(Soen Sa Nim)
Laundromat repairman, 78th Korean Zen Patriarch, ”Great Lineage Master,” Korean army captain, founder of the international Kwan Um School of Zen; Seungsahn founded many Zen centers in the USA, in Israel, and—with Mikhail Gorbachev’s invitation—one also in the Soviet Union. A member of the underground resistance during the Japanese occupation of Japan, he was caught, imprisoned and almost executed. This led to a 100 day retreat living on a diet of pine needles and rain water and his transition to dharma teaching. Teaching in the West without attachment to a particular form or school, he taught the appreciation of “don’t-know mind” and improvised different practices for different students. this improvisation may have gone a little too far though when—still posing as a celibate monk—he had many affairs with female students. When discovered, he did repentance ceremonies making it seem unlikely that these actions were just more teachings.
Lineages
Zen
“Only don’t know!”
Chapters:
65. Simplicity: the Hidden Power of Goodness
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“Our mind is like a clear glass of water. If we put salt into water, it becomes salt water; sugar, it becomes sugar water, shit, it becomes shit water. But originally the water is clear.”
Chapters:
78. Water
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“No thinking, no mind. No mind, no problem.”
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“You must keep don’t know mind always and everywhere. This is the true practice of Zen.”
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“Only throw away likes and dislikes and everything will be perfectly clear.”
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“The mind that becomes one with the universe is before thinking.”
Chapters:
39. Oneness
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“The conflict between right and wrong is a sickness of the mind.”
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“If you want to get the plain truth, be not concerned with right and wrong.”
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