Category: koan

In Zen Buddhism, enigmatic or paradoxical questions used by teachers to develop students’ intuition. Also refers to religious problems encountered in daily life.

  • enlightenment not brilliance

    Think of those who gained enlightenment upon hearing the sound of bamboo when struck by a tile or seeing blossoms in bloom.

    Does the bamboo distinguish the clever or dull, the deluded or enlightened; does the flower differentiate between shallow and deep, the wise and stupid?

    Though flowers bloom year after year, not everyone who sees them gains enlightenment.

    Bamboo always gives off sounds, but not all who hear them become enlightened.

    – Dogen 1200-1253

  • Searching

    Often the only way you will find something,
    Is to stop searching for it

  • no illusions

    When you see reality,
    no illusions can confuse you;
    when you develop stability,
    things cannot shake it or take it away.

  • good companions

    Association with good companions is a serious recommendation of the ancient sages.

  • Lift up the mountain

    So it is said that the earth lifts
    Up the mountain without
    Knowing the mountain’s
    Stark steepness.

    A rock contains jade without
    Knowing the jade’s flawlessness.

    This is how truly to leave home.

    Hongzhi Zhengjue (1091-1157)

  • The first principle

    When one goes to Obaku temple in Kyoto he sees carved over the gate the words “The First Principle”. The letters are unusually large, and those who appreciate calligraphy always admire them as being a mastepiece. They were drawn by Kosen two hundred years ago.

    When the master drew them he did so on paper, from which the workmen made the large carving in wood. As Kosen sketched the letters a bold pupil was with him who had made several gallons of ink for the calligraphy and who never failed to criticise his master’s work.

    “That is not good,” he told Kosen after his first effort.

    “How is this one?”

    “Poor. Worse than before,” pronounced the pupil.

    Kosen patiently wrote one sheet after another until eighty-four First Principles had accumulated, still without the approval of the pupil.

    Then when the young man stepped outside for a few moments, Kosen thought: “Now this is my chance to escape his keen eye,” and he wrote hurriedly, with a mind free from distraction: “The First Principle.”

    “A masterpiece,” pronounced the pupil.

  • the mind roams in heaven

    Sometimes the mind is still.
    There is no anxiety, and the heart is clear throughout.
    Then it is said that even though the body is in the human realm, the mind roams in heaven. 

    However in one day an ordinary person transmigrates countless times, during which he rarely keeps the human mind, much less roams in heaven.

    Master Torei (1721-1792)

  • small hut

    The white clouds
    On the mountain tops
    Poke halfway into this thatched hut
    I had thought too cramped
    Even for myself

    – Koho Kennichi (1241-1316)

  • no one is deluded

    No one is absent and no one is ignorant.
    Originally, no one is deluded.
    – Bankei (1622-1693)

  • Act without mind

    They act without mind,
    They respond with certainty.

    – Hongzhi Zhengjue (1091-1157)