Maezumi Roshi told his students not to search for Zen, but rather develop an appreciation for their lives as their greatest teacher. This text is, therefore, not a teaching in the traditional sense, but crystalline offerings of Zen insight to reach beyond the intellect.
1) Deze zenleraar was alcohol-verslaafd. Gek om dat inspirerend te noemen? Het hielp mij om met minder (voor)oordelen kijken naar alcohol in mijn omgeving.
2) Hij sluit in z’n lezingen af met ‘Alsjeblief waardeer je leven’. Een boodschap die ik niet vaak genoeg kan horen. En die doorheen tijd en ruimte troost bood.
Het boek klikte op dit punt in mijn leven niet zo. Ik voelde me moe van “vaag” zen-taalgebruik. Zijn documentaire daarentegen, geweldig: https://youtu.be/4C3C6jADV0o?si=5xWz1...
I trained with Maezumi Roshi at ZCLA for 22 years, until his untimely death in 1995. I stayed because there was always more to learn. I have a hard time being "objective" about this book. The editors did the best they could working from transcripts of taped talks and editing them for the page. I was probably present for all these talks. Whenever I read in the book it re-activates how I experienced him speaking. But what is on the page feels like it captures about 10-15% of whatever transpired when Maezumi spoke in the zendo. Still I give the book 4 stars because I think it is a very valuable document.
Dogen taught that impermanence is the Buddha Nature. Maezumi encourages the Zen practitioner to realise that one already is Buddha, so just BE IT. To realise this, devices such as breath counting, shikantaza or koans can be used. One embodies these practices and hence realises all at once. It's not something that the "I" gets involved in. Thus the practice is one of faith, trust and persistence - being reminded of ones Buddha Nature and continually practising. And perhaps most importantly in Soto Zen - gratitude! The teachings are mainly exoteric (it's all right there - nothing to hide!), though also has esoteric elements mainly due to koans, which are also used as a teaching tool.
Buddha Nature teachings are beautiful and can lead to a life of peace and freedom. However, I noticed a distinct lack of teachings on the precepts and paramitas (only one chapter). Discipline is essential in Zen and I fear that overemphasising Buddha Nature without emphasis on the precepts can lead to karmically-disadvantageous behaviour that hampers ones spiritual progress.
I read Appreciate Your Life: The Essence of Zen Practice out of respect for a friend who recently passed. I am not a practitioner of Zen Buddhism, so I was probably at a great disadvantage when reading the book. It was filled with patriarchal Zen lineage and was very ‘heady’. I found it difficult to stay focused and had to reread sections constantly. From my perspective, it is not a book for beginners. I’d suggest Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind by Shunryu Suzuki as a good place to begin. I see that I haven’t reviewed it, so perhaps now is a good time to take Suzuki’s book off the shelf and do a reread. Appreciate Your Life: The Essence of Zen Practice is going into the donation pile. Hopefully, it will find a more deserving home. I am giving it two stars out of respect for the core ideas and for my friend.
Reading books with my Zen Buddhist book group, is so meaningful. The book would be lovely on its own. With friends to discuss it with, it becomes so much more.
Great way to dive deeper into Zen, a little dense at time. Definitely requires time and focus to appreciate the contents. Worth reading again and again.
A book that I will come back to again, much of Maezumi Roshi's wisdom is beyond my current understanding. That's not to say that I didn't enjoy the book, I really did. 4 stars next time when I'm ready maybe 5.