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The most important Japanese Zen master after Dogen, Hakuin reinvigorated
Rinzai Zen through an emphasis on the uncompromising pursuit of enlightenment.
Such a relentless pursuit can be found in the pages of his autobiography
Wild Ivy. After being scared out of his wits by a Nichiren priest
lecturing on the fires of Hell, Hakuin left home at the tender age of 14.
He set himself to practicing but vacillated, alternating between fervent
effort and doubt. Wild Ivy tells honestly of the ups and downs of
Zen training, of peak satori experiences, and deflating conundrums. Perhaps
the great value of this book is the human face that Hakuin manages to put
on a centuries-old tradition by offering details from his own life. For
instance, take his story of being beaten unconscious by a crazed woman
with a broom and coming out of it with a penetrating understanding of the
impenetrable Koans he had been working on. Through his merciless practice,
Hakuin also experienced a physical deterioration, or "Zen sickness," and
relates the storybook account of his ascending a remote mountain to glean
the secret method of introspective meditation from a cave-dwelling hermit.
Hakuin believed that even after satori, one must never stop practicing.
Teaching is one method of practice, and Wild Ivy stands as one of
Hakuin's great teachings. --Brian Bruya |