Zen Letters presents the teachings of the great Chinese master Yuanwu (1063-1135) in direct person-to-person lessons, intimately revealing the inner workings of the psychology of enlightenment. These teachings are drawn from letters written by Yuanwu to various fellow teachers, disciples, and lay students--to women as well as men, to people with families and worldly careers as well as monks and nuns, to advanced adepts as well as beginning students. A key figure of Zen history, Yuanwu is best known as the author of The Blue Cliff Record. His letters, here in English for the first time, are among the treasures of Zen literature.
He sounds like he's talking to teachers or to teachers-in-training. In any case, he pulls no punches, metaphorically of course, and in classic Zen style, if you don't have any idea what he's talking about before you go in, you won't have much of a place to get a grasp. But that's what makes some of these classical-type Zen writings so profound, they call to be read over and over, and each time they are, their depths show a little more clearly.
Descending to the Cave of Dragons
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
Yüan-wu, in Japanese Engo, was the Sung Dynasty Master who wrote the commentaries to the koans and verses of the "Blue Cliff Record". He has bent over backwards to help the reader, but at first they can seem baffling, if not infuriating. But you expect the "BCR" to be a lifetime struggle: most of its insights will only ever be accessible to those who can meditate at least 6-8 hours a day, every day (though the ideal is meditation without pause, while working, washing the dishes, eating, sleeping...) This book is much more approachable, a selection of letters of advice written to his lay followers. The contents are altogether more mundane: about attitude and perseverance, meditation-practice and dealing with day-to-day life. These are not chatty, casual letters, they're concentrated teachings: this book is slim but contains nothing but treasures from cover to cover. They were written for a much more static and structured society, so how far they can be applied to today's accelerating world is a matter for personal judgement. The translation is in the Cleary house style, certain words seized on as ad hoc technical terms. Treat with caution. Room for one example. "Conditioning", in Buddhism, does NOT mean "social conditioning". It means the sum total of causes that make a thing what it is. So the colour of your eyes, the shape of your fingernails, your shoe-size, your height, are "conditioned." Not a book for those just encountering Zen, but perfect for those beginning to get serious. Though he writes for lay-people not monks, Yüan-wu's guidance is rigorous. You must stay in what T.S. Eliot called "a condition of complete simplicity, costing not less than everything." The Buddha himself meditated for 6 years. Bodhidharma faced a wall for 9 years. The old Zen Masters used to talk about doing battle "in the Cave of Dragons." Do you want to read this book when there are so many much easier ways to "enlightenment" out there in the spiritual marketplace? Up to you.
A great treasure of Zen literature
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
This book is one of great treasures of Zen--or for that matter, spiritual--literature. Yuanwu was one of the greatly enlightened beings, a true Buddha. Most Zen masters, for good reason, couched their teachings in language designed to help "wake up" their students, but which is usuually impenetrable to all of us who are decidedly on the unenlightened side. But in this marvelous book, Yuanwu speaks directly to Zen students in a way that both reveals his own transcendent state while giving spiritual guidance in earthy, practical, yet utterly inspiring words. This is a book that I dip into often for inspiration and guidance. I highly recommend it to you.
Informal advice from a Zen Master
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Yuanwu (Japanese "Engo", 1063-1135) was the Chinese Zen Master who compiled the great koan collection, "The Blue Cliff Record". This volume presents Yuanwu's wisdom in a much more accessible form: it is a selection from his letters to monks & nuns and lay disciples. This is a Zen Master speaking directly and intimately with the people who depend on him for spiritual guidance. Few writings of the classical Zen tradition are more straightforward and uncomplicated than Yuanwu's words in these letters to his disciples.
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