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  • MONDAY SEPTEMBER 17 2007 12:00 PM

Brad Warner's Hardcore Zen: Your Life is Not Your Own (Sorry)

Last week I was in Boulder, Colorado where people have long discussions with their sushi chef about whether or not the mackerel and squid they serve is fished sustainably. I’m from Akron, Ohio where the most likely conversation with a sushi chef is, “Take this back, it’s not even cooked!” By the time most of you read this I’ll be on my way to Japan where I will try and find out what the fuck is going on with the company I work for and then go lead a four day Zen retreat.

While I was in Boulder at the sushi shop where people worry about sustainable fish there was a dude outside on the street panhandling. There are tons of panhandlers in Boulder, nearly all of them young, White, healthy and looking like the only thing they’ll use your spare change on is recreational drugs. This particular White panhandler, not quite as young as most of them, had obviously used some heavy drugs in his past -- perhaps even his immediate past -- and put some serious wear and tear on his body. He was getting pretty belligerent with his companions and I kept my eye on him to see if he started heading towards the restaurant’s patio where I was sitting. Eventually he moved on somewhere down the street.

Seeing that guy made me realize that my life really isn’t my own. We all imagine that our lives and our bodies are our own possessions to do with as we please. We figure as long as we don’t do something really egregious like knife our next door neighbor or go shoot up the local grade school it’s nobody’s business what we do with ourselves. But I wonder if that’s really true.

When that hobo was doing all his drugging and drinking and whatever else got him into the state he was in, he probably thought, “Fuck the rest of the world! I’m living my life the way I want!” Of course, I can’t put words into his mouth. But I know that I have felt this way for most of my own life. If I wanted to take acid it was my own brain I was fucking with and nobody had any right to tell me not to. If I wanted to stay out all night partying, I was the one who had to deal with the consequences the next day so screw anybody who had any opinion about it. If I wanted to eat junk food instead of being healthy it was my own body and that was none of anyone else’s concern.

But now I’m starting to doubt that attitude.

Of course if people want to look or dress a certain way society has no business telling them not to. Just because someone doesn’t like your tattoos doesn’t mean you need to remove them. And just because someone doesn’t like your Mohawk doesn’t mean you need to get a Jay Leno style blow-dry do. Your choice of a life partner is nobody else’s bee’s wax either -- except, of course, your life partner’s. Making a decision about whether or not to have an abortion or vote Republican is a very personal matter and no one else needs to be consulted.

It's also not your duty to keep everyone you meet satisfied. Most people are so thoroughly fucked they don’t have the vaguest clue what they really need or even what they really want. Yet they insist upon demanding that others satisfy their confused ideas about what they think life owes them. Life owes you nothing, people. But I see this attitude all the time in my role as a Zen teacher. People have a lot of bizarre ideas about what I should do or what I should say and they have no compunctions about demanding I play the role they’ve assigned me. I’m sure you get this too. We all do. Sorry friends. That don’t fly in B-Town.

But having said that -- which is so obvious it’s a shame it needs to even be stated -- your life still isn’t really just yours alone. This is why I don’t do drugs. If I get high I’m asking the rest of the world to take care of me. I can’t drive. I can’t find the little hole in the front of my undershorts. And most importantly if some kind of emergency comes up I’m of no use at all. I’m shirking my duties as a human being for the sake of a shallow thrill. If I don’t keep my body in reasonable shape I’m also impinging on others. I take up more than my fair share of space on an airplane or bus. I get pissed off easy because my body never feels right so I can’t think straight. If I get angry or otherwise over emotional it’s never my own personal affair. I spread that anger to others through my careless actions, since when you’re angry you never, ever, ever act reasonably. Never. If I get depressed I force others to deal with my black moods. If I get distracted I might run over somebody’s kitty cat.

This is why I do Zazen too. I discovered that when I didn’t do it my body and mind were too scrambled up for me to interact with anyone in a sensible way. It was through this practice that I began to see very clearly that I was not my own possession. I am a manifestation of the universe, duty bound to take full responsibility for everything I encounter. And everything I encounter is everything in the universe.

Look. You’re an asshole. Seriously. A complete asshole. You have no idea what you are or what you’re supposed to be doing. Yet you run around all of creation like it’s some cheap-ass toy Santa gave you that you’re now gonna break and then cry until Santa gives you another one. Cuz there are a million of them all lined up on shelves at the store. Hooting and hollering your ugly head off at three in the morning and waking all the people on the street. Turning your moronic music up as loud as it can go to show the world who you really are. Racing your Harley down Sunset Boulevard at full speed. Dreaming of enlightenment you can buy in a box from some windbag Zen Master and leave in your car while you go out and buy something else. Hanging out at tawdry meditation seminars hoping some genius guru will show you The Light, paying him good money for garbage fantasies. You’re fucking useless. Totally fucking useless. The universe is yours and all you want to do with it is write your name in spray paint on the wall. You’re like a dog pissing on a fence. No one who sees the mark you left on the world could give a shit.

But sit quietly and even a piece of gibbon’s dung like you can see it. There’s no one in the universe but you. You spread out all the way past the farthest galaxies and that’s just the beginning. Your thoughts are all stupid. Your perceptions are completely wrong. There’s nowhere you can be but here. There’s nothing you can know that’s worth knowing. You have no future or past and yet you’ll always be here. And because of this you are God’s eyes and ears on this world.

Pay a little attention, butt wipe.

Brad Warner will be in Akron, Ohio November 7,2007 at the Akron Public Library

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. This is open to anyone who wants to show up.

 

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Comments
Clidna

Clidna

Canada
January 2005

SEP 22, 2007 12:38 AM

shapeshifter23 said:
You're pretty good at judging people, for a Buddhist (I thought Christian fundamentalists alone had that responsibility).



You think Christians are the only religious people judging others? Don't get out much, do you? wink

SimeonM

SimeonM

France
July 2007

SEP 24, 2007 07:59 AM

dragonflower said:but i generally have found that when i confront people right out with the hard-up truth, like, hey you're a fucking asshole and i am too and no one gives a shit but it doesn't matter because even though you're just a speck in god's eye you're still a speck in GOD's EYE! people don't seem to take it as coming off well.



Really? You call people assholes and then they don't want to hear what you have to say? How surprising! These thoughts have been said many times over a few thousand years by people with a better grasp of English, who don't need to swear to get people to listen.Try putting you ideas across from a position of respect for your listeners and you might have more success. Or you might have got it all wrong and your audience have already got there own truths already down pat. Better yet, concentrate on living those truths and forget about enligthening others. Buddha said "don't follow me' and the Tao Te Ching says "He who knows, says nothing, he who does not know says too much"
Try leading by example, might be more effective than swearing at people x (just my opinion of course)

apesamongus

apesamongus

Atlanta, GA
July 2002

SEP 24, 2007 08:40 AM

Brad_WarnerBut having said that -- which is so obvious it's a shame it needs to even be stated -- your life still isn't really just yours alone. This is why I don't do drugs. If I get high I'm asking the rest of the world to take care of me. I can't drive. I can't find the little hole in the front of my undershorts. And most importantly if some kind of emergency comes up I'm of no use at all. I'm shirking my duties as a human being for the sake of a shallow thrill.


There was a plotline in The Sopranos where Dr. Melfi had to go on the run because of Tony being her patient. There was a scene where she saw her own therapist and was very angry at being put in that position because "what if one of my patients really needs me."

Her therapist pointed out that it would be no different than if she was on vacation. Presumably, she was allowed to have a life, and as part of having a life you don't have to be available to everyone 27/7.

So what if you're high when someone needs you? Is that any different than turning your cell phone off in a movie theater? Or going on vacation where you cannot be reached? I mean, I presume you aren't going to have your cell phone turned on for every minute of your retreat. And you probably don't have a private plane ready to shuttle you back home if you're needed.

JamesCole

JamesCole

I'm lost
July 2007

SEP 24, 2007 04:54 PM

apesamongus said:
So what if you're high when someone needs you? Is that any different than turning your cell phone off in a movie theater?



I would say it is different. If you're in a movie theater with your cell phone turned off, and the theater catches on fire, you can turn your cell phone back on and call 911. If you're totally drunk and someone needs you to drive them to the hospital, you can't magically become sober.

apesamongus

apesamongus

Atlanta, GA
July 2002

SEP 24, 2007 06:16 PM

JamesCole said:

apesamongus said:
So what if you're high when someone needs you? Is that any different than turning your cell phone off in a movie theater?



I would say it is different. If you're in a movie theater with your cell phone turned off, and the theater catches on fire, you can turn your cell phone back on and call 911. If you're totally drunk and someone needs you to drive them to the hospital, you can't magically become sober.


Can you magically get the message with your turned off phone that your kid (wife, other person you can make medical decisions for) was just hit by a car and needs emergency consent forms signed at the hospital?

You (general "you" here) are not that important. The world will continue turning without you. The belief that if you take a break from functionality for a while the world will end is the epitome of conceit. It's no different from the CEO who can't let his business go without him when he goes on vacation. It's a god complex.

JamesCole

JamesCole

I'm lost
July 2007

SEP 26, 2007 02:28 PM

apesamongus said:
Can you magically get the message with your turned off phone that your kid (wife, other person you can make medical decisions for) was just hit by a car and needs emergency consent forms signed at the hospital?


No. But just because there is an overlap between the cell phone and the drugs doesn't mean it's the same situation.


You (general "you" here) are not that important. The world will continue turning without you. The belief that if you take a break from functionality for a while the world will end is the epitome of conceit. It's no different from the CEO who can't let his business go without him when he goes on vacation. It's a god complex.


Nice straw man. I never said the world would end if you got drunk, and I don't believe Brad did either. I'm just saying that if you use drugs, you are abdicating certain responsibilities, and more of them than if you just turn off your cell phone.

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