This video was randomly recommended to me and it's only 15 minutes long but it has it all, including a Buddhist Master who draws penises on the walls of temples.
@dioma The koan does like this (paraphrasing):
A man is smoking a cigarette in the temple and dropping his ashes on the Buddha because he believes that all things are Buddha and thus the statue of Buddha is no different than an ashtray. What would you say to him to help him?
The man is very strong and will not allow you to hit him, and you cannot use force. He knows enough about Zen to understand all things have Buddha nature, but is unenlightened.
What would you do?
@dioma That was a good answer actually. Well done.
Buddha nature is just shorthand for "the absolute", the real. Call it Buddha Nature, the Tao, the "True Self", the "Big I", the Logos, the Kingdom of God, or whatever you want.
These are all mere vocabulary. You cannot describe it because all words identity in order to separate. Something is A and thus is not B, C, D, etc.
However "It" is everything, including A - Z, and everything in between. Thus words are meaningless, and yet we use words
@dioma My guess is that it has a lot to do with the fact that enlightenment and personal actualization is hard to monetize.
watching TV or playing videogames are are very flawed and ineffective form of meditation when you get down to it. It's all about mindlessly "flowing", but TV and videogames are monetizable, while sitting zazen or taking a peaceful walk through nature is difficult to monetize.
You don't need a lot of money to be happy once you give up impressing other people.
Hmh I would say that although all things are buddha, water can't be set a blaze. And a statue is not an ash tray.
(Is Buddha nature then like a body made up of many different materials with distinct purposes, but united in a common purpose? Or is everything really the same, but why can't water be used like fire then?)