From: "Bill Smart" <> Al, Are you trying to woo us into this Wu-Wu Zen; or
does this most recent posting of yours just amount to nothing?
>
What could be more Zen, than Nothing-Nothing Zen?? Wu-Wu Zen is the real
deal, and I feel that I have finally stumbled across my personal satori. For
real. N
Al, Are you trying to woo us into this Wu-Wu Zen; or does this most recent
posting of yours just amount to nothing?
.Bill!
From: "Anthony Wu" <'wu' in Chinese, or 'mu' in Japanese, means 'nothing'. I
don't understand you, or maybe you don't want me or anybody to understand.>>
Wouldn't NOTHING-N
From: "Anthony Wu" <'wu' in Chinese, or 'mu' in Japanese, means 'nothing'. I
don't understand you, or maybe you don't want me or anybody to understand.>>
Wouldn't NOTHING-NOTHING ZEN (Wu-Wu Zen) be in harmony with the endless void
and everything that is the essence of Zen?
Perhaps we should start
Al,
'wu' in Chinese, or 'mu' in Japanese, means 'nothing'. I don't understand you,
or maybe you don't want me or anybody to understand.
Regards
Anthony
- Original Message
From: Al <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Zen_Forum@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, 8 January 2007 5:51:22 AM
Subject: [Zen]
Happy New Year To You Bill, Al and everyone,
As per your call, following is a post related to "understanding" the nature of
things.
Too often, we made judgement based what we saw, encountered or heard. We did
so because we received these physical messages through our senses.
Too often, we tho
Anthony,
I agree again, especially in a text-based e-forum it's impossible not to say
anything if you intend to participate.
I agree with your comment about 'eliminating self' (or at least recognizing
it is illusory), but I don't agree about 'understanding what things are'. I
think the fai