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  • MONDAY APRIL 21 2008 6:00 AM

Don't Waste Your Life, OK?

I just spent two weeks in a meditation center up in the mountains. Everywhere you went there were wooden boards that said:

Listen up!
Great is the matter of birth and death
Lost time will not be found again
Do not waste your life!


In Zen temples they have a chant they do just before they clean the place up, part of which goes, “When this day is gone, your life thereby decreases.”

The day I got back from the retreat center I found myself sitting at a swanky-ass restaurant in Beverley Hills, talking to a couple high-powered movie business execs about a film project some folks I freelance for are trying to get off the ground. These guys had that manic, sun-drenched energy you find in Hollywood types. It was hard to tell if they were on coke or if they’re just super high-strung people. They’re young guys. They’re always young guys. You can’t sustain that kind of energy long before you burn out. They’ll char those bright young lights to a deep brown dead crisp making our movie. They’ve got big ambitions. Big, big, BIG.

Young movie-biz dudes have no hope of ever understanding how they’re wasting their lives. Society will provide them with all kinds of rewards for wasting their own time and ours. They’ll have money, power, sex, cars, everything a person can possibly desire. They’ll never even imagine that instead of owning some tawdry little piece of the world, the whole universe from beginning to end could be theirs — that the whole universe already is theirs. As they drive down Santa Monica Boulevard blasting bad hip-hop hits from their shiny, silver Beamer convertibles with their vanity plates they’ll never know that there are guys trudging through the gutters outside their mansions in tattered shoes who own them and everything they imagine they possess.

Right now I'm sitting where I can hear a spiritual master talking spiritual stuff to a lot of spiritual people. He’s bullshitting them. He hasn’t got a clue in the world. But he lulls them to half-sleep with a honey soaked voice and tells them that half-sleep is the Highest Enlightenment. So it goes.

“Boys be ambitious!” said William S. Clark when he left Japan after spending the last few years of the 19th century educating its children in Western ways. Everybody in Japan knows the phrase by heart. Ambition drives Japanese waste and Hollywood waste.

There’s ambition in Zen centers in the mountains too, and in Zen centers in the cities and suburbs. Not so much ambition for money, though that does exist in some; ambition for spiritual accomplishment, ambition for spiritual fame, ambition for the ubiquitous “spiritual merit” practitioners are primed to pile up. You can see it in the eyes of the young studs who’ve been devoting themselves to the rigors of practice intensives in the hopes of rising up the ladder to positions of power within the organization. You can hear it in the mellifluous tones of the wanna-be Zen Masters who pontificate on the finer points of the dharma to those they consider their spiritual inferiors, hoping that one day when they’re dead, gone and buried their names too will be etched in the list the Great Eternal Masters. It rides the wind in envy-drenched whispers when someone passes by in a coveted brown or orange or ochre robe indicating they’ve received the ultimate promotion the bosses of the sect have on offer. Anyone impressed by the color of a glorified bathrobe deserves whatever they get, if you ask me.

And yet retreat centers in the mountains are still better places to practice not wasting your life than swanky-ass restaurants in Beverly Hills. Most of us need some time away from society before we can see how truly fucked over we’ve been. Sure we know that society is shit. But we still cling to the notion that we ourselves are somehow above it, what with our rebel haircuts and tattoos, and all that metal stuck through our bodily extremities. We aren’t like those saps.

Sorry. But you’re not only like those saps, you’re exactly like them. Not a centimeter of separation. Too bad, huh?

You don’t think so? That’s only because you’ve never really taken a look.

When today is gone you’ll be one day closer to death. So what are you doing right now? Turn off your computer and go outside, for God’s sake. There’s nothing in that shiny little box of delights on your lap that’s going to do you any good at all. Not my bullshit, that’s for sure. (Hey, clever kids! Quote that line in your sarcastic comments!)

Brad Warner is the author of Hardcore Zen and Sit Down and Shut Up!. He maintains a blog about Buddhist stuff and a MySpace page too. 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.

UPCOMING APPEARANCES:

April 23rd at Malaprop’s Book Store in Asheville, North Carolina. Probably 7 PM-ish. Call for details.

April 25 - 27 leading a retreat at Southern Dharma Retreat Center in North Carolina.

April 29th at 7 PM, talk at Warren Wilson College’s Buddhist Studies Group.

May 3rd my band 0DFx will play at Pat’s in the Flats in Cleveland with This Moment in Black History and on May 4th, 0DFx will play at the Kent Stage in Kent, Ohio in commemoration of the 38th anniversary of the infamous shootings by the National Guard

Saturday May 10th at 7 PM at Visible Voice Books in Cleveland, Ohio’s Tremont neighborhood.

On May 17th and 18th leading a 2-day retreat at the Milwaukee Zen Center.

I'll be one of the teachers at this year's Great Sky Zen Sesshin August 9-16. Check out their webpage for details.

The annual Dogen Sangha retreat in Shizuoka, Japan will be September 20-23.

 

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Comments
SockPuppet

SockPuppet

I'm lost
July 2006

APR 21, 2008 03:26 PM

Dr_Lizardo said:
Vanity is nothing mysterious. But it is seductive and it's a good idea to remind people of it.



Even unintentionally.

(Not you. The OP.)

Evilgasm

Evilgasm

Netherlands
April 2007

APR 21, 2008 03:40 PM

My philosophy:

Experience (even the kind gained from sitting behind a computer) is meant to enhance life. It provides you with information. And that information can/may/will alter the choices you make in life.

It is not only about the steps you take, but WHY you take them.

The universe belongs to you and you belong to the universe. We are all part of the same unending cycle. All are one and one can be all.

TheFox

TheFox

Durham, NC
February 2006

APR 22, 2008 12:22 AM

Outside is a nice place and I need to go there more often.

You make a good point, however hypocritical it may seem. Contentment and inner peace are often overlooked in favor of impressing others (an unending and harrowing goal). I believe that is the point you were going for, yes? That's what I'm taking away, anyway. Stop saying, "as soon as I do this, this, and this and have that, that, and that - I'll be truly happy." It's the journey, not the destination. All that jazz.

It's true, however cliché. Maybe that's why it's cliché.

lovetolook

lovetolook

I'm lost
March 2007

APR 22, 2008 08:11 AM

Every year that you live is a smaller percentage of what you have already lived, thus the illusion of time going by faster as you get older.


The cure for this is to anchor yourself into each day and realize that any day that you wake up is a year from that same date a year ago. This way you can live 365 years a year.


If a tree falls in the middle of LA, will everyone hear it?

xo_b_mac

xo_b_mac

Markham, ON
June 2007

APR 22, 2008 06:47 PM

I bet you really feel high and might eh? your better than those movie-biz guys, and every other western, because you found Buddhism and you aren't wasting your life with Hollywood and restaurants....lame

xo_b_mac

xo_b_mac

Markham, ON
June 2007

APR 22, 2008 06:50 PM



Most of us need some time away from society before we can see how truly fucked over we've been.



Why? why do we need time away? How are we fucked over? What makes going to a retreat in a mountain so special that it brings the realization that were fucked? fucked how? shocked shocked shocked shocked oink

xo_b_mac

xo_b_mac

Markham, ON
June 2007

APR 22, 2008 06:52 PM



I just spent two weeks in a meditation center up in the mountains.



Good for you, if every American did this you'd lose you status and you'd probably find some other eastern religion to talk about.

weakly

weakly

Los Angeles, CA
July 2007

APR 22, 2008 07:23 PM

Don't use "we" when you really mean "I",
nor "your" when you really mean "my".

MisterSatan

MisterSatan

Portland, OR
August 2002

APR 22, 2008 08:43 PM

xo_b_mac said:


Most of us need some time away from society before we can see how truly fucked over we've been.



Why? why do we need time away? How are we fucked over? What makes going to a retreat in a mountain so special that it brings the realization that were fucked? fucked how? shocked shocked shocked shocked oink



Boy, the raisincakes are representin' tonight!

Ascanius

Ascanius

USA
October 2006

APR 23, 2008 07:28 AM

Mr. Warner, I find your continued insistence that there is something like a 'One True Path' and you're on it and we're not, to be typically offensive Mahayana supremicism. There is not one true path and neither the teachings of Jesus, Mohammed, the Bal Shem Tov, Guru Nanak, nor the Buddha give you the authority to call other lifestyles and other viewpoints wrong, or a waste of time. Different strokes for different folks, okay? Now turn off your computer and go outside.

jonnydee242

jonnydee242

Vero Beach, FL
April 2008

APR 23, 2008 12:28 PM

Ascanius said:
Mr. Warner, I find your continued insistence that there is something like a 'One True Path' and you're on it and we're not, to be typically offensive Mahayana supremicism. There is not one true path and neither the teachings of Jesus, Mohammed, the Bal Shem Tov, Guru Nanak, nor the Buddha give you the authority to call other lifestyles and other viewpoints wrong, or a waste of time. Different strokes for different folks, okay? Now turn off your computer and go outside.





I was going to say 'Preach it, brother!' then I decided that would be counterproductive, considering the point.


wereduck

wereduck

I'm lost
July 2007

APR 23, 2008 12:54 PM

What about those of us who find peace by being indoors, enjoying solitude?

hk85

hk85

Guerneville, CA
October 2007

APR 23, 2008 03:06 PM

you get to hang out in swanky Beverly Hills restaurants with wannabe movie moguls?

U R SO KEWL!

JuliusChurch

JuliusChurch

Ashland, PA
November 2005

APR 23, 2008 04:50 PM

Ascanius said:
Mr. Warner, I find your continued insistence that there is something like a 'One True Path' and you're on it and we're not, to be typically offensive Mahayana supremicism. There is not one true path and neither the teachings of Jesus, Mohammed, the Bal Shem Tov, Guru Nanak, nor the Buddha give you the authority to call other lifestyles and other viewpoints wrong, or a waste of time. Different strokes for different folks, okay? Now turn off your computer and go outside.



Maybe he finds true peace in looking down others. You can't discriminate against him like that.

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