There’s a traditional Zen saying: if the martial artist understands the martial art, they will have success—but only some of the time. If the martial artist understands the martial art and their opponent, they will have success most of the time. But if the martial artist understands the martial art, their opponent, and themselves—there can only be success.
This is because when we understand ourselves, everything becomes part of the discovery of deepening that understanding. So even when we fail, we learn. Even when we stumble, we deepen.
The Japanese practice of Kudo is a contemplative training in archery where the practitioner stands an. Arrow’s length from the target. Success is guaranteed if the practitioner follows basic procedure. But where was their mind during that time? The point, thewy say, is not the target. The point it the mind. Training the mind is the all-important process of learning to understand the mind, so that we understand ourselves. This is a journey to gain mastery over mind so that we have agency over ourselves and our lives. Agency doesn‘t mean controlling nor altering reality. Agency which leads to Mastery is the ability to train the mind to recognize when it is led astray, off the point or clouded by internal drama and to access our natural clarity. From this base of clarity to make decisions which are mindful and considered. This is Mastery.
Do we have agency in our life, or are we just following impulse after impulse—desire leading to desire, leading to lack of fulfillment and depression? Who is in control here? Who is the master of this ship? And where are we heading? The answer is we are our own master, provided we recognize the aspect of mind that allows access to our natural leadership. From this seat, we can ride the waves of internal triggers or external obstacles, like a ship’s captain navigating turbulent waters. The captain does not engage each wave, nor do they contemplate the many dangers around them. They remain internally balanced and guide the ship to safety.
So where are we going?
As is said in Nyingma tradition texts: Rigpa. There is only Rigpa. Rigpa means awareness, but on a deep level—it is the essence of knowing itself, primordial, all-encompassing, and beyond the scope of conceptualization. And though this awareness is non-graspable, we can orient our minds toward it. In more common terms, we could say we are here to develop the kind of awareness that leads us toward wisdom. Or more precisely: awareness that leads beyond the constraints of ego, toward the truth of wisdom.
Awareness. Space. Wisdom.
Developing awareness is the method. Awareness leads to recognizing Space in our mind and our life. And Wisdom is the destination. The destination is not final, as nothing in life is final. Wisdom leads to deepening awareness, which allows us to locate the space to find the balance to make decisions informed by our higher mind. This means, we navigate the space within the turmoil.
Whew. Okay, let’s make it practical. Awareness has always been here and will always be here. It can be accessed by a mind of humility and confidence that is brave enough to face itself, resist the triggers, and return to balance BEFORE action.
We are falling out of the tight constraints of habitual thinking into a larger picture—beyond ourselves. And sometimes falling in love is accompanied by fear. Because ego is organized around control. And since experience is all that we can effectively control, we eliminate the space that offers perspective and contrasting ideas until life becomes small enough for ego to manage. Life becomes two dimensional and black and white. Ego is confining. As it filters out space, it removes possibility, and lateral thinking therefore its nature is said to be not-knowing. Ignorance. A common form of developing ignorance is to focus on things we think we know to the exclusion of new ideas. All we know when we are wrapped in ourselves is what we’ve already learned. We are as Feynman said: learning more and more about less and less. The irony is thinking we’re brilliant!
We’ve become so granular in our thinking that we refer only to ourselves and the ideas we allow to be filtered into our basement. And the mind—which craves newness—becomes dull. Unresponsive. When we lose the space that allows us to access awareness, we lose confidence. Without confidence we have no agency. We become victims. We allow the world and our minds to lead us by the nose. We become so certain our thinking is accurate that we assume everyone else should feel the same. As our mind closes further, we begin to encircle ourselves in a world that agrees with us. This happens in politics, society, our lives and our mind. It’s overwhelming. So, begin at the beginning. All that we can change right now is our mind. And all the mind needs is to be strengthened by training.
Come back to now. Regain the balance and find the space to see clearly. Then we’ll know what to do.