Nothing Special – Everything Special

November 1, 2022 Meditation No Comments

There is nothing special about understanding this text. Everybody can do so. Yet, if you realize this, you realize something very special.

Noise and sound

“When a tree falls in an utterly lonely forest, does it make a sound?”

It makes a lot of noise, for sure. However, if sound is what a listener hears, then there is no sound.

If, as in the above Zen riddle, sound is what an entirely present person perceives, then the tree makes no sound even if some distracted person hears the noise.

There is a qualitative difference between hearing the noise and hearing it in a meditative way.

As such, nothing special

In meditation, nothing special happens. One feels one’s body, or one can hear a bird chirping in the distance. One can walk in meditation. One can do the dishes in meditation. There is nothing special to this, nothing that cannot be done by the same meditator in everyday life.

However.

It may be better to say that everything becomes special.

Every moment of every day of every year is special if one finds out that it is. Meditation-on-a-cushion can show this is the case ― not only on the cushion but always.

Meditation doesn’t make it so, as it doesn’t make the noise. It lets the noise become sound.

Everything special

Can anything be special that isn’t more special than anything else?

Indeed, it can, and is. It takes a meditative mindset to be able to see this, transcending dualism: this or that. It takes living in the moment, always starting again like some beginner.

In the beginner’s mind of the expert meditator, nothing is special, and everything is special. Does this appear zen-a-lidoo to you? No problem.

You might try to catch it for a few moments now.

Back to the sound and more

Meditation shows what neurocognitive science shows: Perceptions happen in the mind/brain, and so do experiences of anything that we usually ascribe to causes outside.

Of course, without the falling tree, there is no sound. Likewise, there is no sound without a listener. Likewise, there is no deeply present sound without a deeply present listener.

The tree that the deeply present listener hears falling is the tree inside.

The pain that the deeply present meditator feels in his leg is the pain inside his being present.

Even the Enlightenment (sunyata) that the deeply present meditator experiences is the Enlightenment inside.

Nothing special.

Leave a Reply

Related Posts

The Heart of Buddhism

Many Buddhists find the core of their worldview being expressed in the chanting of the Hannya Shingyo (ancient Japanese). In many Buddhist monasteries, it is chanted at least every day. You can listen to the entire (few minutes) Hannya Shingyo in this nice video. You can read a fine translation (one of many slightly different) Read the full article…

Listening to Music… with Ears of Soul

Any music will do, but I think this goes better with gentle sounds. At least that is true for me. Ears of soul, that is to say: from inside. Ears of soul, that is to say: from within the music. Ears of soul, that is to say: from within your deeper self. Do you feel Read the full article…

AureliZEN: Deep relaxation as a Foundation

[For an introduction to the AureliZen series, goto AureliZEN: a Seminar Series for Deep Growth.] Relaxation as an active force When people hear the word ‘relaxation,’ they often think of doing nothing — lounging on the couch, tuning out, escaping stress. But deep relaxation (further shortly called ‘relaxation’), the kind that recharges from the inside Read the full article…

Translate »