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  • SATURDAY MAY 12 2007 12:00 PM

Brad Warner's Hardcore Zen: Explain Why Stuff Is Good

OK. Before we start I gotta plug my speaking gig on May 17th (Thursday) out in West Hollywood at the Bodhi Tree Bookstore first. I’ll be there at 7:30 PM talkin’ and signin’ my new book. So be there or be square!

And I’ll be on the Suicide Girls Radio Show a couple days later on May 20th. So listen up, motherhumpers!

*****

So I'm in Tokyo now basically having big arguments with the people I work for (What? You thought writinng for Suicide Girls and talking about Zen paid the bills?). OK. I'm over-dramatizing a bit. But yesterday I had this huge, long, painful meeting with my two bosses that consisted mainly of me saying stuff they didn't understand and them responding by saying stuff I didn't understand back. Language and cultural barriers are a huge factor, of course. Japanese is not my first language and, though one of my bosses speaks pretty good English, it's not his first language either. I lived in Japan for 11 years and understand the culture probably about as well as any foreigner can. But it is an enormously different culture. The Japanese style of business and the US style are basically incompatible. Trying to find ways to compromise is the biggest part of my work.

ANYWAY I was looking over the notes I took at the meeting and one of them was "explain why stuff is good." This was evidently the most intelligable translation I could make of what they were saying to me. Even now, not 24 hours later, I'm not entirely certain what they were saying that caused me to write that. But I do know the basic thrust was that they did not understand why the things that were entirely 100% obvious to me were good things to do were actually good things to do.

ANYWAY, I'm also staying at my Zen teacher's eensy-weensy government subsidized apartment. So after having this Hell meeting I came back totally drained and spilled my guts to him all about it.

Now you'd think a old Zen Master would tell me to leave the struggles of the secular world and follow the Buddhist path, wandering around like David Carradine in Kung Fu dispensing cosmic wisdom and kicking ass when necessary. But Nishijima Sensei isn't that kind of guy. He basically told me to keep on struggling with my company. "Try making your own job," he said. "And if it is successful, that is good. If it is not, you can resign."

A lot of people imagine it'd be wonderful to escape from their every day lives and run off to some kind of spiritual world where everything is okey-dokey all day long. This is how cults work, by promising a life free from trouble in exchange for believing stupid stuff and blindly obeying. But the truth is that there's no cult, no church, no monastery in the world is any less succeptible to politics and basic human bull crap than any company or any other organization. The dreams we all have of there being some ideal place we could escape from all such troubles are all just empty fantasies. Sad, but true. I dreamed this dream myself for a very long time and still find myself lapsing into it. But it ain't gonna happen. Not to me. Not to you. Not to anyone anywhere in the world at any time or in any place.

In Los Angeles, where I live right now (until it all burns up anyway), people are always hopping from job to job trying to find something better. The culture in SoCal seems to say that as soon as things get rough you run away. And, of course, there are times when you have to split an uncool scene (groovy hippy talk, man) — battering husbands, Bobbiting wives and that sort of thing are good examples. In fact, I tend to suspect my own current situation just may be one of those too. But if you do split — he says to himself as much as anyone else reading this — just watch you don't do so with the expectation that everything's gonna get solved for good and all.

Our day to day real human struggles are important. I hate 'em just as much as anyone else. Maybe more so right now since I gotta spend the rest of this week trying to explain why stuff is good to people who don't seem to be very interested in understanding. But it's what I gotta do. And even if I run away from this particular struggle now, it's gonna come back and bite me in the ass in another form later on. I wish it wasn't this way as much as you do. But facts is facts. Watch your own life closely and you'll see this is always the case. Don't get me wrong. You can always improve your situation. But you do so by facing it, not running away.

The brilliant thing is that doing what you do is how you realize your life and realize the universe. Your struggles are your self. Weird, but true.

ANYWAY, right now I have no idea how this is gonna play out. But for now I've decided to follow Nishijima Sensei's advice and fight the good fight without worrying too much about whether I'll win or lose.

I'll let you know next week how it went.

*******

HERE'S SOME MORE INFO ABOUT PLACES I'LL BE SPEAKING:

I'll be in the June issue of LA YOGA magazine.

An excerpt from my new book SIT DOWN AND SHUT UP! will appear in WHOLE LIFE TIMES magazine in June as well. WHOLE LIFE TIMES is an LA based mag. But they're also affiliated with CONSCIOUS CHOICE magazine in Chicago and Seattle, and with COMMON GROUND magazine in San Francisco. So I think the excerpt will appear in those magazines as well.

On May 23rd I'll be a guest on a radio show called THE GOOD LIFE with host JESSE DYLAN at 10:15 Pacific Time/1:15 Eastern. That's on Sirius Sattelite Radio.

On Saturday June 2nd, 2007 at 7 PM I'll be in Phoenix at the ARIZONA ZEN BUDDHIST SOCIETY.

AND I'll be all over the San Francisco Bay Area the following week. Here's what's lined up so far:

Tuesday June 12th at the VIRGIN MEGASTORE in San Francisco
Thursday June 14th, 7PM at GATEWAYS in Santa Cruz
Friday June 15th After Dinner Talk at the SAN FRANCISCO ZEN CENTER
Saturday June 16th 7 PM at COPPERFIELD'S BOOKS 140 Kentucky St., Petaluma, CA 94952
Sunday June 17th at San Quentin Prison (this isn't open to the public, but all inmates reading this are invited!)

AND on Wednesday July 25th, 2007, my movie CLEVELAND'S SCREAMING! will have its world premier at the EGYPTIAN THEATER in Hollywood. So mark your calendars!

Plus, the very first record by my old hardcore band 0DFx (Zero Defex) has just been released by Get Revenge Records. This 7 inch vinyl record contains our 1983 demo tape full of thrashin’ Minor Threat/Negative approach style hardcore with a drop of psychedelia thrown in for good measure. This will be followed by a second 7 inch of an earlier demo tape and later on by a double CD set with a million bonus trax. Get yours today!


Brad Warner is the author of Hardcore Zen and Sit Down and Shut Up!. He maintains a blog about Buddhist stuff. If you're in Southern California and you want to try some Zazen for yourself, he has a group that meets every Saturday in Santa Monica.

 
Comments
GonzoChaote

GonzoChaote

Vancouver, BC
March 2007

MAY 12, 2007 12:27 PM

It's funny how the most seemingly obvious truths in life are the ones that you either totally take for granted or blithely ignore until they bite you in the ass. I lulled myself into exactly the kind of thinking you're talking about when I started at Starbucks last year after quitting from a shitty competitor. I was rewarded a couple months later with absurd amounts of drama resulting in a management change. So I totally agree; no matter how great the benefits, atmosphere, and co-workers are wherever there are human beings they will do human things both great and obnoxious.

Dr_Lizardo

Dr_Lizardo

Indian Orchard, MA
February 2006

MAY 12, 2007 01:02 PM

I wonder if you're saying that even when you're enlightened, work still sucks and people still suck. Maybe to get away from it all you have to totally go for it, become a hermit in the mountains, forget about the monasteries.

doublenickel

doublenickel

USA
July 2005

MAY 12, 2007 01:23 PM

i've been contemplating what you were saying about our daily struggles being important
"Your struggles are your self" ...I really like that line.
thanks.

mellon

mellon

USA
October 2004

MAY 12, 2007 01:31 PM

Is it that our daily struggles are important, or just that we can't get away from them by leaving them behind - that in order to escape them, we have to do something that isn't leaving them behind?

What your sensei said sounds exactly like what my lama says - you have to transform them your problems into the Path, because they will follow you until you do.

zobop_

zobop_

Japan
August 2004

MAY 13, 2007 04:28 AM

"...I gotta spend the rest of this week trying to explain why stuff is good to people who don't seem to be very interested in understanding."

Know the feeling. Don't reckon you ever come out to Kyoto?

Nokturn

Nokturn

United Kingdom
April 2006

MAY 13, 2007 10:05 AM

Well said again.
I was thinking some of this concerning the meaning of the word 'ignorance' from a Buddhist perspective.
We often think ignorance is lack of knowledge though in fact its knowing something and yet pretending it isn't there.

I'd say stuff is neither good nor bad.
Its the stuff in your mind that determines whether its good or bad!!!
smile

maike

maike

Germany
January 2004

MAY 13, 2007 12:19 PM

I don't think you need advice, but recounting some personal experience may provide another perspective. I assume you're trying to reach a point of understanding which relates good to money. I mostly deal with another Asian business culture, but it is similar. I hate generalizing cultural differences becuase they are normally only partially true, so bear that in mind.

a. Instead of seeking agreement for why stuff is good, I've restarted conversations beginning with why stuff is not good (beginning with my stuff and all the alternatives I've considered, and not specifically their stuff). I've found a cultural preference to want to say 'yes' to statements or questions, and the more I can phrase and rephrase specific points until they say 'yes', the more I understand what they do want and what options I can persue.

b. In many situations, the appearance of misunderstanding or mis-answering a point statement often means that they are indirectly saying 'no' without being specifically negative. Just last week I got a long letter repeatedly praising me for my diligence and hard work on a project, and at the same time, verbally through an intermediary, they've indicated that they want to 'discuss' our agreement, which usually means 'terminate'.

c. Western concepts of economic 'value', and the process we use to identify value, is certainly different when applied to Asian business situations. Their focus is often 'price', with 'attributes' of the product or service considered separately, followed by the 'appearance' or 'status' which may be gained by their decision.

d. At the point of reaching an impass, I usually ask an external local person having some relationship with both me and the boss to privately speak with them, and ideally this is the person who provided the initial introduction. I want the external person to determine if I should volunteer to terminate the realtionship, sparing the boss all negative feelings which may be created by reversing or changing a prior agreement or understanding without me asking them directly.

e. If I terminate, it is quite important to continue the relationship by maintaining contact and having social meetings with them in the future. It is a culture of respect, and this next phase of the relationship is when I can really gain a deeper understanding of them as individuals. This invariably opens more doors in the future, for both of us.

Good luck with the book tour.

lastresort

lastresort

Gatineau, QC
December 2006

MAY 14, 2007 04:24 AM

most of the time I read what you write, it seems to be relevant with what I am living at that moment, and I have to say that it is very helpful.. although at the moment it isn't only work that is getting me down, I can relate to what you wrote and it always seems to help me see the bigger picture and understand a little better...

Thanx Brad.

Kpan

Kpan

United Kingdom
February 2005

MAY 14, 2007 11:06 AM

Enlightened words from your sensei...brought to mind some texts that kinda address this and similar issues...you may find them encouraging right now....Holding your seat when the going gets tough

3 Methods for working with Chaos

Engage with the struggle....its worth it.

Satya

Satya

SUICIDEGIRL

USA

MAY 14, 2007 08:45 PM

Looks like I'll be seeing you on Sunday for the SG Radio program. Thanks for the recommendation.

**************

Discontent is the first step in the progress of a man or a nation.
-Fortune cookie saying thumbtacked above my desk @ work...

ratzaz

ratzaz

Nashville, TN
March 2007

MAY 17, 2007 04:01 AM

Does anyone on here know why the archive of radio podcasts, like the videos, stops in 2006? Or am I wrong, and is there gonna be a way to hear the podcast of this? For those of us in other time zones, this radio show is going to be prohibitively late!