Please Log in to Vote.
1 out of 1 members found this useful.
No Clinging
無執着
mu shuu jaku
No Clinging
Now that I’m back in Kansas I’m occasionally asked, “What do you miss most about Japan?” It’s a difficult question. Wait, no it’s not. “My friends,” duh. But then memories appear in my mind—mountains, holy god oceans, fresh spring water, pickled plums, office parties, junior high kids, co-workers, trains, kyanpu, thousand-year-old god-trees (goshinboku), sunbathing naked (rotenburo), rivers, zazen, onigokko, onsen, and on and on, I can go forever—Japan is like a secret life I have that nobody here knows about, an inner wonderland that colors my world with appreciation and perspective—but it’s wrenching! I miss Japan everyday! I’m not exaggerating.
“Don't cry because it's over. Smile because it happened.” That proverb attributed to Dr. Seuss says it all, really. Crying because it’s over can be a form of clinging, which leads to more suffering (because everything changes). Sounds familiar. I’m appropriately reminded of the “mushuujaku,” or “non-clinging,” talk a zen monk gave us some Sunday morning beneath the blooming cherry blossom trees. As many of you know Buddhism maintains that everyone has “The Buddha Nature,” and that this “innate,” “unborn,” “undying”, “transcended,” “eternal” “unstuck” aspect of you is a center and expanse of awareness always present and “creatively detached” from your personal mind, body, emotions, thoughts, and feelings, even right now as you read these words. This part of you is aware of change, aware of time, aware of passing experiences and relationships. It is not confined to any of those, however. “The way sunlight falls upon all things equally,” this non-clinging light-mind shines through you onto things every moment as awareness itself, aka “the nature of mind,” and there you are.
Moreover practicing mushuujaku correctly cannot be escapism or avoidance or disinterest in the world. It’s not being dead inside. On the contrary, the teachings note that the “non-clinging mind” is so radically open and inclusive it embraces all feelings, all life, all loss, “like a mirror its objects.” It just doesn't get trapped in any of them.
I try to keep all that in mind.
When I got to America I immediately sought out and became friends with the Japanese exchange students. I admit it. They were amazing, beautiful, and generous, and occasionally mentioned that my English was the easiest to understand and my Japanese was the best. I guess years of living abroad helped me master pronunciation and pace in both languages. Those exchange students have completed their semester and are already back in Tokyo. Man time flies! I miss them already. Ichigo-Ichie! And it’s nice to know that the more loss I experience, the more I get to practice the profound mushuujaku, and imitate mushuujaku Maude from the classic film Harold and Maude (1971).
Harold: Maude?
Maude: Yeah?
Harold: (pulls the stamped coin from the arcade out of his pocket) Here.
Maude: A gift! (reads it) Ohhhhh! This is the nicest present I've received in years. (kisses it and tosses it happily into the ocean. turns back to Harold).
Harold: (stunned, looks out to the ocean and then back to Maude. begins to form the word “Why?")
Maude: So I'll always know where it is.v
- Please Login to Add Comments
- show all sub-comments
- Report Abuse
Please Log in to Vote.
0 out of 0 members found this useful.
What about
Posted February 19th, 2011 by Shikha Sabharwalholding fast to that which we most cherish and value?
I imagine:
that's o.k.
What do you think?
- Please Login to Add Comments
- Report Abuse








.jpg)
Please Log in to Vote.
0 out of 0 members found this useful.
Wonderful post
Posted February 19th, 2011 by Jeremy RichardsonThank you for writing this David. Japan: what a beautiful country and people! I miss it (and them!) as well.
--
नमस्ते