PZI Events Calendar
W E L C O M E to the PZI Events Calendar! Here you will find all upcoming events and registration links for PZI Zen Online retreats, sesshins, and weekly meditations & talks. Search by individual event, day, or month. Save to your Google Calendar or iCal Calendar. No experience required to participate. All event times are Pacific Time. Questions? Contact Emlyn Guiney
F E A T U R E D
September 21 Daylong: Zen and the Goddess Part I
September 22 Sunday Zen with John Tarrant & Friends
October 22–27 Fall Sesshin: The 1000-Armed Goddess of Mercy
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MONDAY ZEN: Ducks Say it Upside-Down with Jon Joseph
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It is nice to occasionally experience the universe as incredibly silly, to see the world as a vast field of play. In even the most dire of circumstances, at times we can taste a quality of suchness and light, one that existed before we attached the definitions “pain” and “struggle.”
In one of our recent Pacific Zen gatherings we talked about jokes, about improbable joy, and the play of the universe. A joke that popped into my mind: the very first one I learned as a young child. It is a silly one that I like to spring onto my family once a decade or so, to a chorus of groans.
It was interesting that as I sat with it, the childhood joke took on the quality of a koan: simple, clear, repetitive, and yet somehow alive without holding a particular meaning. And during the session, a surprising synchronicity emerged: A joke about ducks came up and then the famous Yunmen koan, Upside-Down Statement:
A monk asked Yunmen, “When it’s not the present intellect and it’s not the present phenomena, what is it?”
Yunmen responded, “Say something upside down.”
(Blue Cliff Record Case 15)
It was almost as if the whole forum, along with Yunmen himself, had written the child’s joke:
Question: “Why do ducks fly upside down?”
Answer: “So they can quack up!”
It doesn’t make any sense but that is why it is so alive.
Sometimes the nonsensical are the funniest of jokes.
A couple weeks ago our neighbors joined us for dinner and brought along a young distant cousin who had recently moved from New York to North Carolina. The young man, in his early thirties, had studied philosophy for some years and spoke of different philosophical streams of thought with great eloquence. I was entranced. He had just finished his first Zen retreat at a nearby center and had some questions about practice. For some reason I felt rather taciturn and only added a few thoughts about Zen, while the others chatted on about it. He asked about koans, and I mentioned Yanguan’s Rhinoceros:
One day Yanguan called to his attendant, “Bring me my rhinoceros-horn fan.” T
he attendant said, “The fan is broken.”
Yanguan said, “If the fan is broken, then bring me the rhinoceros.”
(Blue Cliff Record Case 91)
I had read that koan dozens, perhaps hundreds, of times. This time I found it irrepressibly funny and began to laugh loudly, wholly out of character with the tone of our discussion. Everyone at the table looked at me and I felt a little embarrassed. Perhaps you had to have been there.
—Jon Joseph
Art: Eniko Eget
COME JOIN US on Mondays for koan meditation, dharma talk and conversation.
Register to participate. All are welcome.
Jon Joseph Roshi, Director of San Mateo Zen Community