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Buddhist : Zen / Chan
Taoist
8th Century

About Han-shan (Cold Mountain)

Timeline (730? - 850?)

Han-shan (Cold Mountain), Han-shan (Cold Mountain) poetry, Buddhist, Buddhist poetry, Zen / Chan poetry, [TRADITION SUB2] poetry, Taoist poetry

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English version by
Red Pine (Bill Porter)

Original Language
Chinese

[235] Here's a message for the faithful

Commentary by
Ivan M. Granger

 
 
 
 
 

 

Recommended Books

The Collected Songs of Cold Mountain, Translated by Red Pine
A Drifting Boat: Chinese Zen Poetry, Edited by J. P. Seaton / Edited by Dennis Maloney
The Enlightened Heart: An Anthology of Sacred Poetry, by Stephen Mitchell
The Poetry of Zen: (Shambhalla Library), Edited by Sam Hamill / Edited by J. P. Seaton
Riprap and Cold Mountain Poems, by Gary Snyder

More >>

Here's a message for the faithful
what is it that you cherish
to find the Way to see your nature
your nature is naturally so
what Heaven bestows is perfect
looking for proof leads you astray
leaving the trunk to search among the twigs
all you get is stupid

 

 

-- from The Collected Songs of Cold Mountain, Translated by Red Pine

Amazon.com

 

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Commentary by Ivan M. Granger

Even the most sincere of spiritual traditions and practices have a tendency to exhort the seeker to reach outward, to, in effect, seek what is not already there. This is almost inherent in the notion of being a spiritual "seeker" -- to seek, you must be looking for something you don't already have.

Han-shan is reminding us of the essentially non-dual nature of our existence. We are not seeking some sense of God or Buddha who is "out there" somewhere. We are seeking ourselves, our Self, our own true nature. We are seeking the Divine Nature that is what we truly are.

As Han-shan says, our "nature is naturally so." We do not need to impose elaborate spiritual concepts upon our perception of ourselves and reality in order to truly see. We must do the opposite, remove all artificial concepts and simply witness what we truly are in stillness. We are naturally of the eternal nature we are. Indeed, "what Heaven bestows is perfect."

Excessive striving and turning the awareness outward -- even when seeking that which is sacred -- makes it that much more difficult to bring the awareness to rest within. Thus, Han-shan reminds us that "looking for proof leads you astray." In other words, we must stop looking for an objectified, externalized sense of God or the Buddha nature or of ourselves and, instead, discover who is doing the looking through us -- that is when we find God, the Buddha nature, our very Self!


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Ivan M. Granger's original poetry, stories and commentaries are Copyright © 2002 - 2008 by Ivan M. Granger.
All other material is copyrighted by the respective authors, translators and/or publishers.