An introduction to Zen Buddhism

(lu) #1
FOREWORD

aboutthedeepmotivesforthe"masterpiece",asGoethecalled

Faust, or the shudders of the "Dionysus Experience"? One

mustreadBardo Thodol,theTibetanBookoftheDead,back-
wards,asIhavesuggested,^inordertofindanEasternparallel

tothetormentsandcatastrophesoftheWestern"wayofrelease"

to completeness. This is what matters—not good intentions,
cleverimitationsoreven intellectualacrobatics.Such, ininti-
mations oringreaterorlesser fragments, appears beforethe


psychotherapist who has freed himselffrom rash and short-

sighteddoctrinalopinions.Ifheisaslavetohisquasi-biological
creed hewill always try to reducewhat heobserves to the
banal familiar, and to bring it thereby to a rationalistic


denominatorwhichonlysufficesonewho iscontentwithillu-

sions.Theforemostofallillusions,however,is thatsomething

can suffice someone. That illusion stands behind all that is
unendurableandinfrontofallprogress,anditisoneofthemost
difficult things toovercome.Ifthepsychotherapistfindstime
from hishelpfulactivities fora littlereflection,or ifby any


chanceheisforcedintoseeingthroughhisownillusions,itmay

dawnuponhimhowhollowandflat,indeedhowcontraryto

lifeareallrationalisticreductionswhentheycomeuponsome-

thingalive, thatwill develop. Ifhefollows this up hesoon
getsanideaofwhatitmeans"totearopenthosedoorswhich
everyonewouldgladlyslinkpast".
Iwould not underany circumstanceshave it understood

thatinwhatIhavesaidaboveIammakinganyrecommen-

dationoroff"eringanyadvice.ButwhenWesternmenbeginto

talkaboutZen I consideritmydutytoshow theEuropean

whereour entrance liesto that "longestofall roads" which
leads to satori, and what difficulties strew that path, which
hasbeentroddenbyonlyafewofourgreatmen—perhapsas
abeacononahighmountain,shiningoutinthehazyfuture.It
wouldbeanunhealthymistaketoassumethatsatoriorsamadhi
aretobemetwithanywrherebelowthoseheights.Foracomplete
cxp>eriencetherecan benothingcheaperorsmaller than the

whole.Thep>sychologicalsignificanceofthiscanbeunderstood

bythesimpleconsiderationofthefactthattheconsciousisonly
apartofthespiritual,andisneverthereforecapableofspiritual
*W.Y.Evans-Wcntz:DasTibttatdschtTotenbuch.Rascbcr,Zurich,1934.
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