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Ten Bulls

Ten Bulls or Ten Ox Herding Pictures (Chinese: shíniú 十牛 , Japanese: jūgyūzu 十牛図 , korean: sipwoo 십우) is a series of short poems and accompanying drawings used in the Zen tradition to describe the stages of a practitioner's progress toward enlightenment,[web 1] and their return to society to enact wisdom and compassion.

Vietnamese water puppet depicting a scene in the parable.

History edit

Scriptural origins edit

The calf, bull, or ox is one of the earliest similes for meditation practice. It comes from the Maha Gopalaka Sutta (Majjhima Nikaya 33). It is also used in the commentaries, especially the one on the Maha Satipatthana Sutta (Digha Nikaya 22) and the Satipatthana Sutta (Majjhima Nikaya 10). As Buddhism spread throughout South-East Asia, the simile of the bull spread with it.[web 2]

Chinese pictures edit

The well-known ten ox-herding pictures emerged in China in the 12th century. D.T. Suzuki mentions four Chinese versions of the Oxherding Pictures, by Ching-chu (Jp. Seikyo)(11th century), Tzu-te Hui (Jp. Jitoku)(1090-1159), an unknown author, and Kuòān Shīyuǎn (Jp. Kaku-an) (12th century).[web 3][web 4]

Early versions edit

The first series was probably made by Ching-chu in the 11th century, who may have been a contemporary of Kuòān Shīyuǎn.[web 4] There are only five pictures in Ching-chu's version and the ox's colour changes from dark to white, representing the gradual development of the practitioner, ending in the disappearance of the practitioner.[web 3]

Tzu-te Hui (自得慧暉, Zide Huihui, Jp. Jitoku) (1090-1159) made a version with six pictures. The sixth one goes beyond the stage of absolute emptiness, where Ching-chu's version ends.[web 4] Just like Ching-chu's version, the ox grows whiter along the way.[web 3][note 1]

A third version by an unknown author, with ten pictures, was the most popular in China. It derives from the Ching-chu and Tzu-te Hui series of pictures, and has a somewhat different series of pictures compared to Kuòān Shīyuǎn's version.[web 3][web 5] The 1585-edition contains a preface by Chu-hung, and it has ten pictures, each of which is preceded by Pu-ming's poem, of whom Chu-hung provides no further information. In this version the ox's colour changes from dark to white.[web 3][note 1]

Famous versions edit

The best known version of the oxherding pictures was drawn by the 12th century Chinese Rinzai Chán (Zen) master Kuòān Shīyuǎn (廓庵師遠, Jp. Kaku-an Shi-en), who also wrote accompanying poems and introductory words attached to the pictures. In Kuòān Shīyuǎn's version, there is no whitening process, and his series also doesn't end with mere emptiness, or absolute truth, but shows a return to the world, depicting Putai, the laughing Buddha. In Japan, Kuòān Shīyuǎn's version gained a wide circulation, the earliest one probably belonging to the fifteenth century.[web 3]

Liaoan Qingyu (了菴清欲, Jp. Ryōan Seiyoku) (1288-1363) made another version with five pictures.[web 6]

Kuòān Shīyuǎn's Ten Bulls edit

Verses by Kuòān Shīyuǎn; translation by Senzaki Nyogen (千崎如幻) (1876–1958) and Paul Reps (1895-1990);[web 4] paintings traditionally attributed to Tenshō Shūbun (天章周文) (1414-1463).[web 7]

Influence and cultural legacy edit

 
Ten Bulls (by Tokuriki Tomikichiro, 1902–99).

The ox-herding pictures had an immediate and extensive influence on the Chinese practice of Chan Buddhism.[1] According to Chi Kwang Sunim, they may represent a Zen Buddhist interpretation of the ten Bodhisattva bhumi, the ten stages on the Bodhisattva-path.[web 9]

The pictures first became widely known in the West after their inclusion in the 1957 book, Zen Flesh, Zen Bones: A Collection of Zen and Pre-Zen Writings, by Paul Reps and Nyogen Senzaki. Alan Watts included a description of the Ten Bulls in The Spirit of Zen.[2] The pictures went on to influence the work of John Cage, particularly in his emphasis on rhythmic silence, and on images of nothingness.[3] The pictures, especially the last one ('In the Marketplace'), have provided a conceptual umbrella for those Buddhists seeking a greater engagement with the post-industrial global marketplace.[4]

Cat Stevens' sixth studio album Catch Bull at Four is a reference to the 4th step towards enlightenment. On the album, the song Sitting refers to meditation, and the apprehensions that may result from the experiences resulting from enlightenment. Catch Bull at Four was commercially successful and spent 3 weeks at number one in the Billboard album charts in 1972.

In the 1989 South Korean film Why Has Bodhi-Dharma Left for the East?, an ox escapes into the forest and one of the protagonists, a young boy, attempts to hunt it down through the bushes.[5][6][7] During the opening scene of Apichatpong Weerasethakul's 2010 film Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives, a water buffalo stands tied to a tree before breaking loose and wandering into a forest.[8][9]

Ten Elephants edit

An equivalent series of stages is depicted in the Nine Stages of Tranquility,[web 2] used in the Mahamudra tradition, in which the mind is represented by an elephant and a monkey.[web 10][web 11] This formulation was presented by Asaṅga (4th CE), delineating the nine mental abidings in his Abhidharmasamuccaya and the Śrāvakabhūmi chapter of his Yogācārabhūmi-śāstra[10] It is also found in the Mahāyānasūtrālaṅkāra of Maitreyanātha, which shows considerable similarity in arrangement and content to the Bodhisattva-bhūmi-śāstra.[note 2] In this scheme, śamatha practice is said to progress through nine "mental abidings" or Nine stages of training the mind (S. navākārā cittasthiti, Tib. sems gnas dgu), leading to śamatha proper (the equivalent of "access concentration" in the Theravāda system), and from there to a state of meditative concentration called the first dhyāna (Pāli: jhāna; Tib. bsam gtan) which is often said to be a state of tranquillity or bliss.[11][12] An equivalent succession of stages is described in the Ten oxherding pictures of Zen.[13] The Nine Mental Abidings as described by Kamalaśīla are:[14][11]

  1. Placement of the mind (S. cittasthāpana, Tib. འཇོག་པ - sems ’jog-pa) occurs when the practitioner is able to place their attention on the object of meditation, but is unable to maintain that attention for very long. Distractions, dullness of mind and other hindrances are common.
  2. Continuous placement (S. samsthāpana, Tib. རྒྱུན་དུ་འཇོག་པ - rgyun-du ‘jog-pa) occurs when the practitioner experiences moments of continuous attention on the object before becoming distracted. According to B Alan Wallace, this is when you can maintain your attention on the meditation object for about a minute.[15]
  3. Repeated placement (S. avasthāpana, Tib. བླན་ཏེ་འཇོག་པ - slan-te ’jog-pa) is when the practitioner's attention is fixed on the object for most of the practice session and she or he is able to immediately realize when she or he has lost their mental hold on the object and is able to restore that attention quickly. Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche suggests that being able to maintain attention for 108 breaths is a good benchmark for when we have reached this stage.[16]
  4. Close placement (S. upasthāpana, Tib. ཉེ་བར་འཇོག་པ - nye-bar ’jog-pa) occurs when the practitioner is able to maintain attention throughout the entire meditation session (an hour or more) without losing their mental hold on the meditation object at all. In this stage the practitioner achieves the power of mindfulness. Nevertheless, this stage still contains subtle forms of excitation and dullness or laxity.[17]
  5. Taming (S. damana, Tib. དུལ་བར་བྱེད་པ - dul-bar byed-pa), by this stage the practitioner achieves deep tranquility of mind, but must be watchful for subtle forms of laxity or dullness, peaceful states of mind which can be confused for calm abiding. By focusing on the future benefits of gaining Shamatha, the practitioner can uplift (gzengs-bstod) their mind and become more focused and clear.[18]
  6. Pacifying (S. śamana,Tib. ཞི་བར་བྱེད་པ་ - zhi-bar byed-pa) is the stage during which subtle mental dullness or laxity is no longer a great difficulty, but now the practitioner is prone to subtle excitements which arise at the periphery of meditative attention. According to B. Alan Wallace this stage is achieved only after thousands of hours of rigorous training.[19]
  7. Fully pacifying (S. vyupaśamana,Tib. རྣམ་པར་ཞི་བར་བྱེད་པ་ - nye-bar zhi-bar byed-pa), although the practitioner may still experience subtle excitement or dullness, they are rare and the practitioner can easily recognize and pacify them.
  8. Single-pointing (S. ekotīkarana,Tib. རྩེ་གཅིག་ཏུ་བྱེད་པ་ - rtse-gcig-tu byed-pa) in this stage the practitioner can reach high levels of concentration with only a slight effort and without being interrupted even by subtle laxity or excitement during the entire meditation session.
  9. Balanced placement (S. samādhāna,Tib. མཉམ་པར་འཇོག་པ་བྱེད་པ་ - mnyam-par ’jog-pa) the meditator now effortlessly reaches absorbed concentration (ting-nge-‘dzin, S. samadhi.) and can maintain it for about four hours without any single interruption.[19]
  10. Śamatha, Tib. ཞི་གནས་, shyiné - the culmination, is sometimes listed as a tenth stage.

The Dharma Fellowship, a Kagyu (Mahamudra) organisation, notes that the practice starts with studying and pondering the dharma, where-after the practice of meditation commences.[web 12]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b See Terebess Asia Online, Three Oxherding Versions Compared
  2. ^ Piya Tan gives a full description of these stages; see

References edit

  1. ^ Jinwol 2009, p. 139.
  2. ^ Watts, Alan. The Spirit of Zen, pg 62
  3. ^ Pritchett 1996, p. 60-69.
  4. ^ Goodman 1999, p. 352.
  5. ^ "Why Has Bodhidharma Left for the East?". dharma-documentaries. Dharma Documentaries. March 4, 2011. Retrieved May 23, 2022. And all the way through it is the recurring images of the widowed bird, the rushing waters, and an ox in the bushes, recalling the ox-herding drawings, that serve to link up the episodes. It is no coincidence that the filmmaker is a painter, and he sees the scenes in a painterly way.
  6. ^ "Why Has Bodhi-Dharma Left for the East?". bampfa. The Regents of the University of California. April 11, 2005. Retrieved May 23, 2022. As in a sequence alluding to the well-known ox-herding pictures of Zen Buddhism, everyday incidents promise potential knowledge.
  7. ^ Brennan, Sandra. "Why Has Bodhi-Dharma Left for the East?". Allmovie. Retrieved 2007-12-27.
  8. ^ Kohn, Eric (Mar 2, 2011). "Impenetrable Fantasy: "Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives"". indiewire. IndieWire Media. Retrieved May 23, 2022.
  9. ^ Brody, Richard (March 2, 2011). "Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives". newyorker. Condé Nast. Retrieved May 23, 2022. in an opening sequence, in which a water buffalo breaks free of its chain and withdraws deep into the jungle
  10. ^ See Abhidharmasamuccaya 2014-10-14 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ a b Wallace, A: 'The Attention Revolution', Wisdom Publications, first ed., 2006, p.6 [1] 2014-07-28 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ The Practice of Tranquility & Insight: A Guide to Tibetan Buddhist Meditation by Thrangu Rinpoche. Snow Lion Publications; 2 edition. 1998 ISBN 1-55939-106-5 pg 19
  13. ^ "Piya Tan (2004), The Taming of the Bull. Mind-training and the formation of Buddhist traditions" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2013-07-18. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  14. ^ Meditative States in Tibetan Buddhism By Lati Rinpoche, Denma Locho Rinpoche, Leah Zahler, Jeffrey Hopkins Wisdom Publications: December 25, 1996. ISBN 0-86171-119-X pgs 53-85
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-03-12. Retrieved 2007-02-25.
  16. ^ "Nine Stages of Training the Mind". from the original on 2012-10-15. Retrieved 2012-11-09.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-03-12. Retrieved 2007-02-25.
  18. ^ "Achieving Shamatha by Dr. Alexander Berzin on StudyBuddhism.com". from the original on 2016-08-08. Retrieved 2016-06-20.
  19. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2007-03-12. Retrieved 2007-02-25.

Sources edit

Printed sources edit

  • Goodman, R. A. (1999), Modern Organizations and Emerging Conundrums, Lexington Books
  • Jinwol (2009), Seon Experience for Ecological Awakening. In: Religion, Ecology & Gender, pp.131-146, LIT Verlag Münster
  • Pritchett, J. (1996), The Music of John Cage, Cambridge University Press

Web-sources edit

  1. ^ 廓庵《十牛圖頌》考:從牧牛圖頌談起
  2. ^ a b Tan, Pia (2004). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-07-18. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "The Reading Selection from The Ten Oxherding Pictures". philosophy.lander.edu.
  4. ^ a b c d Terebess Online, Oxherding Pictures Index
  5. ^ Terebess Asia Online, Three Oxherding Versions Compared
  6. ^ terebess, Five Oxherding Verses
  7. ^ therebess, Harada Shōdō commentary
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The Ten Oxherding pictures". www.buddhistdoor.com.
  9. ^ "Venerable Chi Kwang Sunim, Ten Bulls, Ten Bhumis, Buddhist Summer Scholl 2013" (PDF).
  10. ^ "Dharma Fellowship: Library - Deepening Calm-Abiding - The Nine Stages of Abiding". www.dharmafellowship.org.
  11. ^ "Mahamudra". skyflowerdharmactr.tripod.com.
  12. ^ "Dharma Fellowship: Library - Deepening Calm-Abiding - The Nine Stages of Abiding". www.dharmafellowship.org.

Further reading edit

Background
  • Rahula, Walpola (1978), Zen and the Taming of the Bull: Towards the Definition of Buddhist Thought, Gordon Fraser Book Publishers
  • Tan, Pia (2004), (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-07-18
Commentaries
  • Yamada, Mumon (2004), Lectures On The Ten Oxherding Pictures, University of Hawaii Press
  • Samy, AMA (2005), Zen: Awakening to Your Original Face, Cre-A
  • Shibayama, Zenkei (2012), A Flower Does Not Talk: Zen Essays, Tuttle Publishing
  • Daido Loori, John (2013), The Eight Gates of Zen: A Program of Zen Training, Shambhala Publications

External links edit

General
  • Terebess Online, Oxherding Pictures Index, huge collection of resources on the oxherding pictures
Zide Huihui (Jp. Jitoku Keiki) (1090-1159) version (six pictures)
  • Terebess Asia Online, The Six Oxherding Pictures by 自得慧暉 Zide Huihui (Jitoku Keiki), 1090-1159
Chinese Pu-Ming (Jp. Fumyō) version (ten pictures)
  • Terebess Asia Online, The Ten Oxherding Pictures by 普明 Puming (Fumyō), an unknown author
Kuòān Shīyuǎn (12th century) version (ten pictures)
  • Paul Reps (1957), Zen Flesh, Zen Bones: A Collection of Zen and Pre-Zen Writings
  • Reverend Eshin, Ten Oxherding Pictures
  • John M. Koller, Ox-herding: stages of Zen-practice
Extended commentaries
  • Commentary by D.T. Suzuki
  • Commentary by Shodo Harada
  • Commentary by Sheng Yen
  • Commentary by Ruben Habito
  • Commentary by Martine Batchelor
  • Commentary by Chögyam Trungpa
Taming the Elephant
  • Dharma Fellowship, Deepening Calm-Abiding - The Nine Stages of Abiding
  • Skyflower Dharmacenter, Mahamudra Tranquility and Insight
Other
  • A comparison between the Zen Buddhist Ten Oxherding Pictures and the Theory of Positive Disintegration
  • Dward Muzika, Awakening versus Liberation

bulls, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, external, links, follow, wikipedia, policies, guidelines, please, improve, this, article, removing. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Ten Bulls or Ten Ox Herding Pictures Chinese shiniu 十牛 Japanese jugyuzu 十牛図 korean sipwoo 십우 is a series of short poems and accompanying drawings used in the Zen tradition to describe the stages of a practitioner s progress toward enlightenment web 1 and their return to society to enact wisdom and compassion Vietnamese water puppet depicting a scene in the parable Contents 1 History 1 1 Scriptural origins 1 2 Chinese pictures 1 2 1 Early versions 1 2 2 Famous versions 2 Kuoan Shiyuǎn s Ten Bulls 3 Influence and cultural legacy 4 Ten Elephants 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 8 1 Printed sources 8 2 Web sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editScriptural origins edit The calf bull or ox is one of the earliest similes for meditation practice It comes from the Maha Gopalaka Sutta Majjhima Nikaya 33 It is also used in the commentaries especially the one on the Maha Satipatthana Sutta Digha Nikaya 22 and the Satipatthana Sutta Majjhima Nikaya 10 As Buddhism spread throughout South East Asia the simile of the bull spread with it web 2 Chinese pictures edit The well known ten ox herding pictures emerged in China in the 12th century D T Suzuki mentions four Chinese versions of the Oxherding Pictures by Ching chu Jp Seikyo 11th century Tzu te Hui Jp Jitoku 1090 1159 an unknown author and Kuoan Shiyuǎn Jp Kaku an 12th century web 3 web 4 Early versions edit The first series was probably made by Ching chu in the 11th century who may have been a contemporary of Kuoan Shiyuǎn web 4 There are only five pictures in Ching chu s version and the ox s colour changes from dark to white representing the gradual development of the practitioner ending in the disappearance of the practitioner web 3 Tzu te Hui 自得慧暉 Zide Huihui Jp Jitoku 1090 1159 made a version with six pictures The sixth one goes beyond the stage of absolute emptiness where Ching chu s version ends web 4 Just like Ching chu s version the ox grows whiter along the way web 3 note 1 A third version by an unknown author with ten pictures was the most popular in China It derives from the Ching chu and Tzu te Hui series of pictures and has a somewhat different series of pictures compared to Kuoan Shiyuǎn s version web 3 web 5 The 1585 edition contains a preface by Chu hung and it has ten pictures each of which is preceded by Pu ming s poem of whom Chu hung provides no further information In this version the ox s colour changes from dark to white web 3 note 1 Famous versions edit The best known version of the oxherding pictures was drawn by the 12th century Chinese Rinzai Chan Zen master Kuoan Shiyuǎn 廓庵師遠 Jp Kaku an Shi en who also wrote accompanying poems and introductory words attached to the pictures In Kuoan Shiyuǎn s version there is no whitening process and his series also doesn t end with mere emptiness or absolute truth but shows a return to the world depicting Putai the laughing Buddha In Japan Kuoan Shiyuǎn s version gained a wide circulation the earliest one probably belonging to the fifteenth century web 3 Liaoan Qingyu 了菴清欲 Jp Ryōan Seiyoku 1288 1363 made another version with five pictures web 6 Kuoan Shiyuǎn s Ten Bulls editVerses by Kuoan Shiyuǎn translation by Senzaki Nyogen 千崎如幻 1876 1958 and Paul Reps 1895 1990 web 4 paintings traditionally attributed to Tenshō Shubun 天章周文 1414 1463 web 7 nbsp 1 In Search of the BullIn the pasture of the world I endlessly push aside the tallgrasses in search of the Ox Following unnamed rivers lost upon the interpenetratingpaths of distant mountains My strength failing and my vitality exhausted I cannot find the Ox nbsp 2 Discovery of the FootprintsAlong the riverbank under the trees I discover footprints Even under the fragrant grass I see his prints Deep in remote mountains they are found These traces can no more be hiddenthan one s nose looking heavenward web 8 nbsp 3 Perceiving the BullI hear the song of the nightingale The sun is warm the wind is mild willows are green along the shore Here no Ox can hide What artist can draw that massive head those majestic horns web 8 nbsp 4 Catching the BullI seize him with a terrific struggle His great will and powerare inexhaustible He charges to the high plateaufar above the cloud mists Or in an impenetrable ravine he stands web 8 nbsp 5 Taming the BullThe whip and rope are necessary Else he might stray off downsome dusty road Being well trained he becomesnaturally gentle Then unfettered he obeys his master web 8 nbsp 6 Riding the Bull HomeMounting the Ox slowlyI return homeward The voice of my flute intonesthrough the evening Measuring with hand beatsthe pulsating harmony I direct the endless rhythm Whoever hears this melodywill join me web 8 nbsp 7 The Bull TranscendedAstride the Ox I reach home I am serene The Ox too can rest The dawn has come In blissful repose Within my thatched dwellingI have abandoned the whip and ropes web 8 nbsp 8 Both Bull and Self TranscendedWhip rope person and Ox all merge in No Thing This heaven is so vast no message can stain it How may a snowflake existin a raging fire Here are the footprints ofthe Ancestors web 8 nbsp 9 Reaching the SourceToo many steps have been takenreturning to the root and the source Better to have been blind and deaffrom the beginning Dwelling in one s true abode unconcerned with and without The river flows tranquilly onand the flowers are red web 8 nbsp 10 Return to SocietyBarefooted and naked of breast I mingle with the people of the world My clothes are ragged and dust laden and I am ever blissful I use no magic to extend my life Now before me the dead treesbecome alive web 8 Influence and cultural legacy edit nbsp Ten Bulls by Tokuriki Tomikichiro 1902 99 The ox herding pictures had an immediate and extensive influence on the Chinese practice of Chan Buddhism 1 According to Chi Kwang Sunim they may represent a Zen Buddhist interpretation of the ten Bodhisattva bhumi the ten stages on the Bodhisattva path web 9 The pictures first became widely known in the West after their inclusion in the 1957 book Zen Flesh Zen Bones A Collection of Zen and Pre Zen Writings by Paul Reps and Nyogen Senzaki Alan Watts included a description of the Ten Bulls in The Spirit of Zen 2 The pictures went on to influence the work of John Cage particularly in his emphasis on rhythmic silence and on images of nothingness 3 The pictures especially the last one In the Marketplace have provided a conceptual umbrella for those Buddhists seeking a greater engagement with the post industrial global marketplace 4 Cat Stevens sixth studio album Catch Bull at Four is a reference to the 4th step towards enlightenment On the album the song Sitting refers to meditation and the apprehensions that may result from the experiences resulting from enlightenment Catch Bull at Four was commercially successful and spent 3 weeks at number one in the Billboard album charts in 1972 In the 1989 South Korean film Why Has Bodhi Dharma Left for the East an ox escapes into the forest and one of the protagonists a young boy attempts to hunt it down through the bushes 5 6 7 During the opening scene of Apichatpong Weerasethakul s 2010 film Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives a water buffalo stands tied to a tree before breaking loose and wandering into a forest 8 9 Ten Elephants editAn equivalent series of stages is depicted in the Nine Stages of Tranquility web 2 used in the Mahamudra tradition in which the mind is represented by an elephant and a monkey web 10 web 11 This formulation was presented by Asaṅga 4th CE delineating the nine mental abidings in his Abhidharmasamuccaya and the Sravakabhumi chapter of his Yogacarabhumi sastra 10 It is also found in the Mahayanasutralaṅkara of Maitreyanatha which shows considerable similarity in arrangement and content to the Bodhisattva bhumi sastra note 2 In this scheme samatha practice is said to progress through nine mental abidings or Nine stages of training the mind S navakara cittasthiti Tib sems gnas dgu leading to samatha proper the equivalent of access concentration in the Theravada system and from there to a state of meditative concentration called the first dhyana Pali jhana Tib bsam gtan which is often said to be a state of tranquillity or bliss 11 12 An equivalent succession of stages is described in the Ten oxherding pictures of Zen 13 The Nine Mental Abidings as described by Kamalasila are 14 11 Placement of the mind S cittasthapana Tib འཇ ག པ sems jog pa occurs when the practitioner is able to place their attention on the object of meditation but is unable to maintain that attention for very long Distractions dullness of mind and other hindrances are common Continuous placement S samsthapana Tib ར ན ད འཇ ག པ rgyun du jog pa occurs when the practitioner experiences moments of continuous attention on the object before becoming distracted According to B Alan Wallace this is when you can maintain your attention on the meditation object for about a minute 15 Repeated placement S avasthapana Tib བ ན ཏ འཇ ག པ slan te jog pa is when the practitioner s attention is fixed on the object for most of the practice session and she or he is able to immediately realize when she or he has lost their mental hold on the object and is able to restore that attention quickly Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche suggests that being able to maintain attention for 108 breaths is a good benchmark for when we have reached this stage 16 Close placement S upasthapana Tib ཉ བར འཇ ག པ nye bar jog pa occurs when the practitioner is able to maintain attention throughout the entire meditation session an hour or more without losing their mental hold on the meditation object at all In this stage the practitioner achieves the power of mindfulness Nevertheless this stage still contains subtle forms of excitation and dullness or laxity 17 Taming S damana Tib ད ལ བར བ ད པ dul bar byed pa by this stage the practitioner achieves deep tranquility of mind but must be watchful for subtle forms of laxity or dullness peaceful states of mind which can be confused for calm abiding By focusing on the future benefits of gaining Shamatha the practitioner can uplift gzengs bstod their mind and become more focused and clear 18 Pacifying S samana Tib ཞ བར བ ད པ zhi bar byed pa is the stage during which subtle mental dullness or laxity is no longer a great difficulty but now the practitioner is prone to subtle excitements which arise at the periphery of meditative attention According to B Alan Wallace this stage is achieved only after thousands of hours of rigorous training 19 Fully pacifying S vyupasamana Tib ར མ པར ཞ བར བ ད པ nye bar zhi bar byed pa although the practitioner may still experience subtle excitement or dullness they are rare and the practitioner can easily recognize and pacify them Single pointing S ekotikarana Tib ར གཅ ག ཏ བ ད པ rtse gcig tu byed pa in this stage the practitioner can reach high levels of concentration with only a slight effort and without being interrupted even by subtle laxity or excitement during the entire meditation session Balanced placement S samadhana Tib མཉམ པར འཇ ག པ བ ད པ mnyam par jog pa the meditator now effortlessly reaches absorbed concentration ting nge dzin S samadhi and can maintain it for about four hours without any single interruption 19 Samatha Tib ཞ གནས shyine the culmination is sometimes listed as a tenth stage The Dharma Fellowship a Kagyu Mahamudra organisation notes that the practice starts with studying and pondering the dharma where after the practice of meditation commences web 12 See also editBuddhist Paths to liberation Bodhi Five Ranks Monomyth NirvanaNotes edit a b See Terebess Asia Online Three Oxherding Versions Compared Piya Tan gives a full description of these stages see Piya Tan 2004 The Taming of the Bull Mind training and the formation of Buddhist traditions dharmafarer orgReferences edit Jinwol 2009 p 139 Watts Alan The Spirit of Zen pg 62 Pritchett 1996 p 60 69 Goodman 1999 p 352 Why Has Bodhidharma Left for the East dharma documentaries Dharma Documentaries March 4 2011 Retrieved May 23 2022 And all the way through it is the recurring images of the widowed bird the rushing waters and an ox in the bushes recalling the ox herding drawings that serve to link up the episodes It is no coincidence that the filmmaker is a painter and he sees the scenes in a painterly way Why Has Bodhi Dharma Left for the East bampfa The Regents of the University of California April 11 2005 Retrieved May 23 2022 As in a sequence alluding to the well known ox herding pictures of Zen Buddhism everyday incidents promise potential knowledge Brennan Sandra Why Has Bodhi Dharma Left for the East Allmovie Retrieved 2007 12 27 Kohn Eric Mar 2 2011 Impenetrable Fantasy Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives indiewire IndieWire Media Retrieved May 23 2022 Brody Richard March 2 2011 Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives newyorker Conde Nast Retrieved May 23 2022 in an opening sequence in which a water buffalo breaks free of its chain and withdraws deep into the jungle See Abhidharmasamuccaya Archived 2014 10 14 at the Wayback Machine a b Wallace A The Attention Revolution Wisdom Publications first ed 2006 p 6 1 Archived 2014 07 28 at the Wayback Machine The Practice of Tranquility amp Insight A Guide to Tibetan Buddhist Meditation by Thrangu Rinpoche Snow Lion Publications 2 edition 1998 ISBN 1 55939 106 5 pg 19 Piya Tan 2004 The Taming of the Bull Mind training and the formation of Buddhist traditions PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2013 07 18 Retrieved 2014 10 08 Meditative States in Tibetan Buddhism By Lati Rinpoche Denma Locho Rinpoche Leah Zahler Jeffrey Hopkins Wisdom Publications December 25 1996 ISBN 0 86171 119 X pgs 53 85 Wallace A The Attention Revolution Wisdom Publications first ed 2006 p 30 Archived from the original on 2007 03 12 Retrieved 2007 02 25 Nine Stages of Training the Mind Archived from the original on 2012 10 15 Retrieved 2012 11 09 Wallace A The Attention Revolution Wisdom Publications first ed 2006 p 62 Archived from the original on 2007 03 12 Retrieved 2007 02 25 Achieving Shamatha by Dr Alexander Berzin on StudyBuddhism com Archived from the original on 2016 08 08 Retrieved 2016 06 20 a b Wallace A The Attention Revolution Wisdom Publications first ed 2006 p 99 Archived from the original on 2007 03 12 Retrieved 2007 02 25 Sources editPrinted sources edit Goodman R A 1999 Modern Organizations and Emerging Conundrums Lexington Books Jinwol 2009 Seon Experience for Ecological Awakening In Religion Ecology amp Gender pp 131 146 LIT Verlag Munster Pritchett J 1996 The Music of John Cage Cambridge University Press Web sources edit 廓庵 十牛圖頌 考 從牧牛圖頌談起 a b Tan Pia 2004 The Taming of the Bull Mind training and the formation of Buddhist traditions PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 07 18 Retrieved 2023 04 24 a b c d e f The Reading Selection from The Ten Oxherding Pictures philosophy lander edu a b c d Terebess Online Oxherding Pictures Index Terebess Asia Online Three Oxherding Versions Compared terebess Five Oxherding Verses therebess Harada Shōdō commentary a b c d e f g h i The Ten Oxherding pictures www buddhistdoor com Venerable Chi Kwang Sunim Ten Bulls Ten Bhumis Buddhist Summer Scholl 2013 PDF Dharma Fellowship Library Deepening Calm Abiding The Nine Stages of Abiding www dharmafellowship org Mahamudra skyflowerdharmactr tripod com Dharma Fellowship Library Deepening Calm Abiding The Nine Stages of Abiding www dharmafellowship org Further reading editBackgroundRahula Walpola 1978 Zen and the Taming of the Bull Towards the Definition of Buddhist Thought Gordon Fraser Book Publishers Tan Pia 2004 The Taming of the Bull Mind training and the formation of Buddhist traditions PDF archived from the original PDF on 2013 07 18CommentariesYamada Mumon 2004 Lectures On The Ten Oxherding Pictures University of Hawaii Press Samy AMA 2005 Zen Awakening to Your Original Face Cre A Shibayama Zenkei 2012 A Flower Does Not Talk Zen Essays Tuttle Publishing Daido Loori John 2013 The Eight Gates of Zen A Program of Zen Training Shambhala PublicationsExternal links editGeneralTerebess Online Oxherding Pictures Index huge collection of resources on the oxherding picturesZide Huihui Jp Jitoku Keiki 1090 1159 version six pictures Terebess Asia Online The Six Oxherding Pictures by 自得慧暉 Zide Huihui Jitoku Keiki 1090 1159Chinese Pu Ming Jp Fumyō version ten pictures Terebess Asia Online The Ten Oxherding Pictures by 普明 Puming Fumyō an unknown authorKuoan Shiyuǎn 12th century version ten pictures Paul Reps 1957 Zen Flesh Zen Bones A Collection of Zen and Pre Zen Writings Reverend Eshin Ten Oxherding Pictures John M Koller Ox herding stages of Zen practiceExtended commentariesCommentary by D T Suzuki Commentary by Shodo Harada Commentary by Sheng Yen Commentary by Ruben Habito Commentary by Martine Batchelor Commentary by Chogyam TrungpaTaming the ElephantDharma Fellowship Deepening Calm Abiding The Nine Stages of Abiding Skyflower Dharmacenter Mahamudra Tranquility and InsightOtherA comparison between the Zen Buddhist Ten Oxherding Pictures and the Theory of Positive Disintegration Dward Muzika Awakening versus Liberation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ten Bulls amp oldid 1171691237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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