Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Desire for Annihilation



















A practitioner emailed me recently about the flip side of the fear of annihilation - what I see Dogen reassuringly addressing by bringing up in the moon-in-the-water metaphor (click here) - by raising the desire for annihilation:

I'm going through one of my cyclical periods where zazen is... unsatisfying... even a bit turbulent: the 'old black dogs' from the past are growling at each other a bit down there/up here and I get that grating frustration that comes with the uncertainty that 'I'm not doing it right' or that 'I could do it better'... I found myself in the back garden tonight having my 'occasional cigarette,' and I stood looking up at the cloudy night sky. I closed my eyes and said to myself, 'Take me away.' I just stood there and let that desire go and the night spread... a sort of resolution. 

This has been an important issue in my own practice too. Seems to me that there is a subtle difference between Way Mind aspiration to drop the whole works and the desire for annihilation. The desire for annihilation arises from our self-hatred, it seems to me, while Way Mind blooms from compassion - may I become a Buddha to carry all beings across. 

And there is a distinct body difference. Way-Mind-dropping-it-all is relaxed and warm, even passionate. Desire for annihilation is tight and cool or even cold, craving escape and especially common among transcendent types.

Buddha addressed this (although I can't think of a Dogen passage that does - perhaps suggesting mental frailty on my part or that in his cultural milieu desire for annihilation wasn't much of a problem or recognized) saying, 

One who is liberated abandons craving for being without relishing non-being.

Nicely put, no? Liberation is neither this nor that - now where have you heard that before?! 

Also, the thirst for non-being is listed as one of the views that keeps us fettered to swirling in our heads and is just the flip side of the view of a permanent self. 

Our practice is to let go of it all, again and again. The view that we're not doing it right as well as the view that we're doing it right. The desire for being (and concomitant fear of annihilation) and the desire for non-being (and the concomitant hardening of the categories).

9 comments:

Café Zen said...

Nice post. Reminds me of Layman Pang's "Giving no heed to existence, and holding not to nonexistence."

Monk in the world said...

Dosho said:
Our practice is to let go of it all, again and again. The view that we're not doing it right as well as the view that we're doing it right. The desire for being (and concomitant fear of annihilation) and the desire for non-being (and the concomitant hardening of the categories).


So Dosho,
Anytime we cling, advert, desire, consciously don't desire, anytime our consciousness separates from pure consciousness the one becomes two...intimacy gone, is lost...yet we can't walk around in "absoluteness" and function in a dualistic, concrete...(I'm struggling here for the right words)world...just for practical purposes there has to be a me/you...right?

So what is the efficacious value of this enlightenment thing,this actualizing the fundamental point?

Alan

billy daijo yman said...

Dosho, here goes. Testing this and posting that. Annihilation Jones was not a comfy place for me. I was there treading those choppy waves on the gloomy waters. Unlike Dogen, I could see neither round world, nor fish palace, nor jeweled necklace. I was glad to crawl back on the earthy shore like a spent salamandar. Tasting annihilation on the lips, we cry out for a big buddha bowl of joy soup...on the house!

Dosho Port said...

Alan,

You impute a pure consciousness and something not pure (clinging, etc) - already two - and utter malign the buddhadharma! :-)

Please remember this practice is based on and expression of the simple seamless truth that "form is emptiness, emptiness is form."

"It" cannot be found apart from the flux and flow of life and death. "It" defuses harmoniously with clinging, ego, etc. ... and therefore this work is incredibly portable and efficacious.

Warm regards,

Dosho

Monk in the world said...

Dosho,
Can you say what you said in another way. Having trouble grasping what all that really means.

Bows,
Alan

steve said...

Wow
not only choppy waves on the gloomy waters

But also $64 words:
giving no heed to existence
concomitant fear of annihilation
impute a pure consciousness

These must be some of the deep weeds Dogen noticed that began growing some years ago and have grown still thicker lately.

Quoting the 1927 song
-Ah gits weary / An' sick of tryin'; / Ah'm tired of livin' / An skeered of dyin', old man river just keeps rolling...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ol'_Man_River

--
Oh, another thing...

Just now considering friend Ruth 81 here in costa rica
-3 friends & a pastor considering how to help
-leave in hospital or send home?
-children in Alaska on the phone every day
-husband just died 3 weeks ago
-recovering from a recent stroke
-can't knit anymore because of neuropothy
-blood glucose out of control at 400+
-Ruth wants to take her friends on a boat cruise in December
-yesterday she ordered cake and ice cream and cake
-one person, Sandy is praying for death, another is praying for life, a third is returning a call today to the hospital doc who wants instructions

Have any Instructions for the cook?

Monk in the world said...

Steve,
Instructions 101:
Ask Ruth what she wants.

Alan

BuddhaFrog said...

Hi All,
Wow, great post and awesome comments. This practice is as large (small) as the body of the Buddha.
Gassho,
Glenda

Gary Shodo said...

"So what is the efficacious value of this enlightenment thing,this actualizing the fundamental point?"

I think if I am looking for an efficacious value I am missing what Dogen is saying.

Leaping clear of absoluteness and dualistic offers me a chance to understand that I am Buddha.