• Freedom is a ladder: one side of the ladder reaches hell, the other side touches heaven. It is the same ladder; the choice is yours.
    - Osho

open all | close all

oshofriends




oshofriends

 

 

 

Hyakujo

 



Hyakujo was the direct heir of Ma Tzu and became most well known for his establishment of the first truly Zen monasteries and his treatise on sudden enlightenment.

To understand Hyakujo, the first thing is to understand that enlightenment can only be sudden. The preparation can be gradual, but the illumination is going to be sudden. You can prepare the ground for the seeds, but the sprouts will come suddenly one day in the morning; they don't come gradually. Existence believes in suddenness. Nothing is gradual here, although everything appears to be gradual; that is our illusion. [....]

Hyakujo introduced another thing: Zen monasteries. Before him there were Zen temples -- small groups of people living in those temples, meditating, reading scriptures. But he introduced a new thing, the monastery, where people were absolutely devoted to a single-pointed goal: to become the buddha. No scriptures, no rituals... the whole energy has to be poured into a single direction: to discovering your intrinsic nature. And why monasteries? When there are thousands of people together, going into the unknown, it is easier for you, because you know that although you are going alone into your own space, thousands of others are also going into the same space on their own. You are not absolutely alone. Secondly, a monastery creates a certain atmosphere. That was the greatest contribution of Hyakujo.


-Osho, "Hyakujo: The Everest of Zen, with Basho's Haikus, #1"

 

 



This gesture by Hyakujo is the greatest sermon delivered in the whole history of mysticism. Just to prepare his people he used to say, "Go and work in the field. You cannot work with the trees and with the grass and with the roses for long without yourself becoming as silent as they are."


The people who live with nature naturally find a synchronicity between themselves and the rivers and the mountains, they are closer to the earth and its heartbeat.


Hyakujo first tried to bring the disciple close to nature, close to silence. Unless he is prepared, the great sermon cannot be delivered. A great sermon needs great disciples, and a great disciple is exactly one who is silent.


-Osho, "This, This, A Thousand Times This: The Very Essence of Zen, #3"

 

 



This series of talks is entitled THE GREAT PEARL, HYAKUJO, WITH THE HAIKUS OF BASHO. Hyakujo is immensely expressive and knows what he is doing and how to bring people to the unknowable.


Basho never wrote prose. Basho is one of the greatest poets in the world. His greatness is not in his poetry -- there are far greater poets as far as the composition of poetry is concerned. His greatness is that his poetry is not just verbiage, is not just putting words together according to a certain pattern, his poetry is an experience.

 

I have put them together because Hyakujo never wrote any poetry. His approach is very prose and direct, and the haikus supplement what is missing in the prose. Basho expressed himself very graphically. His experiences are more paintings than poetry. And his understanding is -- and I agree with him -- that where prose fails, poetry may succeed. Poetry has a more feminine way, more subtle, more graceful, entering into the heart.

 

Prose directly enters into the head and immediately becomes a concern of logic and reason. Poetry has a different root, a different path. You don't bring in rationalization as far as poetry is concerned. Something else becomes stirred in you, something deeper than the mind. Poetry cannot be a logical statement. It is an existential statement -- what Basho himself has seen he has tried to put into words. Hence I have put together two great masters.


-Osho, "Hyakujo: The Everest of Zen, with Basho's Haikus, #2"


 

 


  1. No Image

    on Hui Neng Enlightenment

    It is said that Hui Neng, one of the greatest Zen masters, the sixth patriarch in the Zen tradition, became enlightened by hearing four lines of The Diamond Sutra. And he was just passing by in a marketplace. He had gone to purchase something, he was not even thinking of enlightenment, and somebody by the side...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  2. No Image

    on Gautam Buddha, Maulingaputta and Mahakashyapa

    In the long history of Zen there are milestones. Mahakashyapa is the first, but not much is known about him – in Buddhist scriptures he is mentioned only once. Just one mention and yet he is regarded as the greatest disciple of Gautam Buddha. For twenty years he has not spoken a single word, no question, just ...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  3. No Image

    Osho on Tokusan Enlightenment

    Osho on Tokusan Enlightenment Before he had realized his own enlightenment, Tokusan planned to visit the famous zen master, Soshin, who lived on a mountain in Ryotan. when he arrived at the foot of the mountain, Tokusan found a tea house by the roadside, and thought that he might have a snack before climbing t...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  4. No Image

    on Zen Master Bankei

    Question : Osho, Bankei was preaching quietly to his followers one day when his talking was interrupted by a priest from another sect. this sect believed in the power of miracles, and thought that salvation came from repeating holy words. Bankei stopped talking, and asked the priest what he wanted to say. The ...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  5. No Image

    Joshu

    Joshu Joshu is one of those exceptional people who become enlightened without any formal initiation. They are nobody's disciple. It is a very exceptional case. But the story of Joshu is going to be very beautiful. His each statement is so poetic, so pregnant, that unless you listen in utter silence, you will m...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  6. No Image

    Ma Tzu

    Ma Tzu “Ma Tzu was a very strange master -- you have heard about him. He walked just like an animal on all fours; he never stood up on his legs -- not that there was any problem, not that he was hunchback. He just walked on all fours because he said that is the most relaxed position. It is, because man is stan...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  7. No Image

    on Bodhidharma

    Osho on Zen Master Bodhidharma I have a very soft corner in my heart for Bodhidharma. That makes it a very special occasion to speak about him. Perhaps he is the only man whom I have loved so deeply that speaking on him I will be almost speaking on myself. That also creates a great complexity, because he never...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  8. No Image

    on Mahakashyap - first Zen Master

    This story is one of the most significant ones, because from this was passed the tradition of Zen. Buddha was the source, and Mahakashyap was the first, the original master of Zen. Buddha was the source, Mahakashyap was the first master, and this story is the source from where the whole tradition — one of the ...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  9. No Image

    Bodhidharma : When Bodhidharma reached China

    Osho on Bodhidharma I have a very soft corner in my heart for Bodhidharma. That makes it a very special occasion to speak about him. Perhaps he is the only man whom I have loved so deeply that speaking on him I will be almost speaking on myself. That also creates a great complexity, because he never wrote anyt...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  10. No Image

    Osho - Zen Master Kyogen Enlightenment

    Osho on Zen Master Kyogen Enlightenment Kyogen was a scholar of great learning, and for some time, this stood in the way of his enlightenment. One day, isan asked kyogen, "when you were with our teacher, hyakujo, you were clever enough to give ten answers to a single question, and hundreds of answers to ten qu...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  11. No Image

    on Sage Mind - Zen Master Bokuju Mind

    We are all suffering from eye diseases. This is just symbolic. Not that we use specs – those eyes are not what is meant. Even a blind man suffers from eye diseases and he has no eyes. These eyes, these visible eyes are not what is meant. The world that we create around us is created through our eye diseases. W...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  12. No Image

    Hyakujo

    Hyakujo Hyakujo was the direct heir of Ma Tzu and became most well known for his establishment of the first truly Zen monasteries and his treatise on sudden enlightenment. To understand Hyakujo, the first thing is to understand that enlightenment can only be sudden. The preparation can be gradual, but the illu...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  13. No Image

    on Zen Master Hui-Hai Enlightenment

    on Zen Master Hui-Hai Enlightenment Hui-Hai was a Zen Master. When he had come to his Teacher, the Teacher said, ”Choose! Would you like methods of will? Then I will suggest something to you. Or, are you ready to surrender? If you choose the path of will, then you will have to do something. I can only be a gui...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  14. No Image

    Nansen

    Nansen Nansen is one of the most famous zen masters. Many stories are told about him; one I have been telling you many times. I will repeat it again, because stories like that are to be repeated again and again, so that you can imbibe them. They are a sort of nourishment. -Osho, "And The Flowers Showered, #11"...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  15. No Image

    on Zen Master Hyakujo Sutras of enlightenment

    ”IT IS NOT OBTAINED FROM OTHERS. THEREFORE, WHEN YOU ARE ENLIGHTENED, YOUR ORIGINAL NATURE MANIFESTS ITSELF. NOW YOU HAVE ATTAINED IT – CAREFULLY CULTIVATE IT.” This is a very significant statement of Hyakujo. You cannot cultivate enlightenment, that will be phony. You can walk like a buddha, you can manage to...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  16. No Image

    on Shunryo Suzuki

    Question 1 : Beloved Osho, Shunryo Suzuki, one of the first zen masters to live and teach in the west, was once asked why he never spoke much about satori, enlightenment. The master laughed and answered, “the reason i do not talk about satori is because i have never had it.” Could you please comment. David Hey...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  17. No Image

    on Zen Master Ekido

    Osho on Zen Master Ekido The Japanese Master Ekido was a severe teacher and his pupils feared him. One day, as one of his pupils was striking the time of day on the temple gong, he missed a beat because he was watching a beautiful girl who was passing the gates. Unknown to the pupil, Ekido was standing behind ...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  18. No Image

    Osho on Bodhidharma

    Osho on Bodhidharma One of the most beautiful in the history of Zen. And, of course, it belongs to the first Zen patriarch, Bodhidharma. Bodhidharma is the genius of the absurd. Nobody has ever surpassed him. When he reached China, the Emperor came to receive him. Rumors had arrived that a great man was coming...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  19. No Image

    Osho on Zen disciple Zengen Awakening

    Osho on Zen disciple Zengen Awakening Now try to understand this parable: AT THE DEATH OF A PARISHIONER, MASTER DOGO, ACCOMPANIED BY HIS DISCIPLE ZENGEN, VISITED THE BEREAVED FAMILY. WITHOUT TAKING TIME TO EXPRESS A WORD OF SYMPATHY, ZENGEN WENT UP TO THE COFFIN, RAPPED ON IT, AND ASKED DOGO: 'IS HE REALLY DEA...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  20. No Image

    on Enlightenment of Shen Tsan's Teacher

    on Enlightenment of Shen Tsan's Teacher Zen Master, Shen Tsan, gained his enlightenment through Pai Chang. He then returned to the monastery in which he had been ordained by his ’first teacher’, the monk who had brought him up from childhood and who, at that time, was a very old man.... Remember: he was just a...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  21. No Image

    Kyozan

    Kyozan Kyozan was a very simple man -- not the philosophic kind, not a poet, nor a sculptor. Nothing can be said about him except that he was absolutely authentic, honest. If he does not know a thing he will say so, even at the risk of people thinking that he has fallen from his enlightenment. But this makes h...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  22. No Image

    Ta Hui

    Ta Hui “Ta Hui means the "Great Master of Wisdom." Only at the last moment it seems he attained enlightenment, just before he died, but then he did not say anything except a small verse. So I have called him "The Great Teacher" -- and he was certainly a great teacher. He influenced millions of people; he was a...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  23. No Image

    on Zen Master Ma Tzu and his Disciple Nansen

    We have discussed Ma Tzu. It is no wonder that a man of the insight of Nansen immediately became… he did not miss a single moment as he arrived at Ma Tzu’s monastery, as he saw the master, he immediately touched his feet. And this respect was not one-sided, this love was not one-sided; Ma Tzu showered great lo...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  24. No Image

    Hanyatara and Bodhidharma

    I have heard a very beautiful legend. The legend is, there was a great Master in India, the twenty-seventh successor of Gautam the Buddha; his name was Hanyatara. A king in south India requested him to come to his court. The king himself came, bowed down to Hanyatara, touched his feet, and said, "Please, come ...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  25. No Image

    on Bokoju Enlightenment

    And a Zen Master is just the opposite: you go to him, you have to bow down seven times. And you ask some innocent question… and he jumps on you, hits you on the head so unexpectedly. A very different device, but just think: a Bodhidharma, a Rinzai, a Bokoju, jumping on you, hitting on your head! For a moment a...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  26. No Image

    Dogen

    Dogen Before I explain Dogen to you, let this be the introduction, because this is what he is trying to say: that everything passes and yet there is something that never passes; that everything is born and dies and yet there is something that is never born and never dies. And unless you get centered into that ...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  27. No Image

    Quotes on ZEN Master - Laughing Buddha Hotei

    Osho Quotes on Laughing Buddha Hotei Hotei, a Zen master, was passing through a village He was one of the most beautiful persons who have ever walked on earth. He was known to people as ‘The Laughing Buddha’ — he used to laugh continuously. But sometimes he would sit under a tree — in this village he was sitti...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  28. No Image

    Isan

    Isan The title of the series is ISAN: NO FOOTPRINTS IN THE BLUE SKY. He was as great a master as one can be, but has left behind him neither great scriptures nor great commentaries. Isan functioned exactly as Buddha had said an authentic master would -- to disappear in the blue sky like a bird, leaving no foot...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  29. No Image

    on Zen Master Hotei - Laughing Buddha

    Osho on Zen Master Hotei - Laughing Buddha In Japan, a great mystic, Hotei, is called the laughing Buddha. He is one of the most loved mystics in Japan, and he never uttered a single word. As he became enlightened, he started laughing, and whenever somebody would ask, Why are you laughing? he would laugh more....
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  30. No Image

    on Rinzai Enlightenment

    A Zen monk, Rinzai, attained his enlightenment, and the first thing he asked was, ”Where is my body? Where has my body gone?” And he began to search. He called his disciples and said, ”Go and find out where my body is. I have lost my body.” He had entered the formless. You are also a formless existence, but yo...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  31. No Image

    on Zen Master Bokoju Death

    Meditation means surrender, total letting go. As soon as someone surrenders himself he finds himself in the hands of divinity. If we cling to ourselves we cannot be one with the almighty. When the waves disappear, they become the ocean itself. Let us try some experiments in order to understand what is meant by...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  32. No Image

    Rinzai

    Rinzai “Rinzai has a special place just as Bodhidharma has. Bodhidharma introduced Zen to China from India, and Rinzai introduced Zen to Japan from China. These two were key figures in creating a whole new approach to reality. You will see, at some points, it is so difficult not to say that this man has certai...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
  33. No Image

    on Ten Zen Bulls

    In Japan, they had a beautiful collection of paintings called “Ten Zen Bulls.” It is a series of paintings depicting the whole story of the search. In the first, a man is looking here and there… his bull is lost. You see forest all around, ancient trees, and the puzzled man standing there looking, and he canno...
    CategoryOsho on Zen Master
    Read More
Board Pagination Prev 1 Next
/ 1