
Zen and Zen Classics 1: From the Upanishads to Huineng (Zen & Zen Classics)

Were I a king, pensively Would I pace the corridors of the palace. The path I walk goes through the pine-trees; The sea is blue, a butterfly flits by. Miyoshi Tatsuji
Blyth,R. • Zen and Zen Classics 1: From the Upanishads to Huineng (Zen & Zen Classics)
Just get rid of The mind that thinks "This is good, that is bad," And without any special effort, Wherever we live is good to live in.
Blyth,R. • Zen and Zen Classics 1: From the Upanishads to Huineng (Zen & Zen Classics)
As soon as we are aware of our irresponsibility, all the cause of misbehaviour disappears in so far as the cause, (the illusion of self) is removed.
Blyth,R. • Zen and Zen Classics 1: From the Upanishads to Huineng (Zen & Zen Classics)
Yield to the willow All the loathing, All the desire of your heart.
Blyth,R. • Zen and Zen Classics 1: From the Upanishads to Huineng (Zen & Zen Classics)
Just get rid Of that small mind That is called "self", And there is nothing in the universe15 That can harm or hinder you.
Blyth,R. • Zen and Zen Classics 1: From the Upanishads to Huineng (Zen & Zen Classics)
Sengtsan attributes all our uneasiness, our dissatisfaction with ourselves and other people, our inability to understand why we are alive at all, to one great cause: choosing this and rejecting that, clinging to the one and loathing the other. There is a profound saying:
Blyth,R. • Zen and Zen Classics 1: From the Upanishads to Huineng (Zen & Zen Classics)
The unpoetical life is of two kinds. First, by aversion, we live in a limited world, a half-world. Second, by infatuation, we exaggerate, sentimentalize, weary by repetition.
Blyth,R. • Zen and Zen Classics 1: From the Upanishads to Huineng (Zen & Zen Classics)
DO NOT SEEK FOR THE TRUTH, ONLY STOP HAVING AN OPINION.
Blyth,R. • Zen and Zen Classics 1: From the Upanishads to Huineng (Zen & Zen Classics)
this living fully without taking sides which Sengtsan urges upon us, is the poetical life.