Author: Andrew Taggart
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Your Dharma Is To Wake Up
Two things are to be remarked upon when one is considering the ripeness of a spiritual practitioner or the maturity of a spiritual teacher. The first is that one ceases to think of dharma in any worldly terms. One no longer has the sense that one is “here to do something on behalf of the…
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The Shortcut Approach To Chan Practice
The huatou is a “living phrase” used in Chan meditation to push one beyond dualistic thinking. To get a better sense of how this is a “shortcut,” I’ll begin by citing Robert E. Buswell, Jr’s fine essay, “The ‘Short-cut’ Approach of K’an-hua Meditation.” In what follows, the first quote is from Buswell, Jr., the second…
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Is There A Perfect Place?
There is not. Consider an argument I borrow from Vivekananda, one I reconstruct thus: A twist: When it’s discovered that you are Peace Itself, then and only then is every place perfect.
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Nisargadatta’s Long Teaching And His Shortcut Teaching
Question: What is Nisargadatta’s teaching? Nisargadatta’s Long Teaching: The Negative Way See the mind (or personality); go beyond the mind (or personality). See the body; go beyond the body. This brings about detachment. It also brings one to the witness state. Now, don’t nest here. Nisargadatta’s Shortcut Teaching: The Final Teaching Start at I Amness.…
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The Huatou As Torsion
A huatou, Chan master Xuyun (1839-1959), observes consists of the spoken word or words (hua) and of “the head or source” (tou). That is, a huatou–such as Wu or “Who?”–is a supreme, supremely charged, talismanic-like pointer, one that points immediately the source beyond words. Poetically put, the huatou’s immediate aim is to place one right…