A monk asked Yun Men: « What are the teachings of a whole lifetime? »
Yun Men replied: « An appropriate response. »
Not really anything else to add…
Yet there remains the question: What is the « appropriate response »?
A monk asked Yun Men: « What are the teachings of a whole lifetime? »
Yun Men replied: « An appropriate response. »
Not really anything else to add…
Yet there remains the question: What is the « appropriate response »?
Le Web carnet de Amy Hollowell Sensei, fondatrice de la Wild Flower Zen Sangha et successeur de Catherine Genno Pagès Roshi dans le lignage Zen Soto de Taizan Maezumi Roshi, fondateur du Centre Zen de Los Angeles.
The Web notebook of Amy Hollowell Sensei, founder of the Wild Flower Zen Sangha and dharma successor of Catherine Genno Pagès Roshi in the Soto Zen lineage of Taizan Maezumi Roshi, founder of the Los Angeles Zen Center.
Email: info@wildflowerzen.org
http://www.swissfakeuhren.de
At first I thought response meant “verbal answer” (like in “answering to a question”). Them I checked in a dictionary and realised it means a “reaction” rather. Like a suitable reaction, or the appropriate course of action to take under different circumstances.
–response to treatment – “reacção ao tratamento”;
–we were hoping for a bigger response –“ estávamos à espera de maior adesão”;
–her love met with no response – “o amor dela não era correspondido”.
Therefore the appropriate response is to act appropriately, or “in accordance with”. And this varies accordingly to events and circumstances. As the masters of yore taught us, something that should be anchored in the “here and now”. This instant, this fleeting moment that’s the essence of zazen.
Later on I thought (but perhaps there’s too much thinking going into this already) the question in
—“Yet there remains the question: What is the ‘appropriate response’?"—
must be “rhetorical”. It’s not a question which looks for an answer, but simply wants to make a point. It also works as a sort of koan.
So I was “answering” instead of respond. Trying to give appropriate verbal answers (intellectual reasoning) instead of an appropriate response. (I guess in koan practice the response is mainly given by an act or gesture of some sort rather than by words – but to say the truth I’m more familiarized with the Soto-school).
Yet there remains the question: What is the "appropriate response"?
this one
A monk asked Yun Men: "What are the teachings of a whole lifetime?"
Nelson Mandela.
let’s be with him.
One might need a lifetime to answer that…