Transcript
OTHER HARPER SAN FRANCISCO BOOKS BY THOMAS CLEARY
The Essential Tao: An Initiation into the Heart ofTaoism through the Authentic 1Ao Te Ching and the Inner Teachings of Chuang Tzu The Essmtial Confucius: The Heart of Confucius' Teachings in Authentic I Ching Order
The Secret of the Golden Flower The Classic Chinese Book ofLifo Translated, with.Introduction, Notes, and Commentary by
Thomas Cleary
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A Di'!!i.!ion ofHarperCollinsPubliJhers
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Ho.rp•rOne
THE SECRET 01' THE GOLDEN FLOWER:
The ClaJsic Chinese Book 4 Lift. Copyright© 1991 by Thomas Cleary. All rights reserved. Printed in the United Scates of America. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief qumations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For informarion address HarperCollins Publishers, 10 East 53rd Sueet, New York, NY 10022. HarperCollins books may be purchased for educarional, business, or sales promotional use. For information please write: Special Markers
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Lii, Tung-pin, b. 798 [T'ai i chin hua rsung chih. English] The secret of the golden flower I translated, with introduction, notes, and commentary, by Thomas Cleary. - lsr ed. p. ern. Translation of: T'ai i chin hua tsung chih. ISBN: 978-0-06-250193-6 1, Spiritual life (Taoism) 2. Spiritual life (Buddhism) I. Cleary, Thomas F., 1949II. Title. BL1923.L78 1991 299'.5144-dc20 90-55796 08 09 10 11 MART 20 19
Contents
Introduction 1 The Secret of the Go/dm Flower 7 Translation Notes 73 Th.nslator's Afterword: Modern Applications of the Golden Flower Method
131 Works Cited 154
Introduction Naturalness is called the Way. The Way has no nameorfonn; it isjust the essence) just the primal spirit.
.··he Secret of the Golden · Fb!wer is a lay manual of Buddhist and Taoist methods for clarifYing the mind. A distillation of the inner psychoactive elements in ancient spiritual classics, it describes a natural way to mental freedom practiced in China for many centuries. The golden flower symbolizes the quintessence of the paths of Buddhism andTaoism. Gold stands forlight, the light of the mind itself; the flower representS the blossoming, or opening up, of the light of the mind; Thus the expression is emblematic of the basic awakening of the real self and its hidden potential. In Taoist terms, the first goal of the Way is to restore the original Godo.given spirit and become a. self-realized human being. In Buddhist terms, a realized human being is someone conscious of the original mind, or the real self, as it is in its spontaneous natural state, independent of environmental conditioning. This original spirit is also called the celestial mind, or the natural mind. A mode of awareness subtler and more direct than thought or imagination, it is central to the
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2 blossoming of the mind. The Secret ofthe Golden r'/mver is devoted to the recovery and refinement of the original spirit. This manual contains a number of helpful meditation techniques 1 but its central method is deeper than a form of meditation. Using neither idea nor image, it is a process of gerting right to the root source of awareness itself. The aim of this exercise is to free the mind from arbitrary and unnecessary limitations imposed upon it by habitual. fixation on its own contents. With this liberation, Taoists say, the conscious individual becomes a "partner of creation11 rather than a prisoner of creation. The experience of the blossoming of the golden flower is likened to light in the sky, a sky of awareness vaster than images 1 thoughts, and feelings, an unimpeded space containing everything without being filled. Thus it opens up an avenue to an endless source of intuition 1 creativity1 and inspiration. Once this power of mental awakening has been developed, it can be renewed and deepened without limit. The essential practice of the golden flower requires no apparatus 1 no philosophical or religious dogma, no special paraphernalia or ritual. It is practiced in the course of daily life. It is near at hand, being in the mind itself, yet it involves no imagery or thought. It is remote only in the sense that it is a use of attention generally unfamiliar to the mind habituated to imagination and thinking. The Secret of the Golden Flower is remarkable for the sharpness of its focus on a very direct method for selfrealization accessible to ordinary lay people. When it was written down in a crisis more than two hundred years
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ago, it was a concentrated revival of an ancient teaching; . ·.and it has been periodically revived in crises since) due to the rapidity with which the method can awaken awareness ofhidden resources in the mind. The Secret of the Golden Flmver is the first book of its kind to have been translated into a Western language. A German version by Richard Wilhelm was first published in 1929) and an English •translation of this German rendi•tion was published shortly thereafter. Both German and English editions included an extensive commentary by the distinguished psychologist C. G. Jung) whose work became a majorinflllence in Western psychology; studies of mythology and religion) and New Age culture in general. Although J ung credited The Secret of the Golden Flower with having clarified his own work on the unconscious, he maintained serious reservations about the practice taught in the book. WhatJung did not know was that the text he was reading was in fact a garbled translation of a truncated version of a corrupted recension of the original work. Unawares, a critical communication gap occurred in the process of transmission; and yet the book made a powerful impression. It became one ofthe main sources ofWestern knowledge of Eastern spirituality and also one of the seminal influences in Jungian thought on the psychology of religion. Cary F. Baynes, who rendered Wilhelm's German into English, even went so far as to hail it as "the secret of the power of growth latent in the psyche." Psychological and experiential approaches to religion have enriched modern psychological thought and
4 research, which have in turn enriched the understanding and experience of religion. In terms of religion as culture, one of the advantages of a· psychological approach is the facility with which emotional boundaries of church and sect can thereby be transcended. In Wilhdm's own introduction to his translation of The Secret of the Golden Flown; he notes that Taoist organizations following this teaching in his time included not only Confucians and Buddhists but also Jews, Christians, and Muslims, all without requiring them to break away from their own religious congregations. So fundamental is the golden flower awakening that it brings out inner dimensions in all religions. From the point ofview of that central experience, it makes no more diffi:rence whether one calls the golden flower awakening a relationship to God or to the Way, or whether one calls it the holyspirit or the Buddha nature or the real self. The TtUJ Te Ching says, "Names can be designated, but they are not fixed terms.'' The image of the opening up of the golden flower of the light in the mind is used as but one of many ways of alluding to an effi:ct that is really ineffable. The pragmatic purpose of Taoist and Buddhist·teachings is to elicit experience, not to inculcate doctrines; that is why people of other religions, or with no religion at all, have been able to avail themselves of the psychoactive technologies of Taoism and Buddhism without destroying their own cultural identities. Considered in terms of its essential aim rather than the forms it can take, the golden flower method can be used to transcend the barriers of personal and cultural
5 differences without losing the richness of diversity and distinction ....· The Semt of the Golden Flower is indeed a powerful treatise on awakening the hidden potential of a universal human being, and it is in reality an even better and more useful book than Wilhelm,]ung, or Baynes thought it to be. However immature his rendition may have been, I am deeply indebted to Richard Wilhelm for introducing this extraordinary text to the West, for it could otherwise have gone unnoticed for decades, even centuries, amidst the hundreds upon hundreds of Taoist and Buddhisttreatises awaiting translation. It can therefore be said that it is because of Wilhelm's efforts that this new English version of The Smtt of the Golden Flower has come into being. It is to further inquiries into ways of approaching universal psychology and mental wholeness in general, and to further inquiries into development of the researches initiated by Wilhelm and Jung in their presentation of this book in particular, that I have undertaken to follow up on their work with a new and complete rendition of The Secret of the Go/Mn F/Qwer.
Because the still-current Wilhelm/Jung!Baynes edition of this manual contains dangerous and misleading contaminations, a primary consideration of the new translation was to make the contents of The Secret of the Golden Fluwer explicitly accessible to both lay and specialist audiences. This is partly a matter of translation and partly a matter of presentation. The text itself is somewhat like a series of explanations of practical meanings in esoteric terminology for the use
6 of lay people. To this have been added selections translated from a canonical Chinese Taoist commentary that further refines the principles into pragmatic observations divested of the outward forms of religious and alchemical symbolism. The translation notes explain the expressions, ideas, and practices to which the text refers. The afterword joins the beginning and the end, from the background of th~ translations to the psychological implications of the praxis.
The Secret of the Golden Flower
I. The Celestial Mind II. The Original Spirit ::md the Conscious Spirit III. Turning the Light Around and Keeping to the Center IV. Turning the Light Around and Tuning the Breathing v. Errors in Turning the Light Around VI. Authenticating Experiences of Turning the Light Around VII. The Living Method of Turning the Light Around VIII. The Secret ofFreedom IX. Setting Up the Foundation in a Hundred Days X. The Light of Essence and the Light of Consciousness XI. The Intercourse of Water and Fire XII. The Cycle XIII. Song to Inspire the World
Questions and Answers Opening up the Mysteries of the Doctrine of the Golden Flower
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9. 13 17 23 31 33 37 39 49 51 55 57 61
65
I The Celestial Mind
1
Naturalness is called the Way. The Way has no name or form; it is just the essence, just the prirriaispirit.
2
Essence and life are invisible, so they are associated with sky and light. Sky and light are invisible, so they are associated with the two eyes.
3
Since ancient times, those who realiied spiritual immortality all communicated their teaching verbally, transmitting it from individual to individual.··
4
Thishang appeared magically to Donghua, and the Way was handed on. through a succession to Yan, then to the southern and northern schools of Complete Reality, which can be considered its full flourishing.
5
That movement flourished in the sense that there were a great many who followed it, yet it declined in the sense that its mental communication deteriorated. This has continued up to the present day, when it is extremely confused and extremely degenerate.
9
10 6
When an extreme is reached, there is a reversion. Therefore there was a certain master Siu who extended his kindness to liberate all, especially setting up the teaching of the special transmission outside of doctrine. For those who heard, it was a rare opportunity; those who accepted it formed a religious association in their time. Everyone should respectfully understand the heart of master Siu.
7
First establish a firm foothold in daily activities within society. Only then can you cultivate reality and understaf1,: essence.
8
In obedience to a directive, I am acting as a guide to liberation. Now I am bringing to light the source message of the golden flower of absolute unity. After that I will explain in detail.
9
The absolute unity refers to what cannot be surpassed. There are very many alchemical teachings, but all of them make temporary use of effort to arrive at effortlessness; they are not teachings of total transcendence and direct penetration. The doctrine I transmit directly brings up working with essence and does not fall into a secondary method. That is the best thing about it.
10 The golden flower is light. What color is light? It is symbolized by the golden flower, which [in Chinese characters] also conceals [the words] one light within. This is the absolutely unified real energy of celestial immortals; this is what is meant by the saying, "The lead in the homeland of water is just one flavor."
11 The whole work of turning the light around uses the method of reversal. The beauties ofthe highest heavens and the marvels of the sublimest realms are all within the heart: this is where the perfectly open and aware spirit concentrates. Confucians call inhe open center, Buddhists call it the pedestal of awareness, Taoists call it the ancestral earth, the yellow court, the mysterious pass, rhe primal opening. The celestial mind is like a house; the light is the master of the house. Therefore once you turn the light around, the energies throughout the body all rise. Just turn the light around; this is the unexcelled sublime truth. The light is easily stirred and hard to stabilize. When you have turned it around for a long time, the light crystallizes. This is the natural spiritual body, and it steadies the spirit above the nine skies. This is what is referred to in the Mind Seal Scripture as "silently paying court'' and ''soaring upward." The golden flower is the same thing as the gold pill. The transmutations of spiritual illumination are all guided by mind.
II The Original Spirit and the Conscious Spirit
From the point of view of the universe, people are like mayflies; but from the point of view of the Way, even the universe is asanevanescent reflection. Only the true essence of the original spirit transcends the primal organization and is above it. Vitality and energy degenerate alorig with the universe, but the original spirit is stillthere; this is the infinite. The production of the universe all derives from this. If learners can just preserve the original spirit, they live transcendentally outside ofyinarid yang. They are not within the three realms. This is possible only by seeing essence. This is what is called the original face. What is mC>st wondrous is when tlttdight has crystallized in a spiritual body, gradually becoming consciously effective, and is on the verge of moving into action. This is the secret that has not been transmitted in a thousand ages.
13
14 5
The conscious mind is like a violent general of a strong fiefdom controlling things from a distance, until the sword is turned around.
6
Now steadily keep to the chamber of the origin, turning the light around to look back, and this is like having a heroic leader on top with great ministers helping. Once the inner government is orderly, the strong and violent naturally become tame.
7
The highest secrets of alchemy are the water of vitality, the fire of spirit, and the earth of attention.
8
The water of vitality is the energy of the primal real unity. The fire of spirit is illumination. The earth of attention is the chamber of the center, the celestial mind.
9
The fire of spirit is the function, the earth of attention is the substance, the water of vitality is the foundation.
10 People create the body by attention. The body is not just the physical body, because there is a lower soul therein. The lower sou! functions in association with consciousness, and consciousness develops based on the lower soul. The lower soul is dim; it is the substance of consciousness. If consciousness is not interrupted, transformation and transmutation of the lower soul go on endlessly from lifetime to lifetime, generation to generation.
11 Then there is the higher soul, which is where the spirit is concealed. The higher soul resides in the eyes during the day and lodges in the liver at night. When it resides in the eyes, it sees; when it lodges in the liver, it dreams. 12 Dreams are the roaming of the spirit. It traverses the nine heavens and nine earths in an instant. If you are dull and depressed on awakening, that is a sign of clinging to the body, which means clinging to the lower soul. 13 So turning the light around is a means of refining the higher soul, which is a means of preserving the spirit, which is a means of controlling the lower soul, which is a means of interrupting consciousness.
14 The ancients' method of transcending the world, refining away the dregs of darkness to restore pure light, is just a matter of dissolving the lower soul and making the higher soul whole. 15 Turning the light around is the secret of dissolving darkness and controlling the lower soul. There is no exercise to restore the creative, only the secret of turning the light around. The light itself is the creative; to turn it around is to restore it. 16 Just persist in this method, and naturally the water of vitality will be full, the fire of spirit will ignite, the earth of attention will stabilize, and thus the embryo of sagehood can be solidified.
16 17 A dung beetle rolls a pill of dung, from which life
emerges, by the pure effort of concentration of spirit. If life can come even from a dung ball, how could it not be possible to produce a body by concentrating the spirit on where the celestial mind rests when the embryo leaves the shell? 18 Once the true nature of unified awareness has fallen
into the chamber of the cnative) it divides into higher and lower souls. The higher soul is in the celestial mind; this is yang, energy that is light and dear. This is obtained from cosmic space and has the same form as· the original beginning.· The lower soul is yin, energy thatis dense and opaque. This sticks to the ordinary mind that has form.
19 The higher soul likes life, the lower soul looks toward death. All lust affecting the temperament is the doing of the lower soul. This is what consciousness is. After death it feeds on blood, in life it suffers greatly.. This is darkness returning to darkness, by a coming together of kind. 20 If learners refine the dark lower soul completely, then
it will be pure light.
III Turning the Light Around and Keeping to the· Center
1
Where did the term turni~ the light around begin? It began with the adept Wenshi. When the light is turned around, the energies of heaven and earth, yin and yang, all congeal. This is whatiscalled "refined thought,'' "pure energy:' or "pure thought.''
2
When you first put this technique into practice, t~ere is seemingly nonbeing within being. Eventually, when the work is accomplished, and there is a body beyond your body, there i~ seemingly being within nonbeing.
3
Only after a hundred days of concentrated worki~ the light real; only then is it the fire of spirit. After a hundred days, the light is spontaneous: a point of true positive energy suddenly produces a pearl, just as an embryo forms ftoJ1l the intercourse of a man and a woman. Then you should attend it calmly and quietly. The turning around of the light is the "firing process.''
17
18 4
In the original creation there is positive light, which is the ruling director. In the material world it is the sun; in human beings it is the eyes. Nothing is worse than to have a running leakage ofspirit and consciousness; this is conformity, so theway of the golden flower is accomplished completely through the method of reversal.
5
Turning the light around is not turning around the light of one body, but turning around the very energy of Creation. It is not stopping random imagination only temporarily; it is truly emptying routine compulsion for all time.
6
Therefore each· breath corresponds to one year of human time; and each· breath corresponds to a century in the various pathways of the long night of Ignorance.
7
Usually people wind up pursuing objects and come to age in conformity with life, never once looking back. When their positive energy fades and disappears, this is the netherworld. Therefore the Heroic March Scripture says, "Pure thought is flight, pure emotion is fall." When students have little thought and much emotion, they sink into low W is the single yang in the center of wa~ on the verge ofblazing·and returning to heaven. Herein lies [the operation of spiritual alchemy known as] "taking from wa~ to fill in .fire."
32 The next two lines explain the function of the ctipper handle; the whole mechanism of rising and descending. Does not "in the water" refer to watnf The eyes, as the breeze of wind) shine into the chamber of wa~ and beckon the vitality of dominant yang. That is what these lines mean.
33 "In the heavens'' refers to the chamber of the &native. "Roaming and returning to absorb the virtues of the rtceptiPe" means nurturingthe fire. 34 The lasttwo lines point out the secret within these-
cret. The secret within the secret cannot be ctispensed with from start to finish. This is what is called cleaning the mind, washing the thoughts, which is "bathing."
46 35 The learning of sages begins with knowing when to stop and ends with stopping at ultimate good. It begins in the infinite and winds up in the infinite. 36 In Buddhism, activating the mind without dwelling
on anything is considered the essential message of the whole canon. In Taoism, "effecting openness" is the whole work of completing essence and life. In sum) the three teachings are not beyond one saying, which is a spiritual pill that gets one out of death and preserves life.
37 What is the spiritual pill? It just means to be unminding in all situations. The greatest secret in Taoism is "bathing." Thus the whole practice described in this book does not go beyond the words "emptiness of mind." It is enough to understand this. This single statement can save decades of seeking. 38 If you do not understand how three stages are
included in one, for an analogy let me use the Buddhist teaching of contemplating emptiness, the conditional, and the center. 39 First is emptiness; you see all things as empty. Next is
the conditional; though you know things are empty, you do not destroy the totality of things but take a constructive attitude toward events in the midst of emptiness. Once you neither destroy things nor cling to things, this is the contemplation ofthe center.
all
When you are practicing the contemplation of emptiness, if you still know that the totality of things cannot be destroyed, and yet do not cling to them, this includes all three contemplations. Since empowerment after all means really seeing emptiness, when you cultivate contemplation of emptiness, emptiness is empty, t~e conditional is also empty, and the center is empty too. In practicing contemplation of the conditional, much of the empowerment is attained in action; so while the conditional is of course conditional, emptiness is also conditional and the center is conditional too. When on the way of the center, you still meditate on emptiness; but you don't call it emptiness, you call it the center. You also meditate on the conditional; but you don't call it the conditional, you call it the center. When you come to the center, there is no need to say. Although !·sometimes speak only o(fire, sometimes I also speak of warer. Ultimately they have never moved; with one saying I open my mouth: the essential mechanism is all in the two eyes. The mechanism means the function; you use this to manage Creation. This docs not mean that is all there is to Creation; all the faculties of sense and mind are mines of light, so how could we presume to take only the two eyes and not deal with the rest?
48 46 To use the yang of water, you use the light offin to illumine and absorb it. This shows that the "sun and moon" are originally one thing. 47 The darkness in the sun is the vitality of the true moon; the "moon cavern" is not on the moon but on the sun. That is why it is called the "moon cavern," for otherwise it would be enough just to say the ''moon."
48 The white of the moon is the light of the true sun. The sunlight being on the moon is what is called the "root of heaven." Otherwise it would be enough just to say "heaven." 49 When the sun and moon are separated, they are but half; only when they come together do they form a whole. This is like the case of a single man or a single woman, who cannot form a family living alone; only when there are husband and wife do they amount to a family.
50 But it is hard to represent the Way concretely. If a man and a woman are separated they are still individuals, but if the sun and moon are separated they do not form a complete whole. What I am saying just brings out the point of communion, so I do not see duality; you just cling to the separation, so the separation has taken over your eyes.
IX Setting Up the Foundation in a Hundred Days
1
One of the Mind Seal scripturessays, "the returning wind mixes together, the hundred days' work is effective.'' On the whole, to set up the foundation requires a hundred daysbefore you have real light. As you are, you are still working with the light of the eyes, not the fire of spirit; not the fire of essence, not the torch · ofwisdom.
2
Turn it around for a hundred days, and the vital energy will naturally be sufficient for true yang to rise spontaneously, so that there is true fire naturally existing in water. If you carry on the practice this way, you Will naturally achieVe intercourse and formation of the embryo. You are then in the heaven of unknoWing, and the child thus develops. If you entertain any conceptual view at all, this is immediately a misleading path.
49
so 3
A hundred days setting up the foundation is not a hundred days; one day setting up the foundation is not one day. One breath setting up the foundation does not refer to respiration. Breath is one's own mind; one's own mind is the breath's original spirit, original energy, and original vitality: rising and descending, parting and joining, all arise from mind; being and nonbeing, emptiness and fullness, are all in the thoughts. One breath is held for a lifetime, not only a hundred days; so a hundred days is also a single breath.
4
The hundred days is just a matter of empowerment: gain power in the daytime, and you use it a.t night; gain power at night, and you use it in the daytime.
5
The hundred days setting up the foundation is a precious teaching. The sayings of the, advanced realized ones all relate to the humanbody; the sayings oftrue teachers all relate to students, This is the mystery of mysteries, which is inscrutable. When you see essence, you then know why students must seek the direction of a true teacher. Everything that emerges naturally from essence is tested.
X The Light of Essence and the Light of Consciousness 1
The method of turning the light around basically is to be carried on whether walking, standing, sitting, or reclining. It is only essential that you yourself find the opening of potentiaL
2
Previously I quoted the saying, "Light arises in the empty room." This light is not luminous, but there is an explanation of this as an evidence of efficacy in the beginning before one has seen the light. If you see it as light and fix your attention on it, then you full into ideational consciousness, which is not the light of essence.
3
Now when the mind forms a thought, this thought is the present mind. This mind is light; it is medicine. Whenever people look at things, when they perceive them spontaneously all at once without discriminating, this is the light of essence. It is like a mirror reflecting without intending to do so. In a moment it becomes the light of consciousness, through discrimination. When there is an image in a mirror, there is no more mirroring; when there is consciousness in · the light, then what light is there any more?
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52 4
At first, when the light of essence turns into thought, then it is consciousness. When consciousness arises, the light is obscured and cannot be found. It is not that there is no light, but that the light has become consciousness. This is what is meant by the saying of the Yellow Emperor, "When sound moves, it does not produce sound, it produces echoes."
5
The introduction to logical examination in the Heroic Ma"'h Scriptun says, "neither in objects nor in consciousness;' only picking out the organ. What does this mean~ Objects are external things, or the socalled material world. This has no actual connection with us. If you pursue objects, you are mistaking things for yourself.
6
Things must have an attribution. Transmission of light is attributable to doors and windows, light is attributable to the sun and moon, Borrowing them for myself, after all I find "it is not mine." When it comes to where "it is not you;' then who attributes if not you?
7
"Light is attribUtable to the sun and moon." When you see the light of the sun and moon, there is nothing to attribute it to. Sometimes there is no sun or moon in the sky, but there is never an absence of the essence of seeing that sees the sun and moon.
53 8
If so, then can that which discriminates sun and moon be considered one's own possession? Don't you know that discrimination is based on light and dark? When both light and dark are forgotten, then where is discrimination? Therefore there is still attribution; this is an internal object.
9
Only the seeing essence cannot be attributed to anything. But if when seeing seeing, 8eeirig is not seeing, then the seeing essence also has an attribution, which refers back to the seeing essence of the revolving flow of consciousness, alluded to in Buddhist scripture where it says, "Using your flowing revolving consciousness is called error."
10 When first practicingthe eight attrib1ltions for discerning perception, the first seven show how each is attributable to something, temporarily leaving the seeing essence as a crutch for the practitioner. But ultimately as long as the seeing essence still carries with it the eighth consciousness, it is not really unattributable. Only when this last point is broken through is this the real seeing essence, which is truly unattributable. · . ·..
.·.
:
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11 When turning the light around, y6uproperly turn around the primary l!nattributable llght, so not a single conscious thought is applied.
54 12 What causes you to flow and revolve is just the six sense organs; but what enables you to attain enlightenment is also just the six sense organs. But the fact that sense objects and sense consciousnesses are not used at all does not mean using the sense organs 1 just using the essence in the sense organs.
13 Now if you turn the light around without falling into consciousness 1 you are using the original essence in the sense organs. If you turn the light around fallen into consciousness, then you use the nature of consciousness in the sense organs. Herein lies the hairsbreadth's distinction. 14 Deliberate meditation is the light of consciousness; let go, and it is then the light of essence. A hairsbreadth's clitference is as that of a thousand miles, so discernment is necessary.
15 If consciousness is not stopped, spirit does not come alive; if mind is not emptied, the elixir does not crystallize. 16 When mind is clean, that is elixir; when mind is empty1 that is meclicine. When it doesn't stickto anything at all 1 it is said that the mind is clean; when it doesn't keep anything in it 1 it is said that the mind is empty. Ifemptinessis seeri as empty1 emptilless is still not empty. Wren empty and mindless of emptiness1 this is called true emptiness.
XI The Intercourse of Wtl-ter and Fire
1
Whenever you leak vital spirit, being stirred and interacting with beings, that is all .fire. Whenever you gather back spirit's consciousness and quiet it down to steep in the center, that is all water. When the senses run outward, that is .fire; when the senses turn around inward, that is water.
2
The one yin [inside the.fire trigram] concentrates on pursuing sense experience, while the one yang [inside the warer trigramJ concentrates on reversing and withdrawing the senses themselves.
3
Water and fire are yin and yang, yin and yang are essence and life, essence and life are body and mind, body and mind are spirit and energy. Once you withdraw to rest your vital spirit and are not influenced by objects, then this is true intercourse, as of course when you sit in profound silence.
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XII The Cycle
..
..
1
For the complete cycle, energy is not the main thing; mental attainmenfis the sublime secret. If you wonder what it ultimately is, the cycle helps growth; it is maintained without minding, carried out without deliberate·intention.
2
Look up at the sky; it changes from hour to hour, through 365 ·days,· yet the polar star never moves. Our mind is also like this; mind is the pole, energy is the myriadstars revolving around it. The energy in our limbs and throughout our whole body is basically a network, so do not exert your strength to the full on it.•Refine the conscious spirit, remove arbitrary views, and then after that medicine will develop.
3
This medicine is not a material thing; it is the light of essence, which is none other thari the primal true energy. Even so, it is necessary to attain great concentration before you see it. There is no method of culling; those who speak of culling are quite mistaken.
57
58 4
When you have seen it for a long time, eventually the light ofthe basis of the mind becomes spontaneous. When the mind is empty, and all indulgence is ended, you are liberated from the ocean of misery.
5
If it is "dragon and tiger" today, "water and fire" tomorrow, in the end they turn into illusions.
6
There is a cycle in each day, there is a cycle in each hour; where water and fin: interact, this is a cycle. Our interaction is the "revolving of Heaven." As long as you are unable to stop the mind directly, as a consequence there are times of interaction and times of non interaction.
7
Yet the revolving of Heaven never stops for a moment. If you are actually able to join yin and yang in tranquillity, the whole earth is positive and harmonious; in the right place in your central chamber, all things simultaneously expand to fulfillment. This is the method of "bathing" spoken of in alchemical classics. What is it if not the great cycle? .
8
The processes of the cycle do indeed have differences of scale, but ultimately there is no way to distinguish great and small. When you reach the point where meditation is spontaneous, you do not know what fin: and water are, what heaven and earth are, who does the interacting, who makes it one cycle or two cycles, or where to find any distinction between great and small.
59 9
It is all the operation of one body; though it appears to be most great, it is also small. Each time it takes a turn, the universe and all things take a.turn with it. Thus it is in the heart; so it is also most great.
10 The alchemical process should ultimately become spontaneous. If it is not spontaneous, then heaven and earth will revert on their own to heaven and earth; myriad things will go back to myriad things: no matter how hard you try to join them, you cannot. Then it is like a season of drought, when yin and yang do not join. Heaven and earth do not fail to go through their cycles every day, but ultimately you see a lot that is unnatural. 11 If you can operate yin and yang, turning them suitably, then naturally all at once clouds will form and rain will fall, the plants and trees refreshed, the mountain rivers flowing freely. Even if there is something offensive, it still melts away all at once when you notice it. This is the great cycle. 12 Students ask about "living midnight." This is very subtle. If you insist on defining it as true midnight, that would seem to be sticking to forms; but if you do not focus on forms and do not point out true midnight, by what means can the living midnight be known?
60 13 Once you know living midnight, there is definitely
also true midnight. Are they one or two, not true or not alive? It all requires you to see the real. Once you see the real, everything is true, everything is alive. If your seeing is not real, what is living, what is true? 14 As fur living midnight, when you see it at all times, finally you reach true midnight; your mood is clear and light, and living midnight gradually blooms into ever-greater awareness.
15 At present, people do not yet clearly know the living; just test it out when you head for the true, and the true will appear, while the living will be sublime.
XIII Song to Inspire
the World
0
Because ofthe warrnth of my cinnabarheartto liberate the world, I do not refrain from coddling and talking a lot. Buddha also pointed directly to life and death for a great cause, and this is truly worthwhile. Lao-tzu also lamented the existence of the egotistic self and transmitted the teaching of the open spirit, but people did not discern. Now I give·a general explanation of finding the road oftruth: ·.
1
The pervasive principle of the center Bears universal change;
2
The very being of true poise Is the mysterious pass.
3
Midnight, noon, and in between, If you can stabilize breathing,
4
The light returns to the primal opening, .· So all psychic functions are calm.
5
There emerges the unified energy Of the river source that produces the medicine.
61
62 6
It passes through the screen And transmutes, with golden light;
7
The single disk of the red sun Shines with constant brilliance.
8
Pepple of the world misconstrue The vitalities wattr and fire;
9
Conveying them from heart and genitals, Thus producing separation.
10 How can the human way Meet the celestial mind? 11
If in accord with the celestial, The way is naturaUy meet.
12 Put down all objects, so nothing comes to mind; This is the true infinity of the primal. 13 Cosmic space is silent, Signs are gone; 14 At the pass of essence and life, You forget conceptual consciousness. 15 After conceptual consciousness is forgotten,
You see basic reality.
16 The water-clarifying pearl appears, Mysterious and unfathomable: 17 The screen of beginningless afflictions Is voided all at once.
63 18 The jade capital sends down A team of nine dragons;
19 Walking in the sky, You climb to the gateway of heaven: 20 Controlling wind and lightning, You make the thunder rumble. 21 Freezingthe spirit and steadying breath are for beginners; Retreating to hide in secrecy is eternal calm.
22 The two poems lused when I initiated Zhang Zhennu long ago both contain the great Way. "After midnight and before noon'' are not times, but 1vatl:r and fire. "Settling the breath" means a state of certteredness in which you go back to the root with each breath. "Sitting" means that the mind is unmoved. The "midspine where the ribs join" does not refer to vertebrae; it is the great road directly through to the jade capital. As for the "double pass;' there is something ineffable in this. "Thunder in the earth rumbles, setting in motion rain on the mountain" means the arising of true energy. The "yellow sprouts emerging from the ground" refer to the growth· of the medicine. These two little verses are exhaustive; in them the highway of practical cultivation is clear. These are not confusing words. Turning the light around is a matter of singleminded practice: just use the true breathing for stable awareness in the central chamber. After a long time at this you will naturally commune with the spirit and attain transmutation.
This is all based on quieting of mind and stabilization of energy. When the mind is forgotten and the energy congeals, this is a sign of effectiveness. The emptiness of energy, breath, and mind is the formation of the elixir. The unification of mind and energy is incubation. Clarifying the mind and seeing its essence is understanding the Way. You should each practice diligently; it would be too bad if you wasted time. If you do not practice for a day, then you arc a ghost for a day; if you do practice for a single breath, then you are a realized immortal for a breath. Work on this.
Questions and Answers Opening up the Mysteries of the Doctrine of the Golden Flower You suppose that attainment is possible in quietude but lost in activity; you do not realize that the reason for loss through activity is because nothing is attained through stiUness. When you attain nothing in quietude or lose anything through activity, in either case you have not yet reached the Way. When you keep presence of mind, only then do you have autonomy. When you have autonomy, only then can you manage affaixs .... However, presence of mind is easily fnterrupted. Practice it for a long time, though, and it will naturally become unbroken. Once it is unbroken, it is continuous. With continuity, the light shines bright. When the light shines bright, energy is full. When energy is full, then oblivion and distraction disappear without effort. ·observing mind means observing the purity of mind. The mind is basically nondual, just one vital reality; throughout the past and future, there is no other. Without leaving the objects of sense, you climb transcendent to the stage of enlightenment.
65
66 But observation of mind can be deep or shallow; there is forced observation and there is spontaneous observation. There is observation outside of sense objects, there is observation within sense objects; there is observation that is neither internal nor external, there is panoramic observation. With what observation do you observe mind? When observation is deep and illusion is cleared, then this is true emptiness. Turning the light around is done not by the eyes but by the mind; the mind is the eyes. After long persistence, the spirit congeals; only then do you see the mind-eyes become clear. When you observe mind and become aware of openness, thereby you produce its vitality. When its vitality stabilizes, it becomes manifest, and then you see the opening of the mysterious pass. Gazing at the lower abdomen is external work. As for the inner work, when the mind-eye comes into being, that alone is the true "elixir field." The light you see before your eyes is rat-light, not the light of the tiger-eye or dragon-vitality. The light of mind does not belong to inside or outside; if you look to see it with the physical eyes, that is bedevilment. You have been affected by pollution for so long that it is impossible to become clear all at once. In truth, the matter of life and death is important: once you turn the light around and recollect the vital spirit to shine stably, then your own mind is the lamp of enlightenment.
67 Everyone already has the lamp of mind, but it is necessary to light it so that it shines; then this is immortality. Don't let yourselves forget the mind and allow the spirit to be obscured. If you have no autonomy, your vital spirit diffuses. Forms are all conditioned. Cognition is a function of mind, empty silence is the substance of mind.Jf you fix the mind on anything conditioned, then temperament is in control, so you cannot govern if completely or comprehend it thoroughly. The minor technique of circulating energy can enhance . the body so as to extend the life span, but if you therefore suppose that the great Way requires work on the physical body, this is a tangential teaching. External work has no connection to the great Way. The true practice of the great Way first requires that vitality be transformed into energy. As alchemical literature has clearly explained, this vitality is not sexual. Refining energy into spirit means keeping the clear and removing the polluted. Few are those who are calm and serious, rare are those who are sincere and unified. Radiant light is the function of mind, empty silence is the substance of mind. If there is empty silence without· radiant light, the silence is not true silence, the emptiness is not true emptiness-it is just a ghost cave.
68 The breathing that passes through the nose is external breathing, which is a phenomenon of the physical body. Only when mind and breathing rest on each other is this the true breath. The venerable Prajnatara [considered the twenty-seventh Indian ancestor of Chan Buddhism] said, "Breathing out, I do not follow myriad objects; breathing in, I do not dwell on the elements of body or mind." Is this the nose? When it comes to watching the breathing, or listening to the breathing, these are still connected with the physical body. These are used to concentrate the mindand are not the real lifeline. The real lifeline is to be sought from within the real. Looking and listening are one thing. The three realms are none other than your mind; your mind is not the three realms, yet it contains the three realms. Whenever there is dependence, that is tempoi:al; where there is no dependence, that is primal. Where is the primal to be sought? It must be sought by way of the temporal. Temporal feelings and consciousness are marvelous functions of the primal. It must be sought through the work of practical balance in harmonious accord, which means calmness and openness. Of course, as long as clarification has not taken place, all is polluted. Clear up the pollution, and eventually there will be spontaneous clarity even without attempting to achieve clarity. Only then will the "gold pill" come out of the furnace.
69 When there is no self in the mind, it is even and dear; when the spirit is pure and the energy dear, this is Buddhahood and immortality. It is only because the iron pillars of thoughts are deeply rooted, and it is hard to escape their limitations, that it is necessary to observe one's own mind. When you see the mind, only then will you find the roots are insubstantial and thus have a sense of freedom from pher10mena while having the ability to enter their range. The primal and temporal are originally not two: what makes the distinction is only temporal. When you discriminate, then action and stillness are not united, and primal energy becomes conditioned. When they are united, temporal energy is also primal, and there is no distinction between primal and temporal. If there is discrimination between primal and temporal, that is just consciousness;ifyou discriminate, then conditioning flares up, and this is the source of the profuse confusion of thoughts. What cannot be spoken and cannot be named is the generative energy,· which is the.su b9tance of the Way. When the substance is established, the function operates. When people are deluded by emotions and do not know there is essence, they are ordinary ignoramuses. If they know there is essence but do not know there are emotions, this is senseless vacuity. TherefOre our teaching is actively living and does not settle into one corner, but instead applies to heaven and earth, combines eternity with the present, equalizes others and self, and has neither enemy nor f.uniliar.
70 It is said that we are the same in essence but different in feeling. There is no difference in feeling either; it is just that habits develop unnoticed, evolving in a stream, continuing to the present, so that their defiling influence cannot be shed. Ultimately this is not the fault of essence. The great Way is not in quiet living. If you stay quietly in a room, that has the countereffect of increasing the· flames of fire in the heart. It is necessary to beworking on the· Way whatever you are doing in order to be able to "sit on the summit of a thousand mountains without leaving the crossroads." Consciousness is knowledge. In ordinary people it is called consciousness, in immortals and Buddhas it is called knowledge. The only distinction is between purity and impurity. The noncognizing in the consciousness is the eternal; the consciousness in noncognizing is wisdom. If you arouse a discriminatory, galloping mind, this is routine, and you become an ordinary mortal. How can you find purity in the mind? It is just a matter of seeking out purity in the midst of impurity. Then when you discover signs of impurity in the midst of puiity, you have now found purity. The true 'mind has no form: what has forin is ultimately illusory.
71 Is the true mind to be sought from the source of mind? If the source is clean, then the celestial design is apparent, and daily activities never obstruct the supreme Way. If the source is not clean, then even ifyou have some vision it is like a lamp in the wind, flickering erratically. What we call the true mind is the enlightened clear mind. Therefore it can pervade the heavens and permeate the earth, without the slightest artificiality. When mind is empty yet not vacant, this is called true emptiness; when mind is there but not reified, this is called subtle existence. Don't tarry on one side, and you then enter the middle way. Then you have a basis for gaining access to virtue. The Way is present before our eyes, yet what is before our eyes is hard to understand. People like the unusual and enjoy the new; they miss what is right in frorit of their eyes and do not know where the Way is~ The Way is the immediate presence: if you are unaware of the immediate presence, then your mind races, your intellect runs, and you go on thinking compulsively. All of this is due to shallowness of spiritual power, and shallowness of spiritual power is due to racing in the min~.
Translation Notes
I. The Celestial Mind I. The identification of the Way with essence and primal spirit follows the traditions of the Chan school of Buddhism and the northern branch of the Completely Real school ofThoism. 2.
Essence is open and spacious, like the sky; life is a quantity of energy, like light. When the text talks about the two eyes guiding attention, it means that both spacelike awareness and specific perception are operative at the same time.
3. This passage introduces the idea of a succession of transmitters of the teaching of the goldc,;n flower, to link it with the Way of the ancients. 4. The honorific name Taishang (f'ai-shang) refers to the metaphysical realit)' represented by Lao-tzu,legendary author of 1i4o Te Ching, the baSic classic ofThoism. Donghua. (I'ung-hua) was the teacher of Zhongli Quan. (Chung-li Ch'uan), who was the teacher ofLu Yan (Lu Yen). Lu Yan is the ''Yan" mentioned in our text; he is regarded as the immediate ancestor of the Completely Real (Quanzhen /Ch'uan-chen) school of Taoism, which was founded by his disciples and descendants in the eleventh and twelfth centuries.
73
74 The teaching of the golden flower itself is attributed to Lu Yan. There are numerous conflicting stories about the life and times ofLu Yan, but in Taoist tradition it is widely believed that he attained immortality and is still alive. Most of the texts attributed to Lu Yan were received by spiritual communications centuries after the founding of the Complete Reality school and were not written by Lu himself. 5.
Completely Real Taoism became so influential in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries that it attracted many opportunistic followers and imitators. Later many practices originally abandoned by the school were amalgamated with elements of Completely Real Taoism to produce bastardized forms. At the time of the writing of our text, approximately 250 years ago, Completely Real Taoism was almost entirely a name without a reality.
6.
"Master Siu" seems to refer to Xu Jingyang (Hsu Chingyang), a great Taoist of the third and fourth centuries who is said to have foretold the appearance ofLu Yan, to whom this text is attributed. He is also believed to have said he would reappear in the world twelve centuries later, which would have been shortly before The Secret of the Golden Flower is supposed to have been received from Lu Yan. This text is said to be a written form of a teaching that was originally wordless, an esoteric component of the movement received during a period ofspecial concentration. The term special tmnsmis1ion outside ofiWctrine is a byword of Chan Buddhism. The practice of contemplative vigils likethe one in which the golden flower teaching was revealed is also a standard exercise of latter-day Chan Buddhism.
7. The foregoing passages on the lineage of the text were omitted in Richard Wilhelm's translation. These passages are rather laconic, and someone with Wilhelm's knowledge
75 of Chinese language and Taoist history could hardly have been expected to be able to interpret them; It is not clear, however, why Wilhelm also excised paragraph 7 on the importance of an orderly life as a prerequisite for the mystical practice of the golden flower. It may not have con-: formed sufficiently to his idea of mysticism. Westerners have often professed to believe that mystics are generally isolated from society, and this opinion has affected many Western attempts to interpret and adopt mystical teachings. 8. The speaker is supposed to be Lu Yan, or Ancestor Lu, whom later Taoist texts envision as having been entrusted with a mission for the cdestial government and d~ty bound to reappear in the human world from time to time. 9. Wilhelm completely mistranslates this passage, making it outto say the very opposite of what it actually does. This appears to be mostly due to simple misunderstanding of the language and unfamiliarity with the background of the text. The passage describes the distinctive nature of the text as representing a sudden enlightenment teaching, in contrast to the gradual teachings of ordinary Taoist works on spiritual alchemy. This identifies the Chan Buddhist influence behind the Taoist facade of the text. 10. "The lead in the homeland of water is just one flavor" comes from Umlerstanding Reality, the great classic of the Completely Real school. Lead symbolizes the true sense of real knowledge. Water stands for a symbol from the ancient I Chi1¥J representing the true sense of the knowledge of reality enclosed within conscious knowledge .. To say that it is just one flavor means that it is attained by the essence of consciousness itself, not by any modification of consciousneSs. This is what makes it truly universal and unlimited by sectarian or cultural discriminations.
76 11. The expression "turning the light around" refen; to the Chan Buddhist exercise of mentally looking inward toward the source of consciousness. Wilhelm translates this as "circulation of the light," which is not very plausible linguistically but nevertheless could have been an honest mistake. Evidently he confused this ~ith the watetwheel exercise of Taoist energetics, in which a quantity of psychic heat would be consciously conducted along a certain route through the body. Many cultists imitated this exercise on the level of fixated attention without the psychic heat and noticed the characteristic modifications of consciousness these postures produce. It is quite possible that Wilhelm got this idea from a member of such a cult. The notes added to the Golden Flower text he used (which was printed some two hundred years after the movement had arisen) tend to dilute the Chan with materials that make it look like a runof-the mill mixture of alchemy and energetics. Wilhelm's medical training also seems to have predisposed him to make physiological interpretations There is evidence to suggest that it was possible to read certain special mind-body postures of attention into portions of the original text. These postures were used only for temporarily anchoring the mind while performing the inner gazing toward the source of consciousness. This is not the same as the energy circulation of 'Thoist practice. The' text speaks of the highest experiences being purely mental, "in the heart:' elevating the spiritual over the physical in the manner of Chan Buddhism and the northern branch of Completely Real Taoism. 12. The celestial mind refers to unconditioned consciousness; light is its function. When the light is "turned around" and directed toward its own source, environmental and psycho-
77 logical factors influence the mind less, with the result that the energy in the body is also preserved and purified because it is not drawn into conflicts with inner or outer states. 13. The expression "above the nine skies" means a state of mind beyond the influence of mundane conditioning. In , Buddhist terminology it also has the special meaning of. being above all cultivated meditation states. Silently paying CbUrt (m God) and soari1f!}' upward are common Taoist ex pres~ sions for elevation of consciousness. There are several Mind Seal scriptures, and it is not certain to which of these the text refers in this passage. 14. Taoist maSter Liu I~miilg says of the gold pill, ('The pill is the original, primal, real unified energy. This energy, when passed through fire to refine it,. becomes permanently. indestructible, so it is called the gold pill."
II. The Original Spirit and the Conscious Spirit 1. The distinction between the original spirit and the con~ scious spirit isone of the most important ideas in Taoist psychology. The conscious spirit is historically conditioned; the original spirit is primal and universal. The conscious spirit is a complex of modifications of awareness, while the original spirit is the essence of awareness. To say that this essence transcends the' "primal organization" means that it is by nature more fundamental than even the most basic patterns of modification to which consciousness may be subject. In Jungian terms; this means that the essence of the original spirit is beyond, or deeper than, even the· archetypes of the coJlective unconscious. Jung himself does not seem to have attained this,and his work reflects \vhat
in Taoist terms would be rermed confusion of the conscious spirit (which includes the Jungian "unconscious") with the original spirit. 2.
Vitaliry, energy, and spirit are the fundamental triadof being, known in Taoist terms as the "three treasures" of the human body. Here the spirit is the only one regarded as transcendental. This is characteristic of Buddhistic ncoTaoist spiritual immortalism, which tends to deemphasize the physiological practices of old alchemical immortalism. To ''live transcendentally outside of yin and yang" means to be aloof from the ups and downs of ordinary life in the midst of changes in the world. Th,-ee nalms is a Buddhist term. The realms are the domains of desire, form, and formlessness, representing the totaliry of conditioned experience, from the coarsest to the most subtle. Wilhelm, who seems to have known little about Buddhism, writes in a note that the three realms, or "three worlds:' as he translates them, are "Heaven, earth, and heU." Jung's work on archerypes and dreams would have benefited immensely from an accurate understanding of the real Buddhist concept of three realms or worlds. As it was, J ung does not seem to have been able to distinguish these realms of experience clearly; most of his work appears to hover on the border of the realms of (orm and desire; the realm of formless consciousness seems to have been unfamiliar to him. Perhaps Wilhelm's Christian background influenced his interpretation of this term.
3.
Seei'!!J essence and original foce are· both· Chan Buddhist terms, here used to refer to the Taoist experience of the primal spirit. It is evident that Wilhelm was not familiar with even the most rudimentary lore of Chan Buddhism.
4.
This passage refers to a certain stage that is often referred to
79 in Taoist yogic texts in much more physical terms than it is here, where the Chan Buddhist/northern Complete Reality influence is again manifest. Wilhelm's translation of "instincts and movements" for "on the verge of moving into action" misconstrues both Chinese grammar and the nature of the experience to whiCh the passage refers, When the text speaks of this as a secret that "has not been transmitted in a thousand ages;' it means that the experience can only be understood.firsthand. 5. Chan Buddhism traditionally describes the mechanism of delusion as mistaking the servant for the master. In the metaphor of this passage, the general is supposed to be a servant but instead usurps authority. According toChan/ Taoist psychology, the conscious mind (which does the thinking) is supposed to be a servant of the original mind, but the activity of the conscious mind tends to become so self-involved that it seems to have become an independent entity. When "the sword is turned around;' in the metaphor of our text, the original mind retrieves command over the delinquent conscious mind. 6.
The "chamber of the origin" means the source of awareness~ keeping to the chamber of the origin is turning around the light ofconsciousness to be aware of its own source. In this way the mind is freed from compulsive concern with its own productions. Through this practice it becomes possible to control and order the conscious mind without force, by maintaining the central position of the original mind. Like many Western interpreters of his time, Jung had the idea that yoga involves or produces abnormal psychic states and is aimed at total detachment from the external world, or at transcendental unity without differentiation.
80 In the real Goidm Flower teaching there is no suggestion of obliterating the conscious mind (which in this context means the mind that thinks, imagines, dreams, and emotes, including what Jung called the unconscious). The faculties of thinking, imagining, dreaming, and emotion are not destroyed in the earthly immortal ofTaoism; rather they are brought under the dominion of their source of power and made into channels of its expression. The taming of unruly consciousness is far from the introverted, quietistic cult that Wilhelm, Jung, and othe1'5 of their time imagined from their fragmentary observations of Eastern lore. 7.
Wilhelm translates c'the water of vitality" as "seed-water" and equates it with Eros; he translates "the fire of spirit" as "spirit-fire" and equates it with Logos; and he translates "the earth of attention" as ((thought-earth" arid equates it with intuition. Of these three, Eros is closest to certain Taoist meanings of vitality, in the sense of creative energy and erotic feeling. In this context; however, Eros is inappropriate in that the meaning of vitality here does not . include erotic feeling. Even the connection with creative energy is actually remote in this text, because the real meaning here is the sense of true knowledge of the original mind. This can be known from the symbolism of water as explained in the following text. As for "spirit-fire" and Logos, this seems even less appropriate, since the fire of spirit here just means awareness and does not at this point differentiate between the original spirit and the conscious spirit. The sacred and the profane are mixed, and the spirit does not deserve the name of Logos yet. This is the very reason for the alchemy: to refine the sacred, pure primal spirit out of the profane, conditioned conscious spirit.
81 The earth of attention is translated by Wilhelm as ''thought-earth" and identified with intuition, but thought and intuition properly belong to the realm symbolized by fire, not t~at of earth. Water and fire, :real knowledge and conscious knowledge, primal unity and present awareness, are brought together in the medium of earth, which stands for attention, concentration; intent, or will. Here it is identified with the celestial mind, which means that it is innoc~nt of temporal conditioning. In other texts this is called pure attention or true intent. Since earth is the medium, it must be purified before it can absorb the pure essences of water and fire to combine them. If the focus of attention is itsel(already biased by the activity of an unruly consciousness; then it may not be able to draw thiu consciousnessto an orderly reality of which it is as yet unconscious. 8. The "energy of the primal real unity" stands for the living flux of the perpetual cycles of natural evolution, wherein all beings and all things live in the lives of one another. The Book ofBalame and Harmon:~J an ancient text of the Complete Reality school antedating the golden floWer ··dispensation by over four hundred years, expresses the idea of the primal unityin these terms: "All beings are basically one form and one energy. Form and energy are basically one spirit. Spirit is basically utter openness, The 'Tho is basically ultimate non being. Change is therein." The combination of water and fire in the medium of earth thus refers to experi~ en rial realization of the unity of being from a transcenden~ tal point ofview that is changeless itself yet accommodates all change. 9.
Wilhelm used the terms Eros, Logos, and intuition in an attempt to convey the Chinese ideas to a Western audience,
82 but the assignments he made are largely subjective and arbitraryfrom the point of view of Chinese Taoist tradition. Part.ofthe problem seems to be that as a Christian he understood the Chinese word "spirit" to be as~ociated with either the divine or the supernatural. In the first section of this text, for example, Wilhelm translates zhixu zhiling zhi shen, which means a spirit (i.e., mind) that is completely open and completely effective, as "God of Utmost Emptiness and Life." Based on this sort of translation, Jung thought that the Chinese had no idea that they were discussing psychological phenomena. He then tried to repsychologize the terminology, but since he did not quite understand it to begin with he could not but wind up with a distortion in the end. . It is little wonder thatJung came to imagine, through his own attempts at meditation, that the Taoists had arrived at the entrance to the science of psychology "only through abnormal psychic states;' as he wrote in his commentary to Wilhelm's version of The Secret of the Goldm Fkrwer. lt is wori:h noting in this connection that J ung also found late medieval baroque Christian alchemical books puzzling but did not openly accuse their authors Of having come upon their science through induction of aberrated mental states. 10. The concepts of the higher and lower souls were among those that caught the special attention of Wilhelm and Jung in connection with their Christian backgrounds and interests. Wilhelm uses the term anima for lower soul and animus fur higher soul. ln his introduction he deemphasizes the gender associations of yin and yang, but in connection with the concept of the souls Wilhelm calls the anima feminine and the animus masculine. Jung then proceeds to exaggerate this distortion even further in his
83 own disquisition on feminine and masculine psychologies. None of this gets to the heart of the discussion of our text. The idea that the body is created by attention is typically Buddhist, but it is also found in the schools ofTaoism influenced by Buddhism. In this text, the "lower soul" simply means the feeling of being a solid body physically present in a solidworld. As long as this feeling persists, the srate of the lower soul (\\lhich includes visceral emotions) is subject to random environmental influences. Therefore the text speaks of"interruptingconsciousness" in the sense of withdrawing attention from the feelirigof solidity in order to free it frOm the bonds of external influences, making it less sticky and more fluid, unbounded by temporal events. II. In colloquial Chinese usage, "liverand heart" means what is essentiaL In a human being, the liver is associated with courage and conscience. This passage illustrates the Taoist awareness of the connection between waking and dreaming experience .• 12. The nine heavens and nii1e earths stand for the whole universe of experience, frOm the most exalted to the most profound. 13. This passage connects the last three: the process Ofthe exercise is to turn attention around to the source of awareness to refine the higher soul, thus preserve the spirit, thus control the lower soul, and thus interrupt the conditioned stream of consciousness. The purpose ofinterruptingthe stream of consciousness is described in the following passage.
14. "Dissolving the lower soul" means detachment frOm t:he feeling ofphysical existence. As the text subsequently makes clear, there is no real lower soul that is in substance
84 different from the higher soul. They are both aspects of one spirit, artificially alienated by confusion. When energy is freed from obsessive clinging to the body or lower soul, it can be used to restore the original spirit to completeness.
15. Turning the light around, or directing attention toward the source of awareness, counteracts the tendency to dwell on objects or modifications of consciousness. Here this is called "dissolving darkness and controlling the lower soul." Taoists use a symbol from the I Ching known as heapen or the creative to represent what Chan Buddhists call the original face or the mind ground. When the text says that other than turning the light around there is no special exercise for restoring this primal wholeness, it confirms that the practice being taught is that of Northern Taoism as influenced by Chan Buddhism, and not the physiological energetics of Southern Taoism as influenced by Tantric Buddhism. 16. The term embryo ofsage hood or embryonic enlightenment is very common in classical Chan Buddhist texts of the Tang and Sung dynasties. It seems to have passed into Complete Reality Taoism from Chan, but a parallel idea occurs in certain pre-Chan Taoist scriptures. The formation of the embryo represents the initial awakening of the mind. Nunuring the embryo, a term frequently found in Chan, refers to the process of development and maturation after awakening. 17. "Concentrating the spirit on where the celestial mind rests when the embryo leaves the shell" is a typical Chan Buddhist formulation, here expressed in the terminology of Taoism. The Northern Taoist master Liu 1-ming also uses the metaphor of the dung beetle in his Awakeni'fq to the TtUJ, where he uses it similarly to describe the creation of
85 the transcendent being by concentration of spirit: «rn the midst of ecstatic trance there is a point ofliving potential, coming into being from non being, whereby the spiritual embryo tan be formed and the spiritual body be produced." 18. This passage shows that the division ofso~called higher and lower souls is regarded as not a primal metaphysical reality but a temporal psychic phenomenon. When the text says that the light, clear energy characteristic of the higher soul is
practice is not a matter of attention to subconscious mental activity, as Jung seemed to think. 28. Fixing the length of time for meditation can have negative effi:cts, turning what is supposed to be a liberative technique into an automatizing ritual. Japanese Zennists and their Western imitators often seem to think of sitting meditation in quantitative terms, but in the golden flower teaching quality is the foremost consideration. According to National reacher Muso Soseki, one of the early greats of Japanese Zen, the establishment of fixed periods of sitting meditation was originally a matter of discipline, instituted during the Middle Ages to cope with large numbers of monastic inmates who had entered Zen orders for economic or sociological reasons.
V. Errors in Turning the Light Around 1. "There are many pitf.ills in front of the cliff of withered trees" is an adaptation of a Chan Buddhist saying. The cliff of withered trees stands for a state of nonthinking quiescence, from which standpoint it is easy to f.ill unawares into deviations. Wilhelm translates "in front of the cliff of withered trees" as "before you reach the condition where you sit like a withered tree before a cliff." This may give the
99 misleading impression that the "withered tree" condition is the goal. 2. Chan Buddhism tended to become increasingly simplistic as time went on, and it was generally not systematized to the same degree as Taoist alchemy. Thm was also a traditional reluctance in Chan Buddhism to speak much about psychic states. 4. This passage combines Taoist arid Chan Buddhist w:imings against quietism. "Don't sit inside nothingneSs or indifierence" is a c01nmonChanBuddhist expression. Wilhelm misconstrues it as "One must not sit down (to meditate) in the midst of frivolous affitirs," which is in a sense antithetical to the actual meaning of the expression. The Buddhist term neutmJVoidnesr is insetted in a note in the original text. 5. This is another caution against quietism or nihilism; "letting go"' is not to be exaggerated irito oblivion. 6.
Both Completely Real Taoism and Chan Buddhism commonly Warn against becoming enthusiastic or excited in anticipating ~pe~ences in meditation, since this agitates the mind and stimulates subjoctive1'rojections, thus retarding progress. Wilhelm translates, "Nor must the thoughts .be concentrated on the right procedure." This is a misread.. ing of the words, and a misleading idea. The parenthetical cominents in my translation also notes in the original text. "You can get it by intent that is not willful"' is translated by Wilhelm as "If one can attain purposelessness through purpose." It is not clear what he thought this meant. The idea of"purposelessriess~ seems to have appealed to C. G. Jung insofar as he rebelled against the materialistic interpretation of pragmatism characteristic of his own culture, but the Taoist text means no such thing.
an:
100 7.
Wilhelm's rendition of this passage is also murky,largely because ofthe use of a numberofBuddhist terms that he did not understand. This was unfortunate for Jung, who in his meditative fantasies quite evidently did "fall into the elements of body and mind, where material and psychological illusions take charge." Although Jung admits that he never fOllowed the directions of the Golden Flower (which may be just as well considering the quality of the translation), nevertheless it is tempting to speculate on whatwould have happened had there been an accurate version of the text · available to him.
8.
This passage is added to balance the foregoing warning about becoming deadened through malpractice; one should not become senseless, yet neither should one pursue objects. As ever, balance in the center is the keynote.
9. "Loose ends" tend to come up "for no apparent reason" in quietude because of heightened awareness and lowered inhibitions. Wilhelm translates "the realms ofform and desire" (a Buddhist term) as "the warld ofilh.lsciry desires." Again this was unfortunate for Jung, who showed a marked inability to distinguish between the realm of form and the realm of desire. This tended to skew his interpretations of fantasies and led him to imagine that golden flower meditation is culture-bound in spite of his beliefin universal archetypes. 10. People who enter into contemplative practices without this sort of theoretical preparation are easily deluded by unusual psychic experiences. Jung, himself a prime model of this, projected his imaginations on Taoism and thus believed that the teaching of the golden flower came from "abnormal psychic states." This f.alse belief may be attributed partly to Wilhelm's inexpert translation of the text, but
101 it also seems to be due in large measure to Jung's own arbitrary ideas and personalistic interpretations.
VI. Authenticating Experiences ofTurning the Light Around 1. Wilhelm mistranslates "cannot be undergone responsibly by people with small faculties and small capacities" as "one must not conti:ntoheselfwith small demands." The question of capacity is extremely important in the teaching and practice of Taoist alchemy. In his introduction to the text, Wilhelm asserts that "asfar as the Chinese psyche is concerned, a completely assured method of attaining definite psychic experiences is available." If the expression ''definite .psychic experiences" is supposed to mean authentic realization of the golden flower awakening, this statement would seem absurd in the context ofBuddhism and Thoism. A more accurate reading of the text would have clarified Wilhelm'sconfusion on this point; it is a matter not of"the Chinese psyche"in general, but of the faculties and capacities of the individual. ]ling would also have done wellto observe the warning of the text that ''you cannot handle attainment with a careless or:ll"rur Hu7zdml Wonis on the Gold Elixir in these terms: "Lead is dense and heavy, hard and strong, lasts long without disintegrating; what is called true lead here is not ordinary material lead, but is the formless, immaterial true sense of real knowledge in the human body. This true sense is outwardly dark but inwardlybright, strong and unbending, able to ward off eJiternal afiliedohs, able to stop internal aberrations. It is symbolized by lead and so is called the true lead .... Because its light illumines myriad existents, it is also called the golden flower~ Because it is the pivot of creation, it is also called the North Star. Because itconceals light within darkness, it is also cas considering things to exist or desire as being possessive toward things are typically Buddhist definitions. Desire as thought that is out of place and based on ulterior motives is a typical neo-Confucian definition. 30. Wilhelm translates "spontaneous attention'i as "a movement without purpose;' and "acting without striving" as "action through non-action." Neither of these expre.Ssions hits the mark, but from the point of vieW ofcrossr Women. The original vernes read, After midnight and before noon, Settle the breathing and sit. As the energy goes through The double pass at midspine And on through the brain, Gaining the power of energy Contemplate the self. You must find the ancestor of yourown house. Thunder in the earth rumbles, Setting in motion rain on the mountain. Wait until washing, And the yellow sprouts emerge from earth. Grab the golden essence of vitality And lock it up rightly. Fire metal and wood To produce the dragon and tiger. (Immm-ml Sisters)
Translator} Afterword: Modern Applications ofthe Golden Flower Method For me the experience symbolized by the golden flower has always been a practical concern. This new translation of The Secretofthe Golden Flower arose from a confluence of several· courses of events. One of them was my own introduction to the golden flower practice of"turning the light around;' long before I knew of the existence of this particular book. Finding that method of mindfulness extremely powerful and versatile, I subsequently spent many years studying its use in experience and looking for tested information pertaining to its objective application. Eventually this pursuit led to studies of classical sourcebooks in Chinese, Sanskrit, and Japanese. I began translating relevant texts from Buddhist and Taoist traditions, because I felt that their psychological insights could be useful in some way to people today, wherever they were. Although I had not read his views on the subject, I agreed with Jung that such information should not be cloistered. Whoever we may be and whatever we may do, mind is at the heart of our lives; so the clarification and awakening of mind is of potential interest to everyone, in whatever walk of life.
131
132 For many years I focused on the study of Chan Buddhism, the Chinese precursor of Zen. Classical Chan appealed to me because it cut directly through to the essence of mind without being burdened by dogmatism or cultural accretions. One of the most interesting ways this is done in Chan classics is by concentrating the teachings of the scriptures and schools of Buddhism into symbolic stories representing the underlying state of mind. Many of these stories are specifically for turning the light around, and because of my early experiences I was particularly interested in them. The more difficult and complex Chan stories dealing with creative integration of the golden flower mind with the ordinary world required mental work in everyday life and took much longer to begin to penetrate. Eventually I learned to practice turning the light around according to the methods of all the major schools .. of Buddhism. At first I was most dramatically affected by the Chan and Pure Land ways of awakening this consciousness, but I subsequently found that the techniques of each school had t.heir own advantages; so I continued to apply whatever worked best whenever I had a special quest and wanted renewed inspiration. At the same time, I studied the various support systems devised by the schools to enable people to experience the golden flower consciousness in meaningful ways. I found that this helped to clarify both practical and theoretical issues: what I was experiencing in everyday life and what I was finding in my researches in ancient Eastern literature on mind studies.
133 It was in connection with this course of events that I came into con tact with Taoism; ·In the years following my first exposure to Buddhist teachings;.! looked into other Asian classical traditions such as Hinduism, Confucianism, Taoism, and Sufism. I also read from the Bible, the Koran, and the mystic traditions ofJudaism and Christianity. During these studies I found that turning the light around revealed unsuspected dimensions in the literature of other religions. A transcultural, transdogmatic appreciation of the mental dynamic of religion became manifest in a very direct manner by means of this technique. My studies of world religions took place in several phases. The first phase of study was partly comparative, observing what was common to different religions and what was peculiar to each. This helped to disting1lish local historical and cultural elements of religious presentations from perennial underlying concerns. I returned to these studies later, in connection with programs from the classical Pure Land, Zen, and FlowerOrnament schools ofBuddhism, each ofwhich include investigation of other religions and philosophies as part of Buddhist study. It was through the last phase of intertraditional study, as part of the practice of the comprehensive Flower Ornament school of Buddhism, that I returned to the study of Taoism. This new phase of research into Taoism focused heavily on inner alchemy,· the processes of refining the mind and body as a unit joined by will. This eventually led me to The Secret of the Golden Flmve1; which combines Taoist alchemy with basic mind work according to the designs of several schools of Buddhism. ·
134 Over the years I had attempted to read the Wilhelm/ Baynes translation of this important text several times, but found it inaccessible. Jung's commentary, moreover, seemed contradictory and confused. Giving up in frustration, I finally began to look for the original Chinese work. It proved possible to find a good text in a condensed collection of essential works from the Taoist canon, along with an authentic commentary on the practical application of the teaching. By this time I had also read and translated other Buddhist and Taoist classics in the ancestral traditions of The Secret of the Golden Flower and therefore had become familiar with the technical terminology of the text. The main difficulty of the original work is that it uses Taoist alchemical language mixed with several types of Buddhist Chinese. This undoubtedly caused Wilhelm confusion, because there were no facilities for teaching these languages and symbol systems to Westerners at that time. On comparison with the canonical version of the original Chinese text, it became clear that Wilhelm had misconstrued the text on many points, and his translation was unreliable. There are enough flaws in Wilhelm's readings of grammar, terminology, and conceptual structures to render his translation practically dysfunctional. Perhaps sensing this, but attributing it to cultural differences, Jung went further afield in transmogrifYing the central concepts of the text. J ung warned his readers away from trying to practice the secret of the golden flower, professing psychoanalysis to be its Western equivalent. His reasoning was that
135 Europeans lacked the cultural basis for practicing Eastern disciplines and had to work with their own traditions. There is obviously some truth to this part of the argument, and Buddhistshave long said that teachings must be adapted to local psychological and social climates. I do not agree, however, t~at Jung's approach.to the unconscious outlined in his introduction to The Secret of the ..·· Golden Flower is actually equivalent to the golden flower practice. What Jung seems to have been against in reality was blind imitation of techniques, undertaken with the wrong motivations and attitudes. This is a useful warning, and he himself was aware that Buddhist proverb says the same thing. It is not necessary to believe, however, that all Westerners will inevitably behave in this manner toward Eastern teachings; Furthermore, the behavior will not necessarily change simply because its object is changed. The problem is in the behavior, not in the object. Jung's case against Westerners trying to practice the golden flower method would have been stronger if he had been able to clarify what was culture specific and could not be imitated usefully, and if he had adequately defined cultic behaviors that in hi bit the efficiency of mind-purifying practices. But even so, he made a useful contribution to the study of this issue by raising doubts that needed expression and questions that called for examination. Many Westerners today have had more opportunity.· for exposure to Eastern teachings and to· psychological studies of cultism than had Jung and his contemporaries. Cult behavior continues to exist, nevertheless, so it is important to distinguish it from authentic spiritual
136 practice. In order to do this, it is necessary to observe the cult mentality from the point of view of the golden flower and avoid confusing this process with observing the golden flower practice from the point of view of the cult mentality. Jung's goal of understanding religion in terms of psychology was an approach that made religious teachings of all kinds more accessible to Westerners. Its full realization may have been thwarted by a combination of factors, including lack of sufficient data, due to which Jung was unable to understand Eastern teachings clearly and.therefore could not come to definitive conclusions. Unaware that Taoists and Buddhists had themselves been interpreting religion psychologically for centuries, Jung vns unable to avail himself of their methods. The psychological approach to the study of religion is not itself invalidated, however, by the shortcomings in Jung's own practical work on Eastern teachings; on the contrary, it increases its validity with fuller and more accurate information and analysis. Jung's caveats about practice, therefore, should be understood in reference to cultism, which involves fixation and therefore cannot in any case foster authentic realization of golden flower mind blossoming. In his time J ung did not have access to materials that would have allowed him to make distinctions between normal and cultic practices of Eastern teachings, and he could not objectively judge the relative merits of the different exercises found in the corrupted version of The ~t of the Golden Flower rendered by Wilhelm.
Furthermore,. from sources such as J ung's introduction to the second German edition of The Secret of the Golden Flowe1; ··and• works.such as Siddhartha and M~ · Ludi by Jung's contemporary Hermann Hesse, it is evident that fragmentary imitation Eastern mystical cults were thriving in Europe•between the.first·and second world wars. Jung's reservations about golden flower practice were as much held in reaction to events in his own cultural milieu as they were based on his impressions of . the text itself. This fuct seemed particularly significant to me, particularly insofar as one of the factors involved in my own long-standing interest in Chan and Zen Buddhism was the practice of transcending religious and cultural forms to get at the· heart of reality in itself by direct experience and direct perception. While it istrue that there are ritu:.. alized Zen cults with highly cloistered and involutedattitudes, these are generally examples of imitations described longago in the classics of Chan and Zen, and as such they do not impugn the validity of the originalteachings themselves. Cultism, scholasticism, and cultural traditionalism aside, I believe that the essence of Chan is one of the most potentially useful elements of the golden flower teaching; and of Buddhism in general, in the context of> the modem West. In addition to its psychoactive techniques, the psychologiciU and intellectual structures of Chan lore can be superlative analytic toolS that enable the mind to distinguish the inner patterns of things. Of course, their ultimate value in practice depends upon how
138 effectively they are employed, as in their application to The Secnt of the Golden Fluwer. The theory and practice of the golden flower method do exist in Greek and Christian tradition, but if they are to be usefully analyzed in secular psychological terms, without an abundance of philosophical or religious concepts, I believe this can be most easily accomplished by means of Chan devices that require no background in Chinese culture to understand or employ. The Semt of the Golden Flower represents a way of approaching completeness of energy through completeness of mind. This teaching calls itself a "special transmission outside of doctrine,'' free from attachment to dogma and form, based on direct perception of the essence of mind and recovery of its inherent potential. This is the hallmark of Chan, which is sometimes called the school of the enlightened mind. For practical purposes, a distinction is made in the golden flower teaching between the "original spirit" and the "conscious spirit.'' The original spirit is the formless essence of awareness; it is unconditioned and transcends culture and history. The conscious spirit is the mind-set of feelings, thoughts, and attitudes, conditioned by personal and cultural history, bound by habit to specific forms. These terms are employed in both Chan and Taoist traditions. Intuition belongs to the original spirit; intellect belongs to the conscious spirit. The essence ofTaoism is to refine the conscious spirit to reunite it with the original spirit. In Chan Buddhism, the primal original spirit is also known as the host, while the conditioned conscious
139 spirit is known as the guest; the original spirit is the master, and the conscious spirit is the servant; In these terms, self-delusion occurs when the servant has taken over from the master; self-enlightenment takes place when the master is restoredto autonomy in the center. The idea of two. minds or two aspects of mind is found early on ii1 the ancient Taoist classic TtuJ Te Ching: "Using the shining radiance, you return again to the light~ not leaving anything to harm yourself. This is called entering the eternal.'' Here is an image of an ideal relationship between the original spirit as the source of power and the conscious spirit as a subordinate functionary. When clarified, the conscious spirit functions according to the situation without usurpingthe authority of the original spirit. The original spirit remains available as the reserve of total awareness, to which the conscious spirit returns without leaving any harmful fixation on itself or its objects. In this way the intellect functions efficiently in the world without that conscious activity inhibiting access to deeper spontaneous knowledge through the direct intuition of a more subtle faculty. The operation of switching from the limited mind of conditioned consciousness .to the liberated mind of primal spirit is known as the methodof"reversal," or turning around the light. In The Secret,ofthe Golden Flmver these terms refer to restoration of direct contact with the essence and source of awareness. This direct contact empowers the individual to know spontaneously and be free from bondage to created thoughts and conditioned feelings, even while operating
140 in their very presence. In the words of the Tao Te Chittg, one can thus be "creative without possessiveness." In both Taoism and Buddhism, the term turning the light around means turning the primary attention from involvement in mental objects to focus on the essence or source of mind. This exercise is practiced as a means of clearing consciousness and freeing awareness. Many of the Taoists who had the strongest affinities with Chan Buddhism relied heavily on the exercise of turning the light around. Although this exercise is found in all Buddhist schools, it was particularly emphasized in Chan Buddhism. The See1-et of the Golden Flmver represents one of the most radical ofthese spirit-based methods. Virtually the whole text is devoted to the subtleties of this simple practice of reversal or turning the light around. There are numerous Chan, Zen, and Taoist sources con raining descriptions of tips and techniques for inducing, exercising, and integrating the experience of the golden flower blossoming. The fundamental premise and practice are suggested in the plainest terms in the teachings ofDahui (Ta-hui), a famous Chan Buddhist master of the twelfth century: "Good and bad come from your own mind. But what do you call your own mind, apart from your actions and thoughts? Where does your own mind come from? If you really know where your own mind comes from, boundless obstacles caused by your own actions will be cleared all at once. After that, all sorts of extraordinary possibilities will come to you without your seeking them."
141 There are also many Chan stories for initiating the golden flower exercise. Some of them are very simple, but they can be used over and over again. A srudent asked a teacher, ''What is Buddha?"· The teacher said, ''This mind is Buddha." A srudent asked a teacher, "What should one do when arising and vanishing (of thoughts) goes on unceasingly?" The teacher said, "Tsk! Whose arising and vanishing is it?" Once a teacher asked a student, "Where are you from?" The srudem said he was from such and such a place. · The teacher asked; "Do you think of that place?" The srudent said that· he often thought of it. The teacher said, "The thinker is the mind, what is thought ofis the environment. In the environment are mountains, rivers, land, buildings, people, animals, and so on, Now turn your thought around to think of the thinking mind; are there so many things there?"
These Chan structures illustrate some of the ways that . attention can be arranged to induce the golden flower experience. It may bepossible to apply this use ofmind to psychotherapeutic theory and practice by means of its transcendental understanding of the self, its method of experiencing the self beyond the quirks ofpersonality, and its concentration on the elemental source of autonomy and self-mastery. To the therapist, the golden flower teaching offers techniques of developing deeper insight and greater awareness of human potential, as well as a means of con" tacting patients at a level of mind that is not affected
142 by psychic afflictions. To the patient, it offers an independent means of self-knowledge beyond the domain of conditioned personality, judgment, and opinion. Properly used, in the context of contemporary life and not as an exotic, half-understood cult, the practice of golden flower meditation certainly has the power to dispel the influence of neurotic compulsion. Rightly understood and correctly practiced, it does not have the dangers Jung attributed to it because it does not submit to the fascination of what he referred to as unconscious contents of mind. The exercise of turning the light around is in fact so penetrating an avenue to insight and transcendence that it is tempting to consider applying its theory and practice to the search for direction in treatment of some of the more serious disorders currently being addressed by the psychiatric community, crippling conditions such as those now known as acute manic depression, schizophrenia, psychosis, and multiple personality disorder. It must be kept in mind, however, that it would be completely foreign to the teaching and spirit of Buddhism and Taoism to suggest that any idea or practice can be regarded as a cure for aU iUs, or that any spiritual exercise can automaticaUy bring about the desired regeneration regardless of the mentality and attitude of the practitioner. In the traditional psychology of ancient Buddhist and Taoist schools, psychoactive exercises like the golden flower were part of comprehensive programs, not magic wands all-powerful in themselves.
143 To say that greenery needs light, earth, air, and water does not diminish the importance of any of these elements; but it may be necessary to emphasize the importance of one or another when it is missing or insufficient. For ancient methods of mental development to be naturalized in the West, they themselves will have to be in working order to be able to respond and adapt to local needs; and there will have to be ways of expressing and addressing those needs effectively in the context of the new cultures. This is why clinical and descriptive psychology have become avenues for the exploration of formerly esoteric knowledge relating to the nature of experience. To consider the question of how the golden flower method could shed light on clues to the understanding and treatment ofmood and personality disorders, it is useful to work with the Chan concept of host and guest, a simple concept corresponding to the Taoist distinction between the original spirit and the conscious spirit. From the point of view of the host, or original spirit, everything concerned with mood and personality is in the domain of the guest. But through the process of social conditioning, the average individual comes to be centered in the guest and therefore regards it as the self. As a result the true host is concealed, and it cannot bring out its more objective and encompassing perspective on matters of mood and personality. When the guest has taken over center stage and the host is no longer in sight, the "switching" that takes place within an individual in response to psychological and environmental factors is taking place from one mood or
144 personality to another; it does not return all the way to the source. The individual can then no longer command the capacity to switch deliberately from a subjective mood or subpersonality to an objective and impersonal state of observant mind. Thus alienated tram the primal source or ((host" of the original spirit, the t:go seeks integration by attempting to establish order among ((guests," the conditioned fucades of psyche and personality. Under these conditions, if there develop great disparities among moods or subpersonalities in the absence of ability to ((return to the light'' of the original mind, then dysfunction and breakdown may result when the strain of attempting to maintain relative order overstresses the natural resilience of the fuculty of mind playing the part of the receptionist or answering service for the host. Although the host must be there, it is now hidden and does not respond directly. Considered in this light, the ability to experience the pure self of the original mind and the capacity to return to it at will can be of fundamental significance in the psychic life of the individual. Even as the conditioned mind goes from state to state in the course of changing circumstances, the golden flower technique provides a means of searching out the host behind the scenes to gain direct input from its creative energy and inspiration. This host, or original spirit, can occasionally be glimpsed in the space between temporal shifts of mood or personality, but it generally takes practice to stabilize it and use it deliberately. The result of this ((crystallization" is a boundless source of potential. If applied with knowledge and without o~session, the method of the golden
145 flower can be of use not only to the psychotherapist, but to the ordinary individual as well; because mind is the pivot of all acts and events, its iUuminating effects. touch on every facet of life. There is a great deal of knowledge relating to the use of golden flower consciousness in the teachings of Buddhists and Taoists. These teachings were constructed to assist in orientation of mental exercises, and they need to be understood in terms of their own structure in order to work according to their own design. In this sense,. the need for adaptation does n:ot mean that essential patterns can be distorted. Orientation is as important as the exercise itself, for disoriented meditation does more harm than good. Seen inthis··light, traditional Buddhist and Taoist materials on this subject are not propaganda to inculcate religious belief but blueprints of mental functions drawn to provide direction in the understanding and application of psychoactive exercises; For application of the golden flower mind-awakening method, one of the most useful instructional devices in Chan Buddhist teaching explains the "two minds" in terms of"four relations between host and guese' To focus them in the mind all at once, these four relations are expressed in mnemonic phrases: the guest within the guest; the host within the guest; the guest withiri the host; the host within the host. The guest within the guest is the state of the ordinary mind going from one mood; state, or subpersonality to . another, alienated from conscious contact with the host behind the scenes.
146 The host within the guest is the first stage of turning the light around, when contact with the original mind is established even as the individual is passing through shifting moods and personalities. The guest within the host is a more mature level of attainment, at which the individual can enjoy free access to thought and its products, including ideas, moods, and personalities, without being deceived by them or bound to them. The host within the host is the original spirit itself, the primal source of consciousness in which is found the hidden "turning point" on which psychic liberty hinges. In one sense, conscious experience of the host within the host follows realization of the host within the guest; yet in a deeper sense the host within the host is not only at the pinnacle but even at the basis of the total experience of golden flower practice. There are also certain stories from Chan and 1aoist tradition that are used to orient and sensitize the mind to this "turning point" in such a way that the capacity to "switch minds" is brought within reach of the ordinary consciousness. A few have already been mentioned. One of the more dramatic examples of such stories is based on a folk tale about ayoung woman who was betrothed to a man she didn't love. She ran away to live with her true lover, but eventually died. When her man returned to their hometown after her death, he found that in the experience of the people there she had been at home all the while, having taken to her sickbed shortly after her betrothal.
147 In modern terms, the paraUe.l with emotional division between outer and inner life is obvious; but can we ask, without assumptions, which one was the phantom? A Chan master said, "The girl had split souls; which was the real one?" Ifwe say she was really at home, yet she lived with her lover; if we say she was with.her lover, yet she was lying abed at home. The Chan answer is that both conditions, both "selves," were guests of a. formless host. Another master said, "If you can awaken to the real one herein, youwill know that leaving one state of being and entering another is like staying at an inn." In psychological terms, this would suggest that the individual··· who realizes the true host can enter and exit thoughts, feelings, moods, and personalities at will, being centered in the primal spirit and thus not subject to control by the contents of conditioned states of consciousness. One of the great advantages of using such stories to jog the mind is that the very act of remembering the possibility of "switching" already places psychological distance between host and guest, thus dispelling to some degree the mesmeric influence of thoughts, feelings, moods, and personalities. A parallel story from Taoist tradition is the famous butterfly dream of the sage Chuang-tzu. In this classic tale, the philosopher relates that he dreamed he was a butterfly, having a wonderful time fluttering about from flower to flower on the zephyrs of spring.
148 On awakening from this pleasant reverie, however, he found that he was no longer sure whether he was a man who had dreamed he was a butterfly, or whether he was a butterfly now dreaming he was a man. The issue of this story is not its superficial question of which psychic contents to identify as the selfbut is in the act of recalling attention to the "turning point" revealed in between states, the formless "opening" or "aperture'' through which the real self of the formless host can be seen and experienced in its own purity and freedom. By this means it is possible to detach from conditioned states and identities without thereby becoming dissociated from the realm of ordinary experience. Thus the individual can always resort to renewal from the very source of creativity. This is what Taoists call· returning to the "root of heaven and earth," from which extradimensionalvantage point it is possible to experience higher enlightenment right in the midst of the mundane world. If this can be accomplished in reality, there is no reason why psychic events such as extreme mood swings or personality changes should assume control of individuals to the extent of becoming crippling handicaps. Even if this practice is understood in theory alone, it can still offer a perspective on human psychology that will allow for an objective and nonjudgmental approach to the understanding and treatment of mood and personality extremism. Jung's reasons for warning people away from golden flower practice were ostensibly based on what he perceived as cultural incompatibility. It was his belief that
149 Europeans of his time lacked the proper psychological basis for the yogic practices of Chinese, Indian, and · Tibetan religions. Therefore Jung thought it only reasonable that Westerners should not imitate Eastern methods; and he underscored his point with a proverbial Buddhist .••.. · warning about incorrect use of practices. •·. . Jung quarrelled not with the method of the golden flower, but with the Western attitude toward technology of any k~nd. His remarks on the Western mentality suggest avenues of study, but he does not examine the cultic behaviors that make imitation methods ineffective. Had he done so, Jung could have found that neither the reality nor the imitations of spiritual practices are limited to East orWest; Furthermore, Jung does not show how his method is actually equivalent to the golden flower practice. Apart from the fact that hewas faced with a garbled translation of a corrupt text with the last few chapters missing, Jung was admittedly preoccupied with expounding his own theories. Jung's concern with the problems of cultural differences led him to· believe that the.golden.flower practice developed from Chinese tradition, in spite ofthe fact that he had evidence of its existence in Western tradition. Jung apparently misunderstood descriptions of the exercise partly because ofWilhelm's mistranslation and his own lack of experience. To deal fully with Jung's treatment of the golden flower teaching would lead us afield from the point of this work, which is to exposethe original teaching itself. The purpose of mentioning Jung here is to reopen adoor of inquiry by questioning the limits of the limitations he presumed.
148 On awakening from this pleasant reverie, however, he found that he was no longer sure whether he was a man who had dreamed he was a butterfly, or whether he was a butterfly now dreaming he was a man. The issue of this story is not its superficial question of which psychic contents to identify as the self but is in the act of recalling attention to the "turning point" revealed in between states, the formless "opening" or "aperture" through which the real self of the formless host can be seen and experienced in its own purity and freedom. By this means it is possible to detach from conditioned states and identities without thereby becoming dissociated from the realm of ordinary experience. Thus the individual can always resort to renewal from the very source of creativity. This is what Taoists call returning to the "root of heaven and earth," from which extradimensional vantage point it is possible to experience higher enlightenment right in the midst of the mundane world. If this can be accomplished in reality, there is no reason why psychic events such as extreme mood swings or personality changes should assume control of individuals to the extent of becoming crippling handicaps. Even if this practice is understood in theory alone, it can still offer a perspective on human psychology that will allow for an objective and nonjudgmental approach to the understanding and treatment of mood and personality extremism. Jung's reasons for warning people away from golden flower practice were ostensibly based on what he perceived as cultural incompatibility. It was his belief that
149 Europeans.of his time Jacked the proper psychological basis for the yogic practices ofChinese,Indian, and Tibetan religions. Therefore Jung thought it only reasonable that Westerners should not imitate Eastern methods; and he underscored his point with a proverbial Buddhist warning about incorrect use of practices. Jung quarrelled not with the method of the golden flower, but with the Western attitude toward technology of any k~nd. His remarks on the Western mentality suggest avenues of study, but he does not examine the culric behaviors thatma:keimitation methods.ineffective. Had he done so, Jung could have found that neither the reality nor the imitations of spiritual practices are limited to East or West. Furthermore, Jung does not show how his method is actually equivalent to the golden flower practice. Apart from the fact that he was faced with a garbled translation of a corrupt text with the last few chapters missing, Jung was admittedly pi:eoccupiedwith expounding his own theories. Jung's concern with the problcmsof cultural differences led him to believe that the golden flower practice developed from Chinese tradition, in spite of the fact that he had evidence of its existence in Western tradition. Jung apparently misunderstood descriptions of the exercise partly because of Wilhelm's mistranslation and his own lack of experience. ·. •. · . · ·· . To deal fully withJ ung's treatment of the golden flower teaching would lead us afield from the point of this work, which is to expose the original teaching itself. The purpose of mentioning Jung here is to reopen a door of inquiry by questioning the limits of the limitations he presumed.
ISO Jung's ideas on the golden flower, and their significance in relation to Western thinking about Eastern thought, are more fruitfully treated in the context of his total work on Eastern subjects. Nevertheless, they provide a useful counterpoint to the original tradition when highlighting psychological practicalities of the golden flower exercise. One reason for this is that Western versions of Eastern mental exercises active during the sixty years that have elapsed since the original publication of The Secret of the Goltkn F/Qwer have been informed in· part by Jungian interpretations of Eastern. practices. Among the problems that Westerners have traditionally faced in working with Eastern meditation practices is the fear that mind-stilling exercises will prevent them from thinking thoughts that they need to think. This is also a concern in the East, where there are many warnings in meditation lore to avoid excessive·stilling. There are two main objects to stopping thought in Buddhist tradition. One is to open up space to clarify rhought by distinguishing compulsive habitual thought from deliberate logical thought. The other is to clear room for the conscious operation of non conceptual insight. Practitioners are carefully warned to avoid becoming intoxicated by the peaceful tranquillity of thought cessation; as the Chan proverb goes, "stagnant water cannot contain the coils of a dragon." The golden flower practice can stop thought temporarily, but it does not warp reason. It enables one to think deliberately rather than compulsively. This use of mind opens a wider space for thought, with the ability to
151 think and observe thought with detached clarity, so that one can put down useless thoughts and take up useful thoughts by means of independent discernment and will. The speed of its direct perception can also see at a glance where a train of thought will lead, conserving untold mental energy. With any eXercise that stills the mind, at first there is a tendency for random thoughts and images to occur with seemingly greater~than~ordinary frequency and strength. Jung became aware of this phenomenon and attempted to exploit what he thought was its potential asameans for exploring the unconscious. He was also aware of danger in this; and hestresses this danger in his works on both Eastern and Western alchemy. In golden flower practice this problem is avoided by relinquishing all obsession with thoughts and images that come to mind in the course of the exercise. It is only after the actual awakening or blossoming of the golden flower has taken place that examination ofmental phenomena with detached objectivity is considered possible. Before this breakthrough, too much introspection of psychic contents is viewed as a distraction from the primary purpose of arriving at the source of awareness itself. Golden flower exercise is not focused on forms of images or ideas, and in that sense it is not and cannot be culture bound. For this reason h is not peculiarly Chinese, nor is it known and practiced by Chinese people in general through the influence of their cultural heritage.· To adapt a practice to a new cultural setting is one thing; to turn it into something fundamentally different
152 is another. In order to benefit from whatever is useful in Eastern teachings, they need to be reduced to their essence and allowed to develop in their new environment. What is necessary is the primal psychological seed, not the temporal cultural husk. Taoist and Buddhist teachings explain that their structures and terminologies are not sacred in themselves, but are means of arranging attention to elicit extra potential in vision, being, and action. Independent perception and autonomous conduct are not general ideals in the Confucian and Hindu societies within which Taoism and Buddhism existed; they are part of a transcendent interior culture that has no national boundaries. ·The opening statement of The Secret of the Golden Flower includes the provision that people should establish a firm foothold in the ordinary world before they try to cultivate the blossoming of the golden flower. This means that they should be able to function adequately in their own culture and society, whatever that may be. The golden flower practice is not primarily a therapeutic method for severely unbalanced people; it is a way of higher development for ordinary people. Yet it is also true that some forms of neurosis are built into civilized society itself, and many ordinary people suffering slightly from mild neuroses are well integrated with their everyday world. The reason why the golden flower method is not particularly recommended for severely neurotic people, or for people with schizoid or psychotic tendencies, is that the enhanced receptivity and sensitivity fostered by the practice might exacerbate feelings of illness and fear.
153 The thoughts and images that compel the neurotic and psychotic could become more overpowering in the early stages of golden flower practice, when the "demons, of thought assail the mind as it relaxes its conscious set in anticipation of the attempted switch-over to nonconceptual awareness. Getting past this stage to experience penetrating insight into the essence and source of awareness itself, not associated with any content at all, would be key to any help the golden flower method could offer the severely unbalanced in finding a way out of their hells. If people with uncontrollable mental problems do turn to the golden flower method for help, they could be better off with the guidance of therapists who have themselves experienced the original mind of humanity and can calmly view the various realms of thought and perception as so many planets in a vast ;md endless space. For their part, therapists to the mentally bedeviled need the unattached buoyancy and independent objectivity of penetrating insight, so the golden flower exercise could be useful to them in a very direct way in the investigation of processes of mental illness and liberation.
Works Cited
Chang Po~tuan. Understanding Reality: A TIWist Alchemical C/as~ sic. Translated by Thomas Cleary. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, ·1987. Liu 1-ming. The Inner Teachings ofTIWism. Thnslated by Thomas Cleary. Boston: Shambhala, 1986. Liu 1~ming. The TtWist I Ching. Translated by Thomas Cleary. Boston: Shambhala, 1986. Liu l~ming. I Chi1fff Mandalas. Translated by Thomas Cleary. Boston: Shambhala, 1988. Liu 1-ming. AWR/teni~ to the TIW. Translated by Thomas Cleary. Boston: Shambhala, 1988. . .· Immortal Sisters. Thnslated and edited by Thomas Cleary. Bos~ ton: Shambhala, 1989. Li Daoqun. The Book ofBalance and Ha'!"11Wny. Thnslated by Thomas Cleary. San Francisco: North Point Press, 1989. Zen Essence. Thnslated and edited by Thomas Cleary. Boston: Shambhala, 1989. The Secret ofthe Golden Flcwer: A Chinese Book of Lift. Thnslated and explained by Richard Wilhelm, with a commentary by C. G. Jung. 'franslated from the German by Cary F. Baynes. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1961. Jung, Carl G. Psycho~ and the East. Translated by R. F. C. Hull. Princeton, NJ: Princ~ton University Press, 1978.
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