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Thread: zazen on a plane

  1. #1

    zazen on a plane

    I had a 5-hour plane flight today. I thought it would be a good time to get in some zazen. I tried three different times and kept falling asleep. I don't fall asleep at home even when late and tired. Maybe it was the vibrations.

    Gassho, Drew
    Sat

  2. #2
    Wow, I envy you! I've never been able to fall asleep on planes, even on 11 hour flights. I've had some pretty worthwhile zazen while flying, though.

    ST,

    Peter

    Sent from my LM-Q725K using Tapatalk

  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by drew View Post
    I had a 5-hour plane flight today. I thought it would be a good time to get in some zazen. I tried three different times and kept falling asleep. I don't fall asleep at home even when late and tired. Maybe it was the vibrations.

    Gassho, Drew
    Sat
    Hah! l published this back in 2007 on a Pacific flight (by my calculation, l have made that crossing at least 50 times). Alas, the video itself is long gone into the air ...

    ==========


    Some bouncy turbulence on our Pacific flight, and I sit a little pacific Zazen. Dogen and many teachers of centuries past crossed to China in wooden boats, on voyages taking days or weeks, meeting storms and constant dangers. I can only imagine their state, sitting Zazen in a leaky vessel as waves pounded the timbers. Now anyone can fly the same trip in hours, and in comfort. Statistics tell us how safe it all is.

    Yet, part of me is cringing and terrified in the wind tossed plane, my fingers clenching the armrests.

    I think it is the lack of control that I fear, for despite the best planning and will power, I cannot tell the wind and clouds to clear away. Nor am I flying the plane. We are thrown around like leaves in an autumn breeze. But that fear is also the very heart of our practice ...

    I have learned that, when the plan goes up, I just go up. No resistance. When it goes left and right, I go left and right ... no resistance. Despite the terror and lack of control. I just roll with the rolls. No resistance.

    And there is another way too that airplane life might represent our lives in this universe. Because, if we picture this universe as something like a big, mysterious plane on a flight, we can see ourselves as its passengers sitting in our numbered seats. There are other passengers on board beside ourselves, each sitting in a given place.We are just born on this strange plane, coming from somewhere and going to somewhere we know not. Perhaps there is no destination, perhaps there is no pilot at the controls. We cannot know.

    The Buddhist teachings, however, tell us that we are not just passengers on the plane. We are (when viewed as a higher plane ... ha ha ) in fact the plane itself ... and the plane is us, as are all the other passengers ... and we are them too. We are so much a part of it and them, and it and them are a part of us, that we should drop all words 'it them and us' - for but a single vessel exists. It is true, as much as the wings are the plane, and the doors and windows, and the rudder and all the rest, your are too. You are each light and wire and wheel and motor ... not just part of the craft but the craft. What is more, just as there would be no passenger planes without passengers, there would be no air passengers without an air vessel for passage ... our existence arises through a dependent origination, one needing the other in order to fly.

    Being just the plane (my Big Self), thus I (little self) go where it goes. Up down right left, I just go.

    I do not know the destination if any (I will trust it to go where it goes), I do not know exactly how the plane and I came to be (who handed me my ticket), I do not even know if there is anyone at the stick ... I just know this:

    Up down right left ... bounce bounce bounce.


    Gassho, J

    STLah

    Nepal's carrier ...

    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

  4. #4
    Beautiful metaphor, thank you!



    Gassho,

    Daitetsu

    #sat2day
    no thing needs to be added

  5. #5
    Interesting. When I go to a sesshin a couple of times a year I always take a 7-hours train
    to reach the place.
    Perfect time to have plenty of zazen. But I never had a chance to have it in plane yet.

    Gassho
    Washin
    sat-lah
    Kaidō (皆道) Every Way
    Washin (和信) Harmony Trust
    ----
    I am a novice priest-in-training. Anything that I say must not be considered as teaching
    and should be taken with a 'grain of salt'.

  6. #6
    I thought this was going to be about a movie idea Jundo has, starring Samuel L Jackson.

    Bows,
    Jakushin
    Sat.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    Ask not what the Sangha can do for you, but what you can do for your Sangha.

  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by Chishou View Post
    I thought this was going to be about a movie idea Jundo has, starring Samuel L Jackson.

    Bows,
    Jakushin
    Sat.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    delete snakes.jpg

    Gassho, J

    STLah
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Chishou View Post
    I thought this was going to be about a movie idea Jundo has, starring Samuel L Jackson.

    Bows,
    Jakushin
    Sat.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk


    delete snakes.jpg

    Gassho, J

    STLah
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

  9. #9
    Just what kind of planes are we talking. Is it a plane or a plane. And, while we're at it, let's sit in this plane.
    合掌,生開
    gassho, Shokai

    仁道 生開 / Jindo Shokai

    "Open to life in a benevolent way"

    https://sarushinzendo.wordpress.com/

  10. #10
    Hi Drew

    You must have needed the rest, I hope it was at least comfortable!

    Gassho, Tokan

    SatLah

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