absolute is the absolute
regardless of how we choose to describe it and
regardless of the model we use to find it. It remains
that sound meditation is an important and powerful
vehicle for us as we move toward what the Buddha called
supreme enlightenment, the abode of the Dharmakaya.
The
success of any spiritual practice depends upon our
willingness to follow steadfastly the particular model
or approach used. Our practice begins with humility,
devotion, and a deep desire to move beyond our existence
as pre-programmed, conditioned beings in a constantly
changing, shifting world of forms, feelings, and
thoughts. Whether we look at Kashmiri Shaivism,
Kundalini yoga, Roman Catholicism, or traditional Zen
and Daoist mystical practices, we find that the
spiritual symphony is scored with mantras and other
forms of sound meditations. Through mystical regimens we
begin a new journey, one that starts with learning to
concentrate the mind … one that guides us into ever
deepening levels of awareness.
Sound
meditation remains one of the most valued techniques and
is still taught in Chan monasteries all over the world.
We can illustrate the technique with a mantra: Om,
mani padme hum, "the jewel is in the lotus". We
begin by taking a natural and relaxed deep breath. As we
exhale we say the words of this mantra slowly, hanging
onto the "mmm" sounds a little longer than we would if
we were speaking. We put our lips lightly together so
that we can feel their vibration along with the
resonance in the skull, jaw, and throat. A low, relaxed
voice, is used and the mantra is repeated for a minimum
of five to fifteen minutes. If we need to take a breath
in the middle of the mantra, we do so naturally, without
letting the attention slip away. While there are many
levels of meanings to this important and sacred mantra,
it offers a practical example of how sound meditation
works. With devoted practice of this simple technique,
we soon discover the jewel of understanding and the
blossoming of Dharma wisdom.