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Buddha-Nature and Intuitive Awareness

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RB-03217

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Seminar_Buddha-Nature

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This talk focuses on the concept of Buddha-nature, its relationship with concepts such as self, soul, and spirit, and its significance in the dialogue between Christianity and Buddhism, as well as in psychotherapy and psychology. The seminar explores participants' experiences of intuition, connectedness, and decision-making processes, highlighting various personal anecdotes and reflections on trusting one's intuition. The speaker also emphasizes the importance of self-awareness and non-self-reflective thinking in perceiving and acting upon one's experiences. The discussion includes references to Zen teachings and practices, such as the Yogacara tradition and the use of gate phrases.

Referenced Works and Concepts:

  • Three Bodies of the Buddha (Trikaya Doctrine): Discusses the Dharmakaya, Sambhogakaya, and Nirmanakaya as frameworks for comprehending the manifestation of Buddha-nature in practice.

  • Yogacara Teachings: Highlights the Yogacara emphasis on noticing bodily sensations to unify complex situations, which plays a critical role in understanding and acting on one's experiences.

  • Tathagatagarbha (Buddha-nature): References to understanding and exploring the inherent potential for enlightenment within all beings, pivotal in Mahayana Buddhism.

  • Dogen Zenji’s "Think Non-thinking": Explores the integration of awareness with the world, fostering a state that allows for intuitive actions beyond discursive thought.

Central Themes:

  • The interplay of intuition, self-trust, and decision-making in various life scenarios.

  • The significance of non-self-reflective awareness in practice and the ability to notice and act without ego-driven motivations.

  • The practical application of Zen teachings and practices, such as gate phrases and the importance of noticing one's own experiences.

AI Suggested Title: Buddha-Nature and Intuitive Awareness

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Transcript: 

I'm glad to be able to spend this one more day with you. And I think my impression is we, so people can leave and drive places, we end about one o'clock or 1.15 or 1.30 or something like that. A good piece of cake? Yeah. Also, mein Gefühl ist, dass wir da ja alle irgendwie noch weg müssen oder viele noch weg müssen, dass wir vielleicht so um eins, viertel oder eins, halb zwei... So she has a carrot on the end of it. Do you have that image of a carrot on the end of a string? Yeah, of course. And the rabbit chasing after it.

[01:02]

You get it. Oh, we left? Okay. Yeah. I think this seminar I did last weekend, maybe the four of you, I guess, who were there, can feel it's part of this weekend's seminar. And now I go, as some of you know, I go to Austria, tomorrow to Vienna, and then to Rastenberg. I guess I'm in some ways an itinerant preacher. I should have a stick with a little pack on the back.

[02:16]

But actually I don't feel it like that. I feel it's just I see so many of the same people in each place. It feels like I'm just continuing my own practice with you in various ways. So I do a seminar like this in the first in Rosenberg and then, I don't know, five or six days with a group of Austrian psychotherapists I've been meeting with for 14 years or so. And I have a feeling it may be that this topic will It doesn't mean that today I won't try to give some completion.

[03:18]

hopefully useful completion to what we've been discussing. But a basic Mahayana idea about teachings is any one teaching includes all the teachings. And this idea of Buddha nature And how it relates to self, soul, spirit, etc. Many people think it's at the center of what will be a long time dialogue between Christianity and Buddhism. And it's certainly an implicit part of... It's certainly an explicit part of the implicit dialogue going on all the time with psychotherapy and psychology.

[04:38]

And so as you have done seminars with me before, know that now I'd like to hear from you about the small groups. But I'd also like to hear anything you want to say about how you understand what we've spoken about so far. So this can be just a big group. And the only rule is that Andreas can't go first. Okay, somebody please. Oh, okay. How? Me, American Indian.

[05:41]

Well, in our group, first we had several examples, like when driving a car, not overtaking because there's some feeling and then there's a crash which would have been... one's own, or being very sure that you can overtake before it occurs because knowing there is no one coming. We had another example of phoning, getting in contact with a person where there has never been a contact before out of a list of 150 numbers, you know, when someone had died, just taking this number, which had never been died before and was no name, you know, just exacting it. It turns out to be right. Yeah. Also knowing when someone was dying. Also when one person being concentrated on a certain piece of music or a certain composer that just appeared anywhere when turning on the TV, when listening to music or even finding a record on the street of this composer, this concentration.

[06:51]

So we had several examples of that. And one person said that actually this can be felt as a feeling of connectedness to that altogether. That was one part. I'll say it again. We had different examples. It was about leadership or something like that. about driving a car, knowing when you can overtake, not such a security in it, so to speak, when it crashes, or that when someone has died, you are reached by the relatives, although there has never been a contact before and there is no name in the phone book or something like that. So actually find and make contact very precisely. Or when someone has contact with a certain composer, wherever he is, so to speak, even if he never turns on the television, he turns it on or finds a record lying in front of him on the street or something like that. So a whole series of examples, actually.

[07:52]

Yes, someone said that there is a feeling of connection behind it or that you can recognize it. Would you say that the examples were characterized by being highly intense situations, somebody's dying or something you have to do, or were some just sort of ordinary? No, there were intense examples and also the feeling seemed to be that surety about it, about the situation, you know, just this is right, nothing else. Thanks. Someone else? It's hard to count, isn't it?

[09:18]

It's hard to count, isn't it? Another example that came to me, which I found remarkable, is a person said in everyday life, she has often sort of a soft feeling, just knowing exactly what other people need. What does he need? Someone else said, yes, my father felt it. What does he need himself? He suddenly has the idea, I need a certain tea and does it with Bach flowers or is it recommended by someone? He looks at a Chinese doctor and he says, yes, that was exactly what you need. And also having a safe feeling of knowing what she herself needs, you know, some certain special medicine which turns out to be exactly that which had been necessary.

[10:29]

Another point that was not quite clear to us in the group was whether it falls into the area of intuition. For example, I often go into a room or meet someone and immediately know whether I feel comfortable, what kind of mood it is, whether someone is sympathetic to me or not, without thinking about it. That comes first afterwards, immediately noticed. And for myself, there's this example of, for example, coming into a room without thinking of anything, just knowing exactly this, am I right here? Is this agreeable with that person which is in the room? And thinking comes later than only. So being sure about that too. My question was, is that intuition? My question was, personally, is that more non-conscious thinking? I'd say non-conscious thinking.

[11:31]

I actually rarely use the word intuition unless I'm Have to. Okay. Why isn't everyone as brave as Andreas? In Zen, if this is a real traditional Zen place, the teacher would pick the one who most doesn't want to speak. But I can already feel there's several of you here. Yes, in our group I told my own example.

[12:35]

I had some very important experience and this had to do with a lot of trust. And out of this trust, in some way I know that I will find my way and I don't really have to decide, I just can rely on trusting in some kind of way. And out of this, the intuition, it is a kind of intuition and this is very deeply connected for me with trusting. And so we spoke about, we focused more on this subject and spoke about decisions in our life, how difficult it is in some times and sometimes we are quite different, some people don't have this trust. In my example it was just because I made a very fundamental decision, a kind of vow when I was 16, and this brought some kind of feeling with me that

[13:42]

that kind of connectedness and that really determined my further life. And so this, for me it was relatively easy to have this certainty and to have this intuition, even in difficult situations. In our group I gave the example of my own experience when I was 16. It was a difficult situation. I had then made such a deep decision for myself and that led to almost a kind of praise. And that led to a kind of experience that determined my further life. So a kind of feeling of happiness that somehow permeated everything in me. And from this feeling, which has a lot to do with trust, came an intuition that accompanied me in many situations.

[14:51]

That's why intuition for me has to do with a kind of deep trust, where I can rely on the fact that it always comes. We talked about the fact that it's not always the same for us, and some people don't like it that much. Yes. I have told an example in Europe, which concerns me very much. I wait in many areas of life for intuition, even as a child, certain tasks or certain things.

[15:55]

I had the experience that if I do it at the wrong time, it is very exhausting and it does not work. And then I learned, I wait now until the right wave comes and then I do it. For example, now we need a drummer for our band and I have to do it and no one else does it. And I haven't been doing it for half a year and I'm dissatisfied with it. I know that if I do it now, give an ad, nothing will come out anyway. And there are many things in life, both in work and also in my private life, where I wait forever until the intuition comes and what do I do to not be dissatisfied in the meantime and feel. For me, since I was quite young, I always waited for the intuition because I found out that doing a decision at the wrong time makes much trouble and much exhaustion and so on.

[17:03]

So there's now often the situation like, for example, I'm looking for a drummer for our band. don't do anything then. I just wait and wait and wait and now it's about half a year and sort of fill in the time somehow, but now I just wait for the intuition. That has been successful in very many events, mostly. I'm sorry I'm not a drummer. I'm glad that he can drum a bit. Julio? I have a question about the... I'm fascinated with what you said, great function. Very fascinating. I think I experience it, but it's not... my will doesn't enter into it. And I realized in the practice that My culture told me many lies about the relationship of body, creativity, and mind. Because it always told me the story that the body contains it.

[18:07]

The body, inside there's the brain, and the heart, and the creativity. And I realized when I tried to force the great functioning, I actually operate in my cousin because I stand there and I say, okay, how does my stomach feel? What does my heart say? Stuff like that. It never works. And the instances where it actually works, I have a different body and there's no, there's like a oneness. And I never, I mean, I never have actually a memory of what was operating. It's just, it happens, and I can never go back and say, oh, you know, I had a feeling there, it just happened. And I would be interested, because I think it has about, the point is about that the body is not, it's located in the self instead of the self in the body, and I would like to know what you were thinking about that. Deutsch, bitte.

[19:09]

The great functioning, which Richard talked about yesterday, fascinates me very much. I have noticed in the practice that the Western culture always refers to the brain, heart and head as being the body. That is the image of my culture. want to have this intuition and deal with this image, it just doesn't work at all. That the moment where it works, I don't have the feeling to be in different parts, i.e. body with a heart or an intuition, but rather that I don't even have any memory of what actually happened. I only know that it happened. I would be interested in how Richard, Well, perhaps before we finish, I can perhaps say something about this. But just let me speak phenomenologically now. A condition of practice, and it would be the condition for anybody, practicing or not.

[20:31]

In this sense, what we mean by practice in Zen... only increases your possibility to notice things and act on them. But we all have the opportunity to notice things and act on them. So if you notice that... In certain situations, you seem to act in a way that you are calling great functioning. And this is satisfying or something that feels right to you. You simply try to notice, as I said phenomenologically, what happens when this happens. when this occurs?

[21:46]

What's going on? And you try to, I mean, the main, almost like, I can say, the main trick in Yogacara teaching is to find the bodily sensation which seems to be present and tie the context of the complex situation together. And the more you... can notice that. And trust it. I think Eric's sense of trusting is essential in all this stuff. It's one of the reasons precepts are part of the door of practice.

[22:50]

Because if you don't feel good about your actions and complete in your actions, there's a conflict set up and it blocks any subtle activity. So the precepts from this way of thinking are not just morality. It's good to be that way. But they're fundamental principles. part of how we function as a whole being. So if you can notice what's at the center of this experience and not try to

[23:50]

Not try to will it or too strongly try to make it happen. But rather be open to the situation and open to the conditions. You then move into the situation or let it happen. And I can repeat this famous koan from the Shoyuroku, which is a monk asked, Dung Shan. I think it's number 98. Among the three bodies of the Buddha. Which one does not fall into any category?

[25:16]

Okay, so the question is something like this. How do you act in a situation which is actually so subtle it doesn't fall into any category? The question is actually like this. And the three bodies of Buddha, I'll just say this for some of you who are interested, the Dharmakaya, the Sambhogakaya and the Nirmanakaya, are ways of understanding among other things, how to unfold what I spoke about yesterday, the Tathagatagarbha. Now, for those of you who are practicing again, you know, regularly, it becomes useful to actually know some of these terms like Tathagatagarbha and three bodies, etc., Not in a scholarly way, but just because they can function

[26:34]

in our own functioning. So he's asked, which body does not fall into any categories? And he answered, I'm always close to this. And so that can be taken as a gate phrase or a mantra-like phrase. And if you can use it with this feeling, I'm always close to this. You can't get hold of it, but you're close to it. So that sense can be can be present in whatever you're doing. Yeah, it can be part of an intention.

[27:43]

Like you might have an intention to be close to this, but the intention can also be within the feeling of I'm always close to this. And what I just said, I just use it as an opportunity to say this, I guess. Much of the... 60, 90 percent of the territory of your practice. It's not going to be the teachings of sutras or me or some other source. It's going to be your ability to notice your own experience. and begin to act in it a way that's satisfying, nourishing, etc.

[28:46]

Yeah, so this that you've noticed, the craft of practice now is To continue to notice, to continue to act within it. But as much as possible without any self in it. The more you make it part of your self-narration, your story, you lose the ability, you lose the capacity. It doesn't mean one part of you can't say, oh, I'm Julio and I can do this, that's all right. But if that's just a little bit of, oh, yeah, habit, that's all right. But it's basically, it's much bigger than any idea of self or a particular person.

[30:10]

Okay. Good enough for now? Yes. A thought, yes? A thought. A thought, yes? A thought. for me it's when I use gate phrases and I first use them there's a bodily feeling to it and then when I continue with it over the weeks it turns into a thought rather okay Yesterday I also tried it with breathing. When I sit here on my pillow and breathe, is it a physical feeling or does the state change?

[31:15]

And when I go out into the world and I go for a walk in the mountains, I tried to observe my breathing and I realized, yes, I consciously observe that I am breathing, but it doesn't change anything because I don't have a physical feeling about it. And then it's so like yesterday, for example, when I'm sitting here and I breathe, there's the bodily feeling of breathing there. But when I go out into the world, for example, I watch my breathing, but eventually the bodily feeling disappears, it's no longer there. How do I achieve this? When I am in the world, I can only achieve this in a mental way, but I cannot connect to this body. And now my question is, how do I get to do this?

[32:19]

When I'm in the world, this is more or only a mental thing for me, how can I sort of get to this bodily, physical feeling again or hold it? Okay. Again, we're speaking about the craft or practice. And it's, of course, whatever you do is going to take various forms. And sometimes it's going to be Richer or stronger and sometimes weaker and not so fruitful. And these are just things we notice. And we have to find out ways to refresh ourselves. But just the fact that you notice things Notice what's happening.

[33:24]

The way you're describing to me means that you have the capacity, the territory that allows you to practice. Some people can't notice their own experience. It's almost impossible from the practice. And with any, you know, continuity. So just this noticing is already a fruit of practice. Or the activity of the practice. Okay. Now, naturally we have to refresh ourselves in these practices. And when we first start the... And it's a skill, it's a skill to learn how to use gate phrases.

[34:26]

In my own experience, I had to use gate phrases, one phrase for sometimes a year, year and a half before eventually I could use gate phrases. gate phrase very quickly in the afternoon or an hour. And when you first start using gate phrases, We naturally have a habit of turning things into mental reflection. And that takes it away from our body. It takes it away from having any power. And then after becoming reflective thinking, it starts being self-reflective thinking. I'm not good at this or something.

[35:37]

And then sometimes you can think of the ego as a kind of bully. Hey, you're getting good at this. I'm going to take that phrase away from you and make it, weaken it. But it's also the case that sometimes when a phrase changes into, yes, thinking, It may be a process of it getting deeper or changing into another phrase. And sometimes it appears in thinking and changes into another form in your thinking, and then you can bring that new phrase back into your body.

[36:43]

So this way of working with a phrase or an intention And intentions are the most powerful thing we can bring into our life. It's again a craft that I can tell you something about. Mostly you have to learn it yourself by doing it. Okay. Isn't this fun what we're doing? Or serious. I would like to come back to the theme of intuition also from our group yesterday. The question was, where does this intuition come from? What is the source of it? And the other thought was there is something predispositioned where intuition leads us to.

[37:59]

From my personal understanding and view of Buddhism, it isn't like that, that intuition leads us to somewhere which is already there. The fact that some people in your group or you have had the experience that intuition leads you somewhere that's already there is not the way you think Buddhism works. Because I am of the opinion that this is not predetermined, but that a situation simply arises due to the fact that a certain constellation is there and then arises from the situation simply somewhere a security or a feeling to make a decision, which can then also be difficult, but also a very trivial one, like buying a piece of clothing. I think this for me it's more like this is a matter of constellation of things coming together and then being sort of sure which decision to make may it be a serious decision or even sort of light decision like buying a piece of shirt or cloth or so right

[39:35]

Is there a question in there? Is there a realm where intuition sort of starts or comes into being, or is there a source? Well, I think we can understand Dogen's famous phrase, think non-thinking here. Because in this enfoldedness of awareness, in its working thusness with the enfoldedness of the world, It's a kind of work... I use the word working thusness. It's a kind of working thusness.

[40:39]

And we can say it's a kind of non-thinking because it produces results that are like thinking, but we can't call it the thinking of thoughts. It is a way of, es ist also eine, es ist eine Art nicht-denken, aber es, obwohl es gedankenartige, etwas gedankenartiges, wie ein Gedanken produziert, der aber kein, nicht so ein Gedanke ist. And that appears in our mind as thinking. Also es heißt, es erscheint in unserem Geist als denken. Yeah, or as intuition. Oder als Intuition. Now, if you are not in... If you're not... engaged in self-reflective thinking, then it doesn't appear as thinking so much, but as a kind of knowing, a kind of series of insights or

[41:42]

something unique, you hadn't noticed before, or hadn't thought before, but it appears as an image, or as a thought, but it's not exactly discursive thinking, for sure. Es erscheint nur sicherlich dann nicht, auch Gedanken, aber nicht als dieses diskursive Denken. Okay. My experience is when I have to make a decision which I can't do on a rational basis. I take it into my sitting then, just take it in, but not as an argument, but not leading a dialogue.

[42:58]

And at some point, after a certain time, there comes a decision or an intuition as to how to act. But it's not so causal that I say, if I do this now, then this will happen. After a time, there comes a decision how to do this and that. It comes the result of having to do this and that in that way. But it's not so causal that I know if I take it into my sitting, then this will occur or happen. Yeah. Can't predict it, but it might make it more fruitful. Yeah. Listening to you just reminded me, the first time I actually used a phrase like this was long before I started practicing Buddhism. And I think we should have a break in a minute, so I can tell you an anecdote. I was in college, but I was working in the summer as a waiter on Cape Cod.

[44:19]

And it's for some reason when you've worked with a phrase or done something that was a turning point, like your vow when you were 16, There's a vividness to the physical situation in which you were thinking about it, or it happened to you. I was in the lower bunk of a rather saggy army-type bed. I had no idea why it occurred to me. But, you know, I was working in this... After my first year of college, I was working in this restaurant. Actually, excuse me, second year of college. I was working in this different restaurant in the same place.

[45:33]

And I suddenly occurred to me I'm an American. You might have noticed that. Am I a typical American? I don't know. Anyway, I thought, I'm an American. What the heck does it mean to be an American? And I thought, I don't know what it means to be an American. Then I kept asking myself questions. What does it mean to say I'm an American? And I woke up and went to bed with this question for several days. And I, one morning I woke up and the question was gone. And I was no longer an American and no longer anything.

[46:37]

But I seemed to be what I was doing. Anyway, that was a kind of step, I think, toward my Zen practice. So let's have a break now. Thanks a lot. We can say Bush this sentence. Hmm? We can say Bush this sentence. Bush. President Bush. Your president. Oh, yeah, I'm sure. I get so tired of all these American people saying, America, this drives me nuts. But I would like you to all take the phrase, gate phrase, I am an American.

[47:20]

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