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Jundo Cohen - The Zen Masters Dance

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Jundo Cohen The Zen Masters Dance
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A FRESH TAKE ON HOW TO READ DGEN In The Zen Masters Dance Jundo Cohen takes us - photo 1

A FRESH TAKE ON HOW TO READ DGEN

In The Zen Masters Dance, Jundo Cohen takes us deep into the mind of Master Dgen and shows us how to join in the great and intimate dance of the universe. Through fresh translations and sparkling teaching, Cohen opens up for us a new way to read one of Buddhisms most remarkable spiritual geniuses.

The Zen Masters Dance creatively and authentically opens us to the heart of Dgens seemingly obscure teachings. Jundo Cohen makes them understandable and immediately applicable for anyone wanting to dance with the Universe.

R EV . E RIC D AISHIN M C C ABE , teacher at Zen Fields

Jundos love of the practice is evident on every page. He has done an outstanding service to those of us who want to better understand Dgen.

A RTHUR B RAVERMAN , author of Living and Dying in Zazen and The Grass Flute Zen Master

An excellent translation and a unique and interpretive commentary. A joyful and informative read. Highly recommended.

D AITSU T OM W RIGHT , senior Buddhist priest, St Zen School

Jundo Cohen offers a personal interpretation of Dgens teachings that brings them directly into our lives with clarity and grace, without diminishing their meaning or complexity.

T ONEN OC ONNOR , resident priest emerita, Milwaukee Zen Center

To all my Friends along the Way at TreeleafSangha

Introduction

Eihei Dgen, a Japanese Zen Master of long ago, heard the music of the universe that sounds as all events and places, people, things, and spaces. He experienced reality as a great dance moving through time, coming to life in the thoughts and acts of all beings. It is a most special dance, for it is the dance that the whole of reality is dancing, with nothing left out, that you and I are dancing, that is dancing as you and me. It is a vibrant, swirling, flowing, merging and emerging unity that Buddhists sometimes call emptiness, as the motion and sweep of the dance empties us of the sense of only being separate beings, and fills and reaffirms us as the whole. We, as human beings, cant be sure when or where this dance began, or whether it even has a beginning or end. But we can come to see that it is being danced now in each step and breath we take, much as a dance unfolds and constantly renews with every turn or leap of its dancers.

You and I are dancers in this dance, as is every creature great or small, the mountains and seas, every grain of sand or massive galaxy, the atoms that make up the universe and the whole universe itself. Everything in reality, no matter how old or vast, no matter how unnoticed or small, is dancing this dance together. And although we may feel as if we are separate dancers finite individuals on a grand stage spanning all of time and space we are also the dance itself dancing through us. A universe of dancers that are being danced up in this dance that the whole universe is dancing.

Picture in your mind a spectator witnessing a dance so vigorous and vibrant that its countless actors seem to vanish in the swirl of motion: single dancers becoming pairs, then groups, coming together and separating moment by moment, yet so merged as the overall movement that, from a distance, individual dancers can no longer be seen. It is like single raindrops vanishing in a distant storm. The dance is the ground below, the air thats stirred, the light of moon and stars in the open sky above. We are such fragile drops in motion, but also the whole ground, the whole motion, every breath of air, the moon and all the stars, the entirety of sky that is dancing too for the dance is the whole of everything. Its a dance that leaves nothing out.

Indeed, the swirling dance constantly spins out new shapes and creations, gives temporary form to each and all of the individual dancers. From this vantage point, each of us is no more solid or separate than eddies in swirling water, dust devils in the breeze, flashes of lighting casting momentary light and shadow, each there for a while before fading back into the dance. The dance of nature in motion seems to spin us out onto the stage, then spin us back in, giving the appearance of birth and death. But beyond those temporary appearances, we are also the whole dance itself a dance which happens before, during, and after our limited sense of time. There are scenes during life of youth, health, love, joy, and beauty, as well as sickness and sorrow, violence and war. Yet all are outward appearances rippling across the surface of it all.

So united did Dgen see that whole that, in his mind, each point holds all other points, near or far, each point miraculously fully contains the whole, and each moment of time ticks with all other moments of time, before or after. It is much like saying that every step of each dancer somehow embodies, depends upon, and also fully expresses every step by all the other dancers on the stage, past, present, or future, and fully contains the entire dance too. Dgen experienced the time of the dance as the overall movement that is fully held and expressed in each individual move itself, with past not only flowing into present and future, but future flowing into the present and past, as the present fully holds the past and future of the dance.

Can we truly say that there are separate dancers in this all-encompassing dance? Endless dances are going on within each dancer, each cell and each atom, each bond and reaction, just dancing within and with each other... dancing within dancing. We can experience all dancers and all reality absolutely absorbed in the constant motion of the dance. As the borders that separate our sense of self from the rest of the world soften or drop away, we see that there is no dance outside, no me and you inside the dance. There is only that which flows from inside to outside, outside to in all borders, all barriers dropped away and the whole having no surface or edge.

Please dont understand the concept of this dance merely intellectually. Instead, join in, truly feel what it is to be swept up in this dance as this dance. Master Dgen spoke of practice, putting it all in motion. Where this dance has come from, where it is going, is not as important as the dance that is truly realized made real right here, in your next leap and gesture. The dance is always right underfoot, so just dance, without thought of any other place.

How to Dance

What would a dance be without some dance lessons? Each dancer can find herself find her identity in the dance knowing her life as a dance too (a personal dance within the great dance), and that her grace, balance, direction, the choices she makes in each step by step, help create the dance as she goes. In his many writings, Master Dgen, our master instructor, shows us how to dance with skill and grace. His dance secrets come down to a few fundamentals:

The first step is no step, sitting upright and very still. This is zazen, seated Zen, in which we assume a balanced and stable posture, breathe deeply and naturally, and just sit. In this sitting, we let go of tangled thoughts and judgments as best we can. We try not to wallow in our emotions or get caught up in long trains of thought, but instead let things be. We sit in equanimity, beyond judging good or bad, with a sense that this sitting is the one and only act that needs to be done in this moment, the one place to be in the whole universe. We sit in the present instant without engaging thoughts of past or future, and in doing so, we encounter the timeless wholeness of just this moment. As we sit unmoving, the whole moving world flows past and through us. When we sit with the trust that nothing is lacking in zazen, our sitting is complete because we stop all other measuring.

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