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09/22/2023
12:28
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    Introduction
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    Productivity
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    • 1.1 What if I Had to Decide Now?
    • 1.2 Delay Decisions until the Optimum ..
    • 1.3 Disconnect
    • 1.5 Mind Mapping
    • 1.7 🏛️ Getting Things Done
    • 1.10 Default to Openness
    • 1.12 Pause and Ask Why
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    Relationships and Communication
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    • 2.1 🏛️ Nonviolent Communication
    • 2.2 Prefer Requests over Demands
    • 2.4 Post Mortem after Arguments
    • 2.5 Mega Threads
    • 2.6 Active Listening
    • 2.7 Radical Honesty
    • 2.8 When Triggered, Pause
    • 2.10 Silence
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    Therapy
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    • 3.1 Go to Therapy
    • 3.3 Gratitude
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    • 3.9 Make the Most of Therapy
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    Spirit
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    • 4.1 🏛️ Meditation
    • 4.2 Everyday Mindfulness
    • 4.6 Kōans and Mu
    • 4.9 Enlightenment is Always Now
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    Mind
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    • 5.1 Write Book Reviews
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    • 6.9 Agree to Be Hungry
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Print: 4.6 Kōans and Mu
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4.6 Kōans and Mu

There is value in exercising the mind with impossible questions

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Motivation
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Zen kōans are stories, statements, or questions for which a solution is sought, but no such solution or answer exists. For example:

  • If a tree falls in the forest and nobody is there, does it make a sound?
  • Does a dog have buddha nature?
  • Show me your original face before you were born.

Such propositions defy our usual way of thinking, and any attempt to arrive at a definitive answer can be daunting or impossible. Nonetheless, there is value in asking them repeatedly and observing what the mind conjures in response. Sometimes the best approach to take with these propositions is simply to experience them, and give up on attempting to reach a rational reply. This attitude can be encapsulated in the concept of Mu.

Mu’s meaning, at least as popularized by Robert M. Pirsig in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, is “No class; not one, not zero, not yes, not no," or in short “unask the question”. In other words, the inquiry does not fall into the category of questions with a concrete answer. Rather, it is intended as a tool to exercise the mind, with the ultimate goal of completely bypassing thought and discovering one’s true nature.

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Benefits
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  • Working on kōans is a powerful path to expanding your awareness.
  • Mu allows you to think the unthinkable, and encapsulate in a word that which is inexpressible.
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Challenges
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  • For some people, the fact that kōans have no correct answer can be quite frustrating.
  • One can misuse Mu as a shortcut, as a way to avoid working with an impossible question, and thus miss its fruits.
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Application
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There are various ways of working with kōans. Traditionally, Zen teachers assigned a specific kōan to each student, with instructions to meditate on it, or “walk with” it throughout the day. Students were not expected to achieve a particular correct answer, but rather were judged on their overall approach. After weeks, months, or even years, the student presented a reply to their teacher, who guided them in turn using approval, disapproval, or terse further instructions. Thus, the student proceeded through a series of kōans, with the intent of reshaping their mind and triggering a spiritual awakening.

These days, the traditional Zen method might not be suitable for everyone, especially westerners. It’s not easy to dedicate huge parts of one’s life to practice. As westerners, we are more used to bite size meditation, making our spiritual search one of a number of important activities in our lives, as opposed to dedicating every moment to it. If you’re seeking to explore this path, with a more limited commitment, you might want to practice either by reading a list of kōans or a practice book, or by listening to specific guided meditations that delve into kōan practice.

You may also wish to explore couples exercises such as “Who is in?”To do this, sit facing one another. One partner looks into the other’s eyes and asks, “Who are you?”The other answers with whatever comes to mind. The first partner then repeats the question, whereupon the second voices another answer, and so on. The purpose of this exercise is not to cling to these answers, but rather to see them as endless false attempts to answer an unanswerable question. Behind the false answers lies valuable non-verbal insight into the truth behind the words.

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References
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mu_(negative)  

Robert M. Pirsig in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance


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Chapters and Tools
Add new tool
Home
09/22/2023
12:28
Paragraph: INSERT TITLE
  • chapter icon
    Introduction
    expand chapter
  • chapter icon
    The Meta Tool
  • chapter icon
    Productivity
    expand chapter
    • 1.1 What if I Had to Decide Now?
    • 1.2 Delay Decisions until the Optimum ..
    • 1.3 Disconnect
    • 1.5 Mind Mapping
    • 1.7 🏛️ Getting Things Done
    • 1.10 Default to Openness
    • 1.12 Pause and Ask Why
  • chapter icon
    Relationships and Communication
    expand chapter
    • 2.1 🏛️ Nonviolent Communication
    • 2.2 Prefer Requests over Demands
    • 2.4 Post Mortem after Arguments
    • 2.5 Mega Threads
    • 2.6 Active Listening
    • 2.7 Radical Honesty
    • 2.8 When Triggered, Pause
    • 2.10 Silence
  • chapter icon
    Therapy
    expand chapter
    • 3.1 Go to Therapy
    • 3.3 Gratitude
    • 3.4 Talk to Your Inner Selves
    • 3.8 Talk about Therapy inTherapy
    • 3.9 Make the Most of Therapy
  • chapter icon
    Spirit
    expand chapter
    • 4.1 🏛️ Meditation
    • 4.2 Everyday Mindfulness
    • 4.6 Kōans and Mu
    • 4.9 Enlightenment is Always Now
  • chapter icon
    Mind
    expand chapter
    • 5.1 Write Book Reviews
    • 5.6 Physical Memory Tricks
    • 5.9 Find Your Purpose
  • chapter icon
    Body – Health and Sports
    expand chapter
    • 6.9 Agree to Be Hungry
  • chapter icon
    Other
    expand chapter
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