I seem to keep a lot of
things on my mind. Thinking about work and worrying about my job
security, wondering about my relationship with family and friends,
trying to figure out where to invest my money, having to buy a new
set of tires for the car, engrossed in the war on terrorism,
seeing that all my buddies are getting married and a thousand
other things that gnaw at me throughout the day.
I am not the only one with a lot on my mind. I have friends who
are dissatisfied with their careers but work it so they can afford
the house and the baby. I know guys with beautiful girlfriends and
nice cars that still seek approval. I know girls with great
careers; lots of friends but can not find love.
So it is easy for us all to be stressed. We look forward to
‘going out’, meeting up with friends, shopping, weekends when
we can retreat to our homes, spending time with the new baby and
all the other little moments that give us pleasure before we
re-immerse ourselves into the immense displeasure of the daily
drone. Life seems like a cycle of seeking pleasure, in material
things, in business success or in personal relationships in order
to stem the displeasures of circumstance.
I recently delved into Zen in order to break this cycle and
experience life in its entirety; not embracing just the good bits
and avoiding the bad bits because there will be times when such
things are out of our control. I still maintain my career
ambitions, my commitment to family and friends. My rent still has
to be paid and my car still needs four new tires. But my day is no
longer a daily drone; no longer a struggle and I no longer seek to
‘get away from it all’. I am experiencing things for what they
are and not what they should be or aren’t. For a Zen master, who
I am not, there is no friction between himself and life and the
world. Events and circumstances ebb and flow but he is always
centered steering his life wherever he sees fit and acting in a
way that is always appropriate to the situation.
So what is Zen and how can it be used. Well, Zen is not a
religion. There is Zen Buddhism but there can also be Zen
Catholicism as well. There is no morality or ethics in Zen; for
morality or ethics you will have to look elsewhere like Buddhism
or Catholicism. Zen is a way of looking and confronting events,
circumstances and life.
Joseph Campbell said of Zen practice, “It is like an athlete
when he’s in the zone, except all of the time.” I thought it
would be great to live and handle challenges and interact with
people like I was in that zone all of the time. Don’t you?
Here are some techniques for laypeople to obtain the benefits
of Zen.
Focused Breathing: One of the basic ways of clearing your head
of distractions so that you can concentrate is focusing on your
breathing. Harvard Medical Center researchers can this the
relaxation principle. In Zen it is called zazen or sitting
meditation but I do this while jogging, reading and working. When
you are relaxed you are more focused and effective in the task at
hand. To do this you must relax your diaphragm and be fully
conscious of your breathing. This is not easy to do when you are
tense. It takes true self-awareness to realize that your body is
tense. It takes effort to relax those muscles in your stomach and
discipline to breath steadily. But try to focus on your breathing;
here is a long breath in, here is a long breath out, here is a
short breath in, here is a short breath out. You will find that
you will be more in tune to the present moment. As your mind is
focused on your breathing, your senses take in the situation
around you unencumbered and unfiltered. You begin to see things as
they unfold, hear and listen to sounds as they come, feel and
smell aromas as they arise without automatically shutting any of
it out or reflexively reacting to them. Continued practice of
focused breathing will help you deal with situations in a more
rational and objective manner. It lets you put things in
perspective. And it gives you insight into the way your body
responds under different situations. Focused Breathing is the
foundation for adopting many of the other techniques of Zen.
Practiced on its own it will yield immense benefit to you.
Beginner’s Mind: Zen is known for some very esoteric notions,
‘No mind’, ‘With-out Thinking’ and a refutation of all
concepts in general. This is one reason Zen appears inaccessible
and nonsensical to the casual observer. These notions are meant to
encourage us to adopt a basic tenant of Zen, the Beginner’s
Mind. When we first learn something we may be anxious, nervous,
excited and looking forward to it but we begin without concepts,
knowledge or any ideas about the subject. Maintaining a
beginner’s mind, even in things that we are already experts,
means not to carry any preconceived ideas and beliefs when
confronting situations. His students asked a Zen teacher if he
ever got tired of being asked the same question day in and day
out. He replied that each student was different and their
question, though worded the same, had a different meaning. A
beginner’s mind protects us from over-conceptualizing,
over-thinking and over-analyzing a situation. We are better able
to think outside of the box because we respond appropriately to
the needs of each situation. When we think we already know what is
going on or that we are already experts in our field we are
trapped in one mode of thinking. Many physicists, scientists,
philosophers, economists and corporate leaders practice Zen-like
techniques because they are aware of such traps. The next time you
think ‘here comes an annoying co-worker’ or ‘someone has let
me down again, they’re always like this’ or ‘how am I ever
going to get this done’, go back to focusing on your breathing,
take in the situation unencumbered and unfiltered by your
knowledge and conditioning and learning. Trust that you have all
of the prerequisite abilities that have taken you this far in life
to respond to any situation. Once your initial, reflexive thoughts
subside you will find that by not categorize situations as they
arise you will be open to more alternatives, more opportunities
and more ways of responding to the situation appropriately and
effectively.
Mindfulness: It is not easy to let go of our thoughts, feelings
and tension as they arise. Commotion, distractions and other
people requiring our attention surround us. We cannot always
maintain a beginner’s mind and often we cannot afford to focus
on our breathing because we are actively responding to something;
this is especially true with first applying Zen techniques. But
like everything else, continued practice allows us to live these
techniques not just merely apply them. One way to over come the
initial hurdles of applying Zen in a busy day is to be Mindful;
basically to be self-aware and self-monitoring with the aim of
accepting all of the thoughts and feelings that arise in us
without judging them or shutting them out. When you are focused on
your breathing, with a Beginner’s Mind you will sense feelings
and thoughts arising. Focusing on your breathing will keep you
centered, and with a Beginner’s Mind you will observe thoughts
and feelings without judging them; rather let thoughts and
feelings rise and subside while you pay attention but not cling to
them. In Zen, all that arises within us are natural; they are a
result of what we are and how we are connected to the world. Our
eyes, ears and nose sense the world; we perceive, conceptualize
and feel because that is the expression of our body. When we are
mindful of anger, sadness, nervousness and joy we acknowledge
them, welcome them when they appear but we do not cling to them.
When we feel love or happiness we welcome these feelings. It
should be the same with anger and nervousness. All these feelings
are our mind, body and consciousness communicating to us. When we
are mindful of them we can only become wiser and more insightful.
I may get nervous before a test. ‘I am nervous. Hello
nervousness, how are you today? Glad to feel you again.’ Focused
breathing keeps me centered. When the test begins my nervousness
naturally subsides. ‘Farewell nervousness,’ and I am
completely in tuned with the task at hand. Do not try to resist or
suppress your feelings. That only means you have turned your mind
to them and are clinging to them even more. Let your feelings and
thoughts. Be mindful of them. I find that as the situation
dictates my distracting feelings and thoughts subside allowing me
to respond unencumbered by the task at hand.
Focused breathing, Beginner’s Mind and Mindfulness are basic
Zen practices. They are almost common sense but often we become
mired in the complexities and details of every day living and lose
sight of common sense wisdom. Zen is not a monastic way of life.
The Zen ideal is to experience and embrace life experiences full
on; not editing out the bad bits because there are no bad bits,
just things are they are.
Tu Hoang may be contacted at fete@sprint.ca. Click
here to view more of their articles.
Business major attending university in Toronto Canada with a
interest in all our potential modes of living.