Opinions Are Like Ensos, Everybody's Got One...


One idea that comes up around Zen practice is that Zen Buddhists shouldn't have views and opinions about things... we should be completely without values and judgements.

This leans to a somewhat extreme view of Zen practice, and can amount to nihilism if taken too far.

Zen practice isn't about not having views on things like the direction that society is going, and racism, war, politics etc etc - it's just that in Zen practice, in our daily practice of 'dropping off body and mind', we see those thoughts and views as what they are. We become unbound by them and no longer make the mistake of accepting them as being exterior reality. They're just thoughts and conceptual models of reality we make ourselves.

We drop off all that in sitting zazen of course, but the point in doing that is to see thoughts and views directly as what they are, and not to be duped by that sense of 'self' that may be implied by how we may attach to thoughts and feelings.

Further to this, as Master Dogen discusses in his bold rewriting of the Heart Sutra, there's prajna - a type of full body-mind direct knowledge gleaned from 'dropping off body and mind'. With some practice we can learn to trust that we can do okay without having to have views and opinions on everything... It depends on the situation though, I think. Sometimes it's right to speak up and express an opinion, and sometimes it might be without much use, or may even be counterproductive.

At the end of the day it's up to us - in Buddhist practice, in 'adult practice' as Kodo Sawaki Roshi called it, we accept the consequences of our actions (or inaction!), difficult as that may sometimes be.

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