There’s a saying in the Bible about the left hand not knowing what the right hand is doing. We also have a saying in Zen that to give the gift of no fear is the greatest gift. To me, that’s the gift of Big Mind, because in Big Mind there’s absolutely no fear. It’s only when all boundaries have dissolved, or been transcended, that there’s no fear, and that is the greatest gift.
That ability to not care, to be detached from expectations, is another gift from Big Mind. I think in our society we’re very concerned about how little we care, how selfish and greedy we are, and we realize that we need to care more, we need to have more compassion, we need to have more empathy, we need all that. But what we don’t see is the other side of the coin: in some ways we care too much, or we could say we are too attached, and that keeps us from being really free, happy and joyful. If we were free, happy and joyful, everything would flow better, our lives and the whole world.
Can you imagine a world where everybody was free, happy and joyful, where everybody came from a place of generosity and giving freely without any strings attached? Can you just imagine this world? It’s almost impossible to imagine, it would be such a different place.
Well, that’s our work. That’s what we’re here to do, and I think we’re all in this together. Nobody escapes, we’re all in the same boat, we’re all on the same planet. It’s a global affair. We either make it, or we break it.
Zen Master Genpo Roshi founded the Kanzeon Sangha, an international Zen community in 1984, with groups and centers throughout Europe and the U.S., and is abbot of Kanzeon Zen Center in Salt Lake City, Utah, which he founded in 1993. He discovered the Big Mind process in 1999. His newest book is Big Mind Big Heart: Finding Your Way.
Visit his website at: www.bigmind.org



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