Freedom in Thought

I’m currently reading Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind by Shunryu Suzuki. In the first chapter, he talks about the importance of maintaining a good posture. The insight itself is simple, but the logic behind it is profound. He writes,

“The most important part is to own your own physical body. If you slump, you will lose your self. Your mind will be wandering about somewhere else; you will not be in your body. This is not the way. We must exist right here, right now…it is impossible to organize things if you yourself are not in order. When you do things in the right way, at the right time, everything else will be organized.” [1]

Suzuki emphasizes the importance of being totally present—in mind and body. He advises us to pay attention to our posture as a way to ground our minds back in our bodies.

When our minds are not grounded in our bodies, we fall into a divided state. Our body is here, but our mind is elsewhere. We create division around us when we ourselves are divided.

For example, you’re sitting at a cafe with your friend, rethinking about a conversation you had the previous night. Your friend is explaining a conflict they had at work to you, but you’re checked out. Physically you’re there, but mentally you’re reliving the last night. You don’t hear anything your friend is saying, and they sense it. They feel disconnected from you. So now your internal division has created external division.

Our minds ruminate when they’re stuck on a problem. They’re seeking the truth that they need to solve the problem. And they think they can find that truth within.

But if our minds had the truth within themselves, they would not be stuck. They would not be ruminating. The mind must look outside of itself for new truths. It must look to the present moment. The present moment contains the truth, because it’s formed by the laws that govern the world. That is why presence is important.

One of the easiest ways to become present, grounded, and unify your mind and body is to pay attention to your posture. I believe that is what Suzuki is trying to communicate.

“The state of mind that exists when you sit in the right posture is, itself, enlightenment.”[2]

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[1] Shunryu Suzuki, Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind, ed. Trudy Dixon (Shambhala Publications, Inc., 2020), 10.
[2] Shunryu Suzuki, Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind, ed. Trudy Dixon (Shambhala Publications, Inc., 2020), 11.

6 months ago | [YT] | 329



@benni.rosinante

I love that book. And to me it's pretty special because everytime I read it, it has something else to offer. It's nearly magical 😁

6 months ago | 0

@AccidentalH3ro

Alternatively, the truth is an internal phenomena rather than an external one. One does not require the validation of the external world to give it the answers but simply realize that answers only appear to reveal themselves externally because we are in harmony with the true nature of reality.

6 months ago | 2

@jofdisonjoson1584

Our ancient siddhas has told about this if the spine is straight to the body to focus more on what you doing in the presence. That why in medication and breathing we all sit down and keep spine straight

6 months ago | 1

@radheyshyamjohar4698

❤️❤️

6 months ago | 0

@FreedominThought 

Newsletter: justindeol.com/

6 months ago | 0

@PatrickDaye

Another great reason to maintain good posture. Thanks! I will check out this book

6 months ago | 1  

@jamesdoyle5405

I never observed a slouching Buddist monk. Now I know why.

6 months ago | 3

@bladeMatster6

Jordan Peterson nodding his head approvingly

6 months ago | 0

@saisree1204

Amazing and profound thought! Thanks for sharing

6 months ago | 2  

@mehedimasud3022

This boy in the pic, I thought thats Aang

6 months ago | 2