Inside the Grass Hut: Living Shitou's Classic Zen Poem
By Ben Connelly and Taigen Dan Leighton
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About this ebook
Destined to become a trusted, dog-eared companion.
Shitou Xiqian’s “Song of the Grass Roof Hermitage” is a remarkably accessible work of profound depth; in thirty-two lines Shitou expresses the breadth of the entire Buddhist tradition with simple, vivid imagery. Ben Connelly’s Inside the Grass Hut unpacks the timeless poem and applies it to contemporary life. His book delivers a wealth of information on the context and content of this eighth-century work, as well as directly evokes the poem’s themes of simple living, calm, and a deep sense of connection to all things.
Each pithy chapter focuses on a single line of the poem, letting the reader immerse himself thoroughly in each line and then come up for air before moving on to the next. Line by line, Connelly shows how the poem draws on and expresses elements from the thousand years of Buddhist thought that preceded it, expands on the poem’s depiction of a life of simple practice in nature, and tells stories of the way these teachings manifest in modern life. Connelly, like Shitou before him, proves himself adept at taking profound and complex themes from Zen and laying them out in a practical and understandable way.
Eminently readable, thoroughly illuminating, Inside the Grass Hut shows the reader a path of wholehearted engagement—with the poem, and with the world. Destined to become a trusted, dog-eared companion.
Ben Connelly
Ben Connelly is a Soto Zen teacher and Dharma heir in the Katagiri lineage. He also teaches mindfulness in a wide variety of secular contexts, including police and corporate training, correctional facilities, and addiction-recovery and wellness groups. Ben is based at Minnesota Zen Meditation Center and travels to teach across the United States. He’s the author of Inside the Grass Hut: Living Shitou’s Classic Zen Poem, Inside Vasubandhu’s Yogacara: A Practitioner’s Guide, and Mindfulness and Intimacy.
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Inside the Grass Hut - Ben Connelly
INSIDE THE GRASS HUT
Clearly and beautifully links the life of this renunciate mountain monk to our own complex, multitasking, engaged, and over-involved lives. He brings this poem to our lives, just as they are.
—SHARON SALZBERG, AUTHOR OF REAL HAPPINESS
Written from the inside out, this wonderful book explores Zen Master Shitou’s marvelous and revelatory poem ‘Song of the Grass-Roof Hemitage.’ The language and sense of immediacy make Shitou’s work transparent to all.
—JOAN HALIFAX, FOUNDING ABBOT, UPAYA ZEN CENTER
Easy and pleasant to read, with plenty of wit, and many examples from daily life. There’s humor, deft turning of phrase, even some paradox and poetry.
—NORMAN FISCHER, AUTHOR OF TRAINING IN COMPASSION
Written not just for Zen practitioners, this lovely book offers insights and encouragement to all who seek to live in the simplicity of the present moment.
—JANET ABELS, AUTHOR OF MAKING ZEN YOUR OWN
A clear presentation of Zen tradition and practice. Striking is the personal and serene tone of the writing, of the instructive exposition, which infuses the book with a living pulse and—what I will dare to call here—the very essence of Zen.
—MIKE O’CONNOR, TRANSLATOR OF WHERE THE WORLD DOES NOT FOLLOW
A wonderful guidebook on the path to being a wiser and kinder human being.
—ELLEN BIRX, AUTHOR OF SELFLESS LOVE
Table of Contents
Foreword by Taigen Dan Leighton
Introduction
A Note on Chanting and Recitation
Song of the Grass-Roof Hermitage by Shitou
1.Living Simply in the Changes
I’ve built a grass hut where there’s nothing of value.
2.Enjoying the Middle Way
After eating, I relax and enjoy a nap.
3.Unwithering Fertility
When it was completed, fresh weeds appeared.
4.Here with the Weeds
Now it’s been lived in—covered by weeds.
5.Who Is This Person?
The person in the hut lives here calmly...
6.Cultivating the Way, Inside and Out
Not stuck to inside, outside, or in between.
7.Retreat and Living in the World
Places worldly people live, he doesn’t live.
8.What Do You Mean When You Say Love
?
Realms worldly people love, he doesn’t love.
9.Everything’s Included
Though the hut is small, it includes the entire world.
10.Ten Feet Square
In ten feet square, an old man illumines forms and their nature.
11.Trust, Faith, and Ease
A Great Vehicle bodhisattva trusts without doubt.
12.Don’t Judge
The middling or lowly can’t help wondering...
13.Life and Death Is the Great Matter
Will this hut perish or not?
14.Who Is the Original Master?
Perishable or not, the original master is present...
15.Have You Ever Transcended Space and Time?
Not dwelling south or north, east or west.
16.The Foundation of Freedom
Firmly based on steadiness, it can’t be surpassed.
17.Light on the Mountain
A shining window below the green pines...
18.Zen Plays with Irony
Jade palaces or vermilion towers can’t compare with it.
19.Protection, Shelter, Refuge
Just sitting with head covered, all things are at rest.
20.Only Don’t Know
Thus, this mountain monk doesn’t understand at all.
21.Home Is Where You Are
Living here he no longer works to get free.
22.Host and Guests
Who would proudly arrange seats, trying to entice guests?
23.Buddhism Is Meditation and Kindness
Turn around the light to shine within, then just return.
24.What Do You Depend On?
The vast inconceivable source can’t be faced or turned away from.
25.Meeting Our Teachers
Meet the ancestral teachers, be familiar with their instruction...
26.Don’t Give Up
Bind grasses to build a hut, and don’t give up.
27.Freedom from the Past
Let go of hundreds of years and relax completely.
28.Lay Down My Sword and Shield
Open your hands and walk, innocent.
29.The Joys of the Human Mind
Thousands of words, myriad interpretations...
30.One Taste
Are only to free you from obstructions.
31.Timeless Intimacy
If you want to know the undying person in the hut...
32.Here and Now
Don’t separate from this skin bag here and now.
Acknowledgments
Selected Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Foreword
BY TAIGEN DAN LEIGHTON
The important early Zen master Shitou is a major ancestor in the Chinese Caodong, or Japanese Soto, lineage—a lineage that is now very significant in the spread of Buddhism to the West. He is best known for his poem Harmony of Difference and Sameness,
or Sandokai
in Japanese, which presented the underlying philosophy, imagery, and dialectical polarities foundational to all of Zen Buddhism but especially significant in the Caodong/Soto lineage. This poem by Shitou is a clear precursor for the poem Song of the Jewel Mirror Samadhi,
attributed to the lineage founder Dongshan in the following century.
Shitou is said to have lived from 700 to 790. His poem Song of the Grass-Roof Hermitage,
the central text for this book, presents not the philosophy of Zen, as Harmony of Difference and Sameness
does, but instead offers a clear, helpful model for its actual practice, and for how to create a space of practice. Shitou built and resided in his grass-roof hermitage near his larger temple, where he trained numbers of students. His hut was his literal practice place, but it also serves as a metaphor for all Zen practice spaces. Lines from this Song of the Grass-Roof Hermitage
are mentioned by later Soto figures such as Dongshan, Hongzhi, and Dogen and can be found embedded in koan collections such as the Blue Cliff Record and the Book of Serenity. But the poem as a whole was relatively neglected, certainly compared to the more celebrated Harmony of Difference and Sameness.
I came across some reference to the second poem in biographical materials about Shitou and translated it in 1985 together with my friend Kaz Tanahashi; it was first published by the Windbell journal of the San Francisco Zen Center.
I am very pleased that Ben Connelly has chosen to use Shitou’s Song of the Grass-Roof Hermitage
as an inspiration for his fine, personal practice reflections in this book. I am also very pleased that this poem is chanted at the Minnesota Zen Meditation Center where Ben practices, as it is in my temple in Chicago. This illuminating poem is now finally receiving some of the attention it richly deserves. It had not previously been part of any liturgy to my knowledge, and I am grateful to have helped promote its reemergence. Along with Ben I heartily recommend chanting the Song of the Grass-Roof Hermitage
; my students have found it very inspiring.
A story about Shitou worth recounting relates that one of his main disciples once asked him about the essential meaning of Buddhadharma. Shitou responded, Not to attain, not to know.
The student then asked whether there was any other pivotal point, and Shitou said, The wide sky does not obstruct the white clouds drifting.
The flavor of Shitou’s practice is not to worry about any attainment or accomplishment, or even to know anything. This is difficult for many contemporary students trained, in our acquisitive consumerist society, to accumulate accomplishments. Many students also think they need to figure out some rational understanding of Zen sayings. But as Shitou says about himself, This mountain monk doesn’t understand at all.
Shitou encourages a spacious sense of practice, even in his small hut that includes the whole wide sky. But in this open-hearted space, the drifting clouds of practice are meaningful and not at all obstructed.
I especially appreciate Ben Connelly’s taking on and opening up the many environmental implications of the Song of the Grass-Roof Hermitage.
Shitou realized that his hut, and each of our own spaces of practice, includes the entire world. We are each indeed deeply interconnected to the whole of nature. As Ben elaborates, Shitou’s living lightly on the earth has major repercussions informing the Buddhist teaching of nonself, and how to see beyond our usual habitual grasping after self-identity.
I am tempted to comment myself on many of the numerous wonderful, rich lines in the Song of the Grass-Roof Hermitage.
But I will leave that to Ben Connelly, and for the reader, to proceed. However, I must say that Shitou’s Turn around the light to shine within, then just return
marvelously contains all of Buddhist practice and its primary rhythm in one line. Further, Shitou’s line Let go of hundreds of years and relax completely
is a wonderful antidote to significant, harmful misunderstandings of Zen practice in our time. The point of Zen practice is to relieve suffering and promote liberation for all beings. Shitou tells us that the way to actively express such universal liberation involves relaxing completely. Please consider this thoroughly.
And please enjoy Shitou’s song, and the many helpful harmonies that Ben Connelly has added for you.
Taigen Leighton
September 2013
Taigen Dan Leighton is the author of Zen Questions: Zazen, Dogen, and the Spirit of Creative Inquiry and Faces of Compassion: Classic Bodhisattva Archetypes and Their Modern Expression, as well as the cotranslator of Dogen’s Extensive Record. He is the Dharma teacher at the Ancient Dragon Zen Gate in Chicago.
Introduction
Thank you for being here with me. Through words, we can be together right now across space and time. Through this book, we can spend a little time with an old monk, his poem, a great tradition, and each other.
I encourage you to give yourself to this time. This particular moment is an opportunity for each of us to give our wholehearted attention to what is here: the air we breathe, the words we read, the sensations in our body, the sounds around us, and the activity of our minds and our hearts. This is a way of being to which we can always aspire.
Remember that turning your wholehearted attention to this text, or to whatever you happen to be doing, can be of benefit to every being—even if it’s not obvious how. This may seem like a strange idea—or a very familiar one—but it is essential to the Buddhist tradition. Our study of the Dharma, and our practice of giving ourselves to each moment, should always be done with the intention to somehow lift the overall well-being of the world.
This book is not an attempt to explain the Song of the Grass-Roof Hermitage.
Instead, I write in order to engage my understanding with the text—in order to engage with your understanding. I meet the text with who I am and I invite you to meet Shitou’s poem and my commentary with your own heart and mind. This is not about arriving at some kind of truth. Instead, it’s about an interaction that is conducive to wellness and a friendly, open, and generous way of being. When we meet a teaching this way, our mind learns to meet life this way, and our actions flower out of this with a lightness, a freshness, a wisdom, and—most importantly—with kindness.
The historical record we have of Shitou Xiqian is sparse and lacking in many solid facts.
There is some evidence that he lived in the eighth century, in the heart of the great classical era of Chinese Zen. However, the details of these records are sufficiently divergent that piecing together much of a clear history is quite difficult. It appears he came to be called Shitou, or stone top,
after a shelf of stone on the mountain in southern China where he made his home late in life. The mountain was the site of a number of monasteries, being in a central region at a very fruitful time in the development of Zen, but Shitou’s home was a small hut.
Shitou left us two poems, each of about two hundred Chinese characters: Harmony of Difference and Sameness
and the Song of the Grass-Roof Hermitage.
The first is widely used as a teaching vehicle, particularly in Soto Zen circles. Its subject is, in broadest terms, the relationship between the absolute and the relative aspects of things. If that sounds a little abstruse, it is. However, these were central ideas used in the practice of Chinese Zen and are still valuable subjects for inquiry.
I love both of Shitou’s poems; however, Song of the Grass-Roof Hermitage
seems to me to be of particular resonance for our times. Living lightly on the land, calmly and happily; letting go of whatever blocks us from being available to those around us; patient devotion to peace—these are themes that are worth coming back to again and again. Shitou manages to teach complex Buddhist ideas in this poem without resorting to the technical language that makes many classic texts inaccessible to the general reader; its simple imagery and tone evoke a calm, relaxed, and open approach to things. This is a poem written by a Zen monk, but it avoids sectarian clichés. Its teachings are therefore much more accessible to Western Buddhists, who are in the process of forming a new tradition of practice from elements of the entire range and