We Are All Connected — Finding Your “Big Mind”

We are all born with the unborn Buddha Mind, what I call Big Mind/Big Heart, an inner awareness that we are connected with others and our environment – literally One Mind.  But something happens as we grow up; we begin to make distinctions and to separate ourselves from the rest of the world.  We trade the Big Heart-Mind we are born with for another mind that centers around the small self.  That self then becomes our number one preoccupation.

The small mind always looks at the world from the center called “me.”  The arrow points “out there” so everything else appears to be on the outside.  And when we look “out there,” we feel rather empty, unimportant and incomplete “in here.”  Naturally want arises; we want to feel better, more complete.  As long as we believe that something outside ourselves can make us feel whole, we will be driven to grasp at things.  Dissatisfaction and anxiety will haunt us because we have traded Big Mind for a narrow, self-centered one.  This unrest is what the Buddha called ignorance.  We ignore our intrinsic wholeness.

The point of spiritual practice is to return to our original nature, which is Big Mind – the mind of clarity and wisdom, and Big Heart – the mind of compassion.  When our mind is not divided, there simply is no conflict.  In Zen we turn our own light inward to find our way back to original mind.

An easy exercise can give you a glimpse into the true nature of your mind.  Take a few minutes to look inside and ask yourself this simple question.  “How big is this mind?”  Really look!  Don’t imagine what you think you should find; look for yourself.  Can you grasp the size of your mind?  No, it is ungraspable.  Can you find a beginning? an end?  Can you find a birth or death?  No.  Anything that you find has been invented by the small mind.

In Big Mind we experience no separation, no outside, no inside, no point and no center.  Even though we experience this incomprehensible Heart-Mind, our separate and frightened self wants to believe that something bigger than ourselves has everything in control; so we keep looking for God “out there.”  The secret known by all the mystics is that God can be found only when we give up our efforts to control and understand our life.  Such striving is really unnecessary.  When we give up our small perspective and come from Big Mind what is there that we don’t know? 

When we look inside and let go, we can come from Big Mind and see that there is no need to control any of it.  When we allow everything to just be, it all functions perfectly, exactly the way we want because we give up wanting it to be any other way.  The trick is to let go of wanting.  When we give up our preconceptions of where the snow should fall and let it fall where it falls, then there is no question about what to do.  Grab a shovel.  Instead of fighting and resisting, we can simply take care of each situation as it happens.  So put the car in neutral.  Relax and let be.  Appreciate how everything is functioning perfectly.

One of the first voices to explore in this process is the voice of the Controller.  Take a few minutes to experience this voice; appreciate its value in your practical life.  Could you function without it?  Now ask it to rest awhile.  You may have been thinking the Controller was the real you, but get to know some other dimensions of yourself.  There are many voices to explore on the way to Big Mind.  The truth of the voices lies in their expression, their being.  Be the voice of the Vulnerable Child.  Sit with it.  What is your vulnerable child like?  Speak as the Protector, the Damaged Self, the Skeptic, the Seeker.  Many on the spiritual path are already acquainted with the Seeker.  It’s the mind that brings us to the path.  Yet, can the Seeking Mind ever be what it seeks?

Now shift to the Non-Seeking mind.  Let all objectives simply drop away and experience this space.  One participant at a recent workshop describes his own experience: “Here [in non-seeking mind] is a sanctuary, entirely in the present, yet part of a continuum extending to the ends of the universe, incorporating birth and death.  Here is ‘Big Mind’ encompassing everything.”

Whether you’re in that space or not, Big Mind is your mind.

Zen Master Genpo Roshi, is the creator of the Big Mind Big Heart Western Zen Approach to Life and author of Big Mind, Big Heart: Finding YourWay, four other books, and numerous DVDs.  A recognized Zen Master in the Soto and Rinzai Traditions, he is the founder of Kanzeon Zen International Community and abbot of the Kanzeon Zen Center, Utah.  He has been teaching Zen throughout the U.S. and Europe since 1979. For further information visit the website www.bigmind.org.

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About genpo.roshi

Dennis Genpo Merzel Roshi is a revolutionary in the tradition of the old Zen Masters who so embodied Buddhist teaching that they were able to revitalize and transform it for their own day and age. As Buddhism moved from India to China to Japan and other Asian cultures, it found unique expression in each culture that made its fundamental teachings resonate for a new time and place. Genpo Roshi is working to transmit the essence of the Buddha’s teachings in a way that is readily accessible to Westerners and relevant to our everyday life.The core of Genpo Roshi’s teaching is the unshakeable and contagious certainty that every one of us, regardless of our socio-economic, cultural or religious background, can instantly awaken to our true nature, like the great masters of old — like the historical Buddha himself, whose essential teaching was nothing less than this. This experience helps us shed anxiety and fear and learn to live more purposeful, compassionate and joyful lives. Roshi combines Zen tradition with the insights of such visionary western figures as Carl Jung, Fritz Perls, and Hal Stone, enabling virtually anyone to realize their true nature, a realization they can further deepen through meditation.Dennis Genpo Merzel comes from a long line of Rebbes. Born in Brooklyn NY, he grew up in Southern California where he was a high school champion swimmer and All-American water polo player. He earned a Masters degree in education from the University of Southern California and was a teacher and lifeguard before ordaining as a Zen monk under Zen Master Taizan Maezumi in 1973. Completing formal Koan study in 1979 he became Maezumi Roshi’s second Dharma Successor in 1980, the first being Bernie Tetsugen Glassman. He received Inka (final seal of approval as Zen Master) from Roshi Glassman in 1996, thereby becoming one of a small group of Westerners recognized as lineage holders in both the Soto and Rinzai Zen traditions.In 1982 Genpo Sensei began teaching throughout Europe and founded the international group he named the Kanzeon (Love and Compassion) Sangha, centered in Salt Lake City, Utah, with affiliates in France, Holland, Poland, Belgium, Germany, England, and Malta. He has eleven Dharma Successors: Catherine Genno Pages, John Shodo Flatt, Anton Tenkei Coppens, Malgosia Jiho Braunek, Daniel Doen Silberberg, Nico Sojun Tydeman, Nancy Genshin Gabrysch, Diane Musho Hamilton, Michael Mugaku Zimmerman, Richard Taido Christofferson, and Michel Genko Dubois. He has given Inka to seven Zen teachers: John Daido Loori, Catherine Genno Pages and Anton Tenkei Coppens, Jan Chozen Bays, Charles Tenshin Fletcher, Nicolee Jikyo McMahon and Susan Myoyu Andersen. For ten years, until 2007, he was the President of the White Plum Asanga, the worldwide community comprising all the Dharma heirs of Taizan Maezumi Roshi, their successors, and the many groups they lead.Roshi’s publications include The Eye Never Sleeps, Beyond Sanity and Madness, 24/7 Dharma, and The Pah of The Human Being, and several DVDs. His latest book, Big Mind/Big Heart: Finding Your Way, published in the Fall of 2007, is also going to be published in translation in Holland, Spain, Germany, Russia and Poland. He is married to Stephanie Young Merzel, co-administrator of Kanzeon Zen Center International, and has two children, Tai Merzel, an aerospace engineer, and Nicole Merzel, a mathematics major at the University of Puget Sound. Website: www.bigmind.org

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One Response to We Are All Connected — Finding Your “Big Mind”

  1. Diana g June 12, 2009 at 4:15 am #

    When I find "Big Mind" within me I feel as though everything makes sense and is as it should be. What is difficult is integrating the "non-seeking, non-striving mind" with the hopeful commitment necessary to get through the daily life of the little "self" where functionality is all.

    The top of the mountain is only half way. Bringing the tablets back down was always the problem.