Whiteboard
Our original minds are like whiteboards, with nothing written, but anything written.
And the whiteboard has no borders, so it's boundless, vast, and even the universe.
It is nothing more than a trace drawn on the whiteboard.
Old zen masters refer to it as a mirror, an empty space, and they also said it was like a dream.
If a magic pencil is to do magic, it needs something to draw or write, but it's all about it.
On the basis of the pencil, or the traces it paints, allowing all traces,
give no attention
If you draw a Buddha on the whiteboard, you can see Buddha, and if you draw me, you can see
me, but those are things I can draw on, and they can't be true me.
Up to here, I have reached the limit of my teaching, and if you have an answer that you cannot
answer here, you will meet yourself right there.
It has been consistently the life of Buddha and Zen masters to point out things that cannot be
immediately pointed out.
If I don't write "Not a Buddha" on that whiteboard and erase it, live without realizing it.
If I write "I am Buddha," I can be a Buddha, but I can't find myself.
Because we're already living as we please, the country can write anything in the background, draw,
but as long as we don't clean up the whiteboard, the trail can last long, but it can't last forever.
On the whiteboard the traces come and go countless times, accept everything in the world, express
my feelings, feelings, consciousness, everything, but only one thing that never changes, if it goes to
the truth of it.
No matter what picture unfolds on the whiteboard, it will be able to stand tall and not fall for it.
The man who found me while listening to Buddha's sermon on TV, or the man who found me while
listening to the cult leader who appeared on TV, is no different.
Because the Buddha or the cult leader, both of them, were just pictures on TV.
Furthermore, if I knew that even the TV were all reflected via my heart, I could see anything and
everything.
Even if I hear it, it will be clear that this is only one thing in my heart.
But through his sermons, it is difficult to return to himself, because Buddha's sermon consistently
points to the whiteboard, and the cult leader's sermon will point to himself, a human being.
Another thing to watch out for is that if you are deceived by Buddha's words and follow them, you
will fall into a more terrible maze than a cult leader, and you will be in a difficult situation to
escape.
Even Buddha's words, if they remain on the whiteboard, are easy to be misled by the text.
When he writes something on the whiteboard, no matter what words or pictures he draws, the hint
is not in the sentence or picture.
So the Buddha wrote a scripture on the whiteboard, and the Zen master wrote to kill the Buddha
when you met the Buddha.
If you say that their behavior is different, don't read my writing anymore.
