Did I get some fortune cookie Zen?
The fortune says, "Discriminating mind leads you in the right direction."
However, Foyan says as follows:
One who is not a companion of myriad things has departed the toils of materialism. The mind does not recognize the mind, the eye does not see the eye; since there is no opposition, when you see forms there are no forms there to be seen, and when you hear sounds there are no sounds there to be heard. Is this not departing the toils of materialism?
There is no particular pathway into it, no gap through which to see it: Buddhism has no East or West, South or North; one does not say, “You are the disciple, I am the teacher” If your own self is clear and everything is It, when you visit a teacher you do not see that there is a teacher; when you inquire of yourself, you do not see that you have a self. When you read scripture, you do not see that there is scripture there. When you eat, you do not see that there is a meal there. When you sit and meditate, you do not see that there is any sitting. You do not slip up in your everyday tasks, yet you cannot lay hold of anything at all.
When you see in this way, are you not independent and free?
This seems non-discriminatory to me, especially that bit about not having compasses in Buddhism. RIP fortune cookie.
I forgot where I left off in Instant Zen, but luckily it was right there at the beginning. Though I have heard this stuff is mostly the same thing over and over again.
Thank you for your time.