“Zen is a living tradition which can help to make sober, healthy, well-balanced, and stable people.”
Source: Zen Keys: A Guide to Zen Practice
“Accustomed as we are to being constantly "occupied," if these occupations should happen to be taken from us, we find ourselves empty and abandoned. We then refuse to confront ourself and instead go off in search of friends, to mix in with the crowd, to listen to the radio or to the television, to get rid of this impression of emptiness.”
Source: Zen Keys: A Guide to Zen Practice
“The development of Japanese economy has made Japan into a Western-like nation, in which many of the spiritual values have given place to materialism. The temples and monasteries must also participate in the present economic way of life and be based upon the present social needs of producing and consuming in order to exist. They can no longer play their role of spiritual leadership, as in the past. Zen is threatened on the very ground on which it was born and developed.”
Source: Zen Keys: A Guide to Zen Practice
“The West has begun to learn about Zen when it is already on the way to disintegration.”
Source: Zen Keys: A Guide to Zen Practice
“From the beginning, self-annihilation has been an important task imposed on Zen monks in everyday discipline. To cast aside the ego means to cast aside your selfhood, determinedly reducing yourself to nothing, all the while revering and obeying your seniors and carrying out your daily chores in perfect silence.”
Source: Eat Sleep Sit: My Year at Japan's Most Rigorous Zen Temple
“Without going into the history of Zen, let it be said that the relationship between master and disciple has always been fraught with peril. The hapless disciple is beaten with a stick, kicked, slapped on the head with his teacher's sandal. But to revile all such actions as violence is too hasty a conclusion. Before an act can be labeled violent, its underlying purpose must be ascertained. A little thought will show that in the context of Zen discipline, the fundamental purpose of a beating or thrashing is not to inflict injury or pain. Such acts are rather a means of conveying living truth from body to body and mind to mind, a form of spiritual training and cultivation.”
Source: Eat Sleep Sit: My Year at Japan's Most Rigorous Zen Temple
“Those who find great difficulties in practicing Zen will find more meaning in it.”
Source: Zen Mind, Beginners Mind
“Student: Master, I am thinking of crossing a very large desert without food and water, what do you say? Master: I say try to cross a small desert with water and food first!”
“The best way to do this is by putting these teachings into practice in our daily lives. Experience always goes beyond ideas.
Tenth-century Vietnamese master Thiên Hôi told his students, “Be diligent in order to attain the state of no birth and no death.” One student asked, “Where can we touch the world of no birth and no death?” and he responded, “Right here in the world of birth and death.” To touch the water, you have to touch the waves. If you touch birth and death deeply, you touch the world of no birth and no death.”
Source: The Heart of the Buddha's Teaching : Transforming Suffering into Peace, Joy and Liberation
“Student: Master, how can I reach the end of an endless road? Master: How can I answer a question that has no answer?”