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zcla 40th anniversary celebration, 2007
Moshe: What is the clown doing here?
Egyoku: I think it is a great question, and I think that it is a question
that we should keep raising actually. For one thing, I think that is
the first question that arises. What is he doing here? What place does
he have here?
M: Some people are still a little skeptical…
E: Yes it just challenges, what should we be doing here? What is Zen?
What is spirituality? What is it really? This is why we have to take
it out of the clothes, and the words. This is where we have to trust
that we can really make it our own.
M: I really find the creative side of life akin to all this, because
that is where it comes from. It comes from letting go.
This weekend, I was talking to my brother about a script he and his writing
partner were writing (they are comedy screenwriters). His story was about
how all week he couldn’t get around a problem in the script. This one
part didn’t feel right, they felt stuck.
E: that is part of the process…
M: That’s what you said in the koan class and I shared with him your
thoughts about being stuck. You said “you get used to that. OK here I
am in this stuck place and just be there, accept it. Just know that you
are going to be there, and that it will pass. That it is just part of
the process.”
E: Yes it is wonderful.
M: My brother said something very interesting. He said, “we were going
with this fix to the script, and I knew in my gut that it was wrong.
I knew and I was upset all week. I knew that I wasn’t going with my gut
feeling.
E: And we keep canceling it out. We cancel it out.
M: I think as an artist that is what you do; you go with your gut.
E: Well life is a great artwork. It is a creation. We kind of think
that it is happening to us. But actually we are creating it every moment.
It’s all our creation, karmically and otherwise. When you start to step
into that way of seeing things, it becomes a whole different now.
M: Art is Zen in that way, isn’t it? It demands letting go of the thought
process. One becomes so deeply concentrated in the art that everything
else dissolves. Which is why for me the practice of clown is akin to
Zen.
E: Yes, it is just another way to reinforce that way of being, that
way of complete embodied presence. From a Zen perspective we would look
at it that way. We have our forms, but there are other forms that could
really get us to…I mean look at how hard it is for us to be a pillar
(referring to the Koan workshop)
Post conversation notes:
Indeed in the koan workshop, at one point, we went around the oblong
circle of some 40 participants in the dharma hall, and different participants
stood up and physically embodied being a pillar. The koan is “Hide
yourself in a pillar”, or sometimes they say “show me a pillar”.
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