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Glossary
Note: A number of words and their uses are
important to the study of Zen and Ch'an and these have been
gleened from a number of sources. Keeping in mind that the
visitors to this page are likely to be beginners, laymen, and
loners, and equally likely that they will be exposed to a wide
number of sources on their own, this glossary has been assembled.
When a word might hold special significance to the
home-practitioner a footnote has ben added.
alaya: spiritual storehouse of all the
potentialities of life, regarded as our true home and our
ultimate destination; the infinitely existent self-nature
experienced directly by the Buddha, that is possible for
everybody.
anatta: the "not-self" idea of man's true
nature, not conceivable my the human mind, because that mind
knows only objects, and therefore what men call
"myself" is not in any respect themselves, but a bundle
of five tendencies called skandhas (heaps)
Anuttara-samyak-sambodhi: unexcelled complete
enlightenment, an attribute of every Buddha, the highest, correct
and complete or universal knowledge or awareness, the perfect
wisdom, omniscience.
Avalokitesvara: Kanzeon, Kwannon, etc.
Bodhisattva of compassion, benevolence, portrayed as a female or
a male
Avatamsaka Sutra: (Kegon) Mahayana sutra embodying
the sermons given by the Buddha immediately following his perfect
enlightenment. Known as the "King of Kings" of all
Buddhist scriptures because of its profundity and great length
(81 rolls - 1500 pages), this Sutra contains the most complete
explanation of the Buddha's state and the Bodhisattva's quest for
Awakening.
Awakening
of Faith: (Mahayana-Sraddhotpada-Sastra or
Ta-ch'eng Ch'i-Hsin Lun) attributed to Asvaghosha, a
comprehensive summary of Mahayana Buddhism, a discourse on one
mind, two aspects, three Greatnesses, Four Faiths, Five
Practices. Recommended.
Bodhi: enlightenment
Bodhidharma: the 28th Patriarch in line from the buddha,
and the 1st Patriarch of Zen in China; came from China to India;
did steady "wall gazing" zazen for nine years in the
mountains in a cave.
Bodhi-mind: intrinsic wisdom; enlightened
heart/mind
Bodhisattva: a Mahayanist seeking enlightenment to
enlighten others, an enlightened one who devoid of egoism and is
dedicated to helping others attain liberation; a high stage of
Buddhahood through self-mastery, wisdom and compassion, but not
yet supremely enlightened or fully perfected; persons and/or
personifications of abstract principles realized in humanity; an
enlightened being who renounces entry into nirvana until all
other beings are saved.
Bodhisattva of Compassion: Avalokiteshvara,
Kanzeon, Kwannon, Kuan Yin, Kannon; all embracing love and
benevolence
Buddha: Sanskrit, 1) ultimate truth or absolute Mind, and
2) awakened one or enlightened one to the true nature of
existence. The Buddha refers to a historical person,
Siddhartha Gautama of the Shakyas or Shakyamuni, a tireless
teacher, who suited the teaching to his audience.
Eventually his sermons and dialogues were recorded as sutras or
scriptures which now comprise the doctrines. The Zen sect
accepts the historic Buddha neither as a Supreme Deity nor as a
savior, but venerates him as a fully awakened, fully perfected
human being who attained liberation of body and mind through his
own human efforts. In other epochs there were other
Buddhas who walked the same path, attained to the same level of
perfection, and preached the same Dharma. That we are all
Buddhas from the very first refers to our equal potential for
such realization. One who has experienced one's own
Buddha-nature realizes the first stage of Buddhahood, but the
degree of enlightenment and perfection of a Buddha is vastly
different than the man of average enlightenment. Various
classifications of the stages are expressed in the sutras.
The Buddha attained enlightenment on his home in a forest.
The "forest tradition" is an inspiration to the Zen
practitioner practicing on their own in the footsteps of the
Buddha.
Buddha-Karita Sutra: Mahayana sutra, the life and
teachings of the Buddha to his entrance into Nirvana
Buddha-nature: our true, perfect, complete,
underlying nature; intrinsic to sentient and insentient
beings.
Buddhism: the Buddha's Dharma; 1) southern
tradition, Theravada or Hinayana or "Small Vehicle" and
2) northern tradition, Mahayana, or "Great Vehicle."
Bhutatathata: The Absolute. The ultimate state
of reality, where even the state of absoluteness disappears.
Ch'an or Chan: Name of mind; Ch'an being name and
mind being substance; ( wrongly interpreted merely as meditation,
abstraction or dhyana).
Dana: the first paramita; charity, almsgiving,
generosity of money, goods, or doctrine.
Delusion: deception, contrary to true reality
and the real meaning of existence; ignorance, unawareness, due to
sense consciousness that accepts the phenomenal world as the
whole of reality.
Dharma: universal Law, phoenomena or things when
without a capital, Truth, reliogion, Buddhist doctrine, teachings
of the Buddha, anything Buddhist, the second of the 3 Treasures
or the Triple Jewel..
Dharma combat: a joust or battle of
"wits" involving words and demonstrative actions beyond
conventional meaning and pointing to one's understanding Truth or
realization of enlightenment. Stems from a Chinese
tradition of testing one's understanding by traveling from master
to master in pilgrimages and engaging in tests and challenges.
dharmadhatu: dharma realm, the unifying underlying
spiritual reality, regarded as the ground or cause of all things,
the absolute from which all proceeds.
dharma door: any doctrine, method, school, etc. of
the Buddha or of Buddhism regarded as a door to one's
enlightenment.
Dharma-Master: A master of the Law who is qualified
to explain and comment on the sutras in the Dharma hall.
dhyana: Sanskrit, meditation, abstract
contemplation; method of attaining enlightenment by means of
correct meditation or contemplation, the fifth of the six
paramitas.
dhyana-samadhi: Ch'an's samadhi, or state of
imperturbability reached in the successful practice of Ch'an.
Diamond Cutter of Doubts: A commentary on the
Diamond Sutra by Ch'an master Han Shan (Ming Dynasty)
Diamond
Sutra: Vajracchedika Prajna Paramita,
Mahayana sutra, One of the most profound of all sutras.
diamond prajna: diamond wisdomm, the wisdom
inherent in man's nature which is indestructable, like a diamond.
dokusan: ("going alone to a higher one") a
one-to-one encounter with a Zen master in his chamber in which
the student's understanding is probed and stimulated and in which
a student may consult the teacher on any matter arising directly
out of practice. A key element of Rinzai Zen. Typically,
there is no dokusan when practicing alone at home or in small
groups.
dukkha: Sanskrit, suffering, misery, being a
nessary attribute of sentient existence; the first of the Four
Noble Truths.
ego: awareness of oneself as a discrete
individuality; delusion; resulting from dualistic conception of
myself (subjective) and not-myself or other (objective) that
culminates in endless rounds of suffering or samsara.
ego and dharma: ego and things, the most subtle
dualism which must be wiped out before enlightenment can be
obtained.
enlightenment: self-realization; Tozan
identified 5 degrees from lowest to highest: 1) the world of
phenomena is dominant, but perceived as a dimension of self; 2)
diversity recedes into the background and the undifferentiated
aspect comes to the fore; 3) no awareness of body or mind
remains; 4) the singularity of each object is perceived at its
highest degree of uniqueness; 5) form and emptiness
mutually penetrate to such a degree that no longer is there
consciousness of either. Ideas of satori or delusion vanish
in this stage of perfect inner freedom.
Four Vows: 1) "Sentient beings are countless, I
vow to save them all. 2) Tormenting passions are
innumerable, I vow to uproot them all. 3) The gates (i.e.,
levels of truth) of the Dharma are manifold, I vow to pass
through them all. 4) The Buddha's Way is peerless, I vow to
realize it." In the Zen temple they are recited three
times in succession after the close of zazen.
gassho: the hands are placed palm to palm about a
fist away from the face with elbows out horizontally in a bow
that indicates respect, gratitude, humility. As recognition of
the oneness of all things, it is a bow to oneself, or in
recognition of Buddha in all things.
great mirror wisdom: perfect, all-reflecting
Buddha-wisdom.
guest and host: the phenomenal and the fundamental
(subjective, objective).
hara: a center or source of energy and stability one
to two inches below the navel; a person's spiritual center.
Heart
Sutra: (Prajnaparamitahridaya or Shingyo),
Mahayana sutra, short, important, and central to Zen, and
chanted; explains the meaning of Prajna-paramita, the perfection
of wisdom that is able to clearly perceive the emptiness of all
phenomena
Hinayana: "Small Vehicle." Only existing
school is Theravada, a school dedicated to preserving the
Buddha's original teachings.
hishiryo: thinking without thinking, beyond
thinking.
hua t'ou: literally, a word's or thoughts head,
ante-word or ante-thought; the mind before it is stirred by a
thought. A technique devised by enlightened masters who
taught their disciples to concentrate their attention on the mind
for the purpose of stopping all thoughts to attain singleness of
mind and thereby realize if for the perception of their
self-nature.
Hui Neng: the 6th Patriarch of Zen or Ch'an.
His story is particularly noteworthy to laymen and those
practicing at home alone.
inka: seal of approval; formal acknowledgment by
the master that a disciple has fully completed his training under
him -- in other words, "graduated," signifying passage
through all the koans or satisfaction of understanding.
iron wall and silver mountain: metaphors pointing to
the sense of frustration of those who reach a certain poin in
their practice beyond which they cannot penetrate. This is to be
expected practicing alone. The value of faith is that it
can keep one practicing even when such frustrations arise.
jiriki: "one's own power," referring to a
person's endeavor to attain enlightenment through his or her own
efforts.
karma: moral action and reaction causing future
retribution, and either good or evil transmigration; rounds of
cause and effect; the present is a product of past thoughts and
actions, and the future is preconditioned by our present thoughts
and actions.
Kaatz!: A guttural upheaval or thunderous shout.
Used to halt all dualistic, ego-centric, or discursive
thoughts. Japanese: Katsu!; Chinese: Ho!
kensho: "seeing into one's own nature";
same as satori only implied to be not as deep; self-realization.
kinhin: walking zen practiced between individual
sitting periods. Approximately 10 minutes between 50
minute periods of zazen, slow and synchoronized with in- and
out-breathing. This is a practice that can be adapted at
home alone or in small groups.
koan: Japanese, kung an (Chinese), kong-an (Korean),
(pronounced in two syllables, ko-an, originally kept as
"cases," or "public records"of
enlightenment), a formulation, often in baffling language,
pointing to ultimate Truth. All instructions given by enlightened
masters are often viewed as koans; sometimes anything trying to
be "solved" or "understood" or
"seen" in terms of Zen. Koans can't be solved by
recourse to logical reasoning but only by awakening a deeper
level of the mind beyond the discursive intellect. A knot
of doubt that results when a koan is grappled with can lead one
to have a breakthrough ("let go" "make a
leap") and "see" their Original Mind (see hua
tou). There are several sources: Mumonkan, Hekigan-roku, Blue
Cliff Record or Pi Yen Lu. Though it is possible to study
and attempt to "solve" a koan in zazen practice on
one's own, there is no way to check or receive verification
without a Zen master. This line of practice is not
recommended on one's own, at least not for the beginner.
Lankavatara
Sutra: Mahayana sutra; an encyclopedia of
Mahayanist thought and practice, including the bodhisattva vows,
discipline, and compassion.
Lord of the House: Buddha in each being, Buddha
Nature, Cosmic Buddha, Who is not explicable in terms of
existence and non-existence or self and other.
Lotus
Sutra: (Saddharma-Pundarika) Mahayana
sutras (three in one), the core and culmination of the Buddha's
teaching toward the end of his forty-year teaching
ministry. At the heart: 1) All sentient beings can attain
Perfect Enlightenment -- that is, buddhahood -- and nothing less
is the appropriate final goal of believers; 2) The Buddha is
eternal; and 3) The noblest form of Buddhist practice is the way
of the bodhisattva, one who devotes himself to attaining
enlightenment not only for himself but for all sentient
beings. Usually includes the Sutra of Innumerable Meanings
and The Sutra of Meditation on the Bodhisattva Universal Virtue.
Mahaparinirvana
Sutra: a Mahayana sutra, (sometimes called
the Nirvana Sutra), a sutra expounded by the Buddha after the
Lotus Sutra but before his Nirvana.
Mahaprajnaparamita Sutra: a Mahayana sutra, said to
have been expounded by the Buddha over several times, consisting
of 600 rolls of text in 120 volumes, and considered to be the
fundamental work on Wisdom.
Mahayana: the "Great Vehicle" which
indicates Universalism, or Salvation for all, for all are Buddhas
and will attain enlightenment. Of particular interest to students
of Zen, recommended for those practicing alone, several of the
sutras are listed here in this glossary.
Maitreya: the next Buddha, to come 5000 years after
the historical Buddha. It is not recommended that you wait
for this one.
makyo: appearance phenomena, often distracting,
pleasant or unpleasant manifestations, feelings, visions, or
halucinations during the practice of zazen; a mysterious
apparition, particularly a vision or dream arising out of
meditation. General advice is to not attach oneself to them, but
to return to the focus of zazen. This is common and should
be expected in home practice. Common advice is "cut it
off" or "just let it go," but at this site
we prefer to advise that if one observes this, just return to the
focus of your zazen. Don't pay it any mind.
Manjusri: Bodhisattva of Wisdom (prajna) and
meditation, often depicted sitting in meditation on a lion, which
represents the wild self which meditation transforms, often shown
holding the sword of Buddha's Wisdom which cuts through all
delusion; placed on the Buddha's left with Samantabahdra on the
right.
mara: delusion
Marga: the Noble Eightfold Path that leads to the
extinction of suffering; the last of the Four Noble Truths.
maya: illusion
mind: mind, heart, spirit, psyche, soul. Mind
with a capital "M" is used for absolute Reality, total
awareness, just hearing when listening, only seeing when looking,
the experience of satori or self realization, often referred to
as Big Mind, Unborn Mind, No-Mind, etc.
mind lamp: the lamp of the mind, inner light,
wisdom.
mondo: a unique Zen dialogue between master and
student, where the student asks a deeply perplexing
question for clarification, or to test understanding akin
to Dharma-combat, or a dialogue about Buddhism among masters.
monk: also priest, ordained disciples of Buddha,
including novice trainees in a monastery, the master of a temple,
but generally signifying one who has taken the Mahayana vows,
although married people may be included.
monkey mind: the manifestations and phenomena
(thoughts) of an active or "busy" mind that arise
during zazen, often attributed to the struggling ego. Here
is a humorous article that shows beautifully what monkey mind
is like during zazen:
Mu!: Nothing, Not, Un, usually the first and most
famous koan from the Mumon-kan or the Gateless Gate(48 koans).
mudra: manual gesture or form in yoga.
mushin: no-mind, or detachment of mind; complete
freedom from dualistic thinking.
nirvana: complete extinction of individual
existence; cessation of rebirth and entry into bliss;satori,
pari-nirvana, nibbana, realization of the selfless "I";
the experience of Changelessness, of inner Peace and Freedom, a
return to the original purity of Buddha-nature after dissolution
of the physical body, i.e., to the Perfect Freedom of the
unconditioned state.
one more step: a phrase used by the master that
implies that the mind has reached a point where it needs one
final thrust or leap to come to its own Self-realization.
Practitioners at home without a master must induce themselves to
always take one more step, in other words to continue practice.
oneness: with a small "o" this word
means absorption to the point of self-forgetfulness. With a
capital "O" it refers to the experience of the Void or
Emptiness.
paramitas: The six methods of attaining
enlightenment: dana (charity), sila (discipline), ksanti
(patience or endurance), virya (zeal and progress), dhyana
(meditation), and prajna (wisdom). The Zen method is
traditionally involved with zazen (dhyana) but embraces a life of
practice involving all six. Practitioners on their own at
home should make every effort to include them all.
Patriarchs: the great masters who received and
transmitted the Buddha's Dharma, 28 in India and 6 in China with
Bodhidharma being both the 28th in India and the 1st in China.
Platform
Sutra or Altar Sutra: (Tan-ching) Sutra spoken by
the 6th Patriarch of Ch'an or Zen, Hui Neng or Eno, on the High
Seat of the Treasure of the Law. Contains the essence of
Buddhism, extending a call to Enlightenment, in, of, and through
one's own understanding. The sutra consists of several
addresses: his life, wisdom (prajna) questions and answers,
samadhi and prajna, dhyana, repentance, temperament and
circumstances, the gradual school and the sudden school, and
final instructions. Recommended.
Pratyeka-Buddha: one who lives apart from others and
attains enlightenment alone, or for himself, in contast
with the altruism of the Bodhisattva principal.
prajna: insight, intuitive wisdom into the emptiness
or the true nature of reality.
Rinzai: the sect of Rinzai or Lin Chi famous for
his vivid speech and forceful methods, characterized by koans,
one sits facing the room instead of the wall.
rohatsu: the sesshin of December 8 commemorating
the Buddha's enlightenment.
roshi: venerable spiritual teacher, who's function
is to guide and inspire disciples along the path to
Self-realization without attempting to control or direct private
lives, whether a monk or a layperson, a woman or a man.
Sanpo Kyodan: a growing sect of Zen that combines
Rinzai and Soto practice and technique in the lineage of masters
Yasutani, Harada, and Yamada. characterized by both
shikantaza and koan practices.
samadhi: Sanskrit, equilibrium, tranquility,
one-pointedness, a state of intense yet effortless concentration,
of complete absorption of the mind in itself, of heightened and
expanded awareness. Samadhi and Prajna are indentical from
the view of the enlightened Bodhi-mind. Seen from the
developing stages leading to satori awakening, however, samadhi
and enlightenment are different; collected concentration in which
subject is no different from object.
Samantabhadra: Bodhisattva of the fundamental Law,
dhyana, and practices of all Buddhas, seated at the right hand of
the Buddha with Manjusri at the left hand.
samsara: successions of birth and death, the world
of relativity, the transformation which all phenomena, including
our thoughts and feelings, are ceaselessly undergoing in
accordance witht the law of causation. Birth and death have been
compared to the repeated rising and falling of waves on the ocean
where each wave preconditions the subsequent ones.
satori: Japanese, the experience of enlightenment,
i.e., Self-realization, opening the Mind's eye, awakening to
one's True-nature and hence of the nature of all existence;
a state resulting from the realization of one's own enlightenment
particularly the enlightenment experienced by the Buddha.
sealing of the mind: indicates the intuitive method
of Zen or Ch'an which is independent of the spoken or
written word.
seiza: the traditional Japanese posture of sitting,
with the back straight and the buttocks resing on the heels.
Self-realization: the realization of Mind; satori.
Shastra: Literally "essays", these are
writings that have been accepted as Mahayana or Zen canonical
works.
shikantaza: "just sitting," zazen itself,
without supporting devices such as breath-counting or koan study,
characterized by intense, nondiscursive awareness, "zazen
doing zazen for the sake of zazen."
shunyata: emptiness or void, without essence; a key
notion of Buddhism.
Soto: one of several Zen sects that came to Japan
from China. Founded by Dogen, characterized by "just
sitting" or shikantaza, and one sits facing the wall instead
of toward the room.
sila: precept, prohibition, command, discipline,
rule, morality; the second paramita. To the extent that is
possible within the laymen's life, one should adopt the precepts
(some have been laid down for monks, others for laypeople,
etc.) Any sincere home practice should include precepts.
skandhas: five aggregates of existence: form,
feeling, ideation, reaction, consciousness, often called heaps.
Zen practice is designed to help you beyond the hangups that
develop from our attachments to these. The teachings of
Mahayana doctrines is that these are all empty, null, and
void.
subject and object: active and passive ideas that
result from the formulation that begins with "I" and
"other." Zen practice is an invitation to breaking down
this thinking. The Zen koan usually works around problems
arising from our stubborn attachment to this kind of thought and
halts it or raises a doubt. During zazen
"observing" the mind before such thinking arises is
recommended in addition to merely counting breaths.
sutras: Sanskrit for "a string of
jewels," Buddhist scriptures, dialogues and sermons of the
Buddha, one of the twelve divisions of the Mahayana canon.
The Pali canon were originally recorded in Pali, and the Mahayana
in Sanskrit. Zen, unlike other sects, is not associated
with any one sutra, giving the masters freedom to use as and if
they see fit. The statement that Zen is a special
transmission outside the scriptures, with no dependence on words
or letters, only means that for the Zen sect Truth must be
directly grasped and not taken on the authority of even the
sutras, much less sought in lifeless intellectual formulas or
concepts.
Sukhavati-Vyuha Sutra: Mahayana Sutra, late
teachings of the Buddha on how to be born in the Pure Land and
three kinds of good actions: world goodness, morality (sila), and
practice.
Surangama
Sutra: Mahayana sutra dealing at length
with successive steps for the attainment of supreme
enlightenment. The Buddha revealed the causes of illusion
causes of illusion leading to the creation of all worlds of
existence and the methods of getting out of them. The most
detailed explanation of the Buddha's teachings concerning the
mind. It includes an analysis of where the mind is located, an
explanation of the origin of the cosmos, a discussion of the
specific workings of karma, a description of all the realms of
existence, and an exposition on the fifty kinds of deviant
samadhi-concentrations, which can delude us in our search for
awakening.
tatami: a woven rice mat used as a ground or floor
covering for sitting zen or zazen. Recommended.
tathagata: "thus come one," he who came as
did all Buddhas; who took the absolute way of cause and effect,
and attained to perfect wisdom; one of the highest titles of the
Buddha.
teisho: a talk presented by the Zen master usually
relating to practice or a point of practice within one's life,
sometimes as an explanation, a commentary, or an expository
talk.
tenzo: head cook in a Zen Center, temple, monastery.
Three Treasures or Jewels: In reality they are one:
(1) the Buddha, representing the realization of the world
of Emptiness, of Buddha-nature, of unconditioned Equality; the
Historic Buddha, Shakyamuni; includes iconography; (2) the
Dharma, the Law of beginningless and endless becoming to which
all phenomena are subject according to causes and conditions; the
spoken words, discourses, and sermons of Shakyamuni Buddha;
and (3) the Sangha, which is the interfusion and reciprocal
interaction of the preceding two, which constitutes total reality
as experienced by the enlightened; the immediate disciples of the
Buddha Shakyamuni and his followers, who heard, believed, and
made real in their bodies the teachings; the contemporary
disciples. Ultimately the Three Treasures in none other
than one's own self.
Tripitaka: Literally "The three
Baskets", the Tripitaka comprises the Sutras, Vinaya and
Commentaries.
Vimalakirti
Nirdesa Sutra: a Mahayana sutra, that
reveals the importance of inner commitment to the spiritual life;
of special interest to those practicing at home alone as it
expounds the practice that a layman may follow. Vimalakirti, the
Bodhisattva of "spotless reputation" represents the
ideal layman in Buddhism because he was able to train
successfully in everyday life.
Vinaya: The disciplinary code of the Sangha.
void-patience: patience or endurance attained by
regarding all things as void or unreal. Zazen becomes much
easier with cultivation, and out of this grows a patience for
what seems like "doing nothing." Again, faith is
very helpful until this develops in practice.
wisdom of equality: the wisdom rising above such
distinctions as I and Thou, thus being rid of the ego idea, and
wisdom in regard to all things equally and universally.
yaza: zazen done after 9p.m., the usual bedtime
hour in the Zen monasteries.
yoga: used in the widest sense, embracing spiritual
disciplines for achieving unity and universal Consciousness,
emphasizes breathing exercises and postures, for physical
and mental health. Several methods are employed and
recommended for readiness and conditioning for zazen, especially
for the full lotus position (most difficult).
zabuton: the larger, thinner, bottom pad upon which
the zafu or bench is placed. It in turn is placed on a tatami mat
or directly on a carpet or bare floor.
zafu: the meditation cushion that one sits directly
upon during zazen, that sits on the zabuton.
zazen: sitting zen practice or zen meditation, a
state of inner collectedness, in absorption.
zazenkai: a full one-day devotion centered around
several periods of zazen practice.
Zazen Yokinki: (Precautions to Observe in Zazen), a
well know writing on the practice of zazen by Keizan-zenji, of
the 14th century.
Zen: Japanese, short for Zen Buddhism, called Ch'an
by the Chinese, and dhyana in India. A sect of Buddhism not
identified or connected with any given sutra as other sects are,
but with freedom, uses all or any or none of the sutras as
needed. Nevertheless, some sutras have become closely related and
helpful to Zen practice, particularly those of the Mahayana
canon, like the Diamond Sutra and the Heart Sutra. It is
recommended that one studying at Zen at home on their own become
familiar with the Mahayana sutras, many of which are listed here.
zendo: a large hall or room or structure where zen
training and practice takes place, particularly zazen,
typically in the presence of the Sangha and under the
direction, guidance and teaching of a Zen master.
Taken from No Zendo with minor alterations and additions.