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"The Sacred Path Is the One We’re On"

amorfati1

Veteran Member
Time of past OR future Camino
2014_Caminho Portuguese (Lisboa to Santiago_4 weeks in May)
this popped into my mailbox this morning and thought it well worth sharing - might be of interest ...

https://onbeing.org/blog/omid-safi-...-69965753&mc_cid=1541b9df94&mc_eid=759179c68b

"The torii, the Japanese gate, is said to mark the threshold between the sacred and the profane. Yet the torii is famously open. Sacred on this side, sacred on that side. Sacred to the right, sacred to the left. And while the thousands of torii do mark the path that one is encouraged to stay on, there are also hundreds if not thousands of sideway paths into other shrines, other bamboo-filled forests to wander and reflect. Ultimately, all is sacred, all is illuminated. For the ones who walk on the path, it is all sacred.”

===
A few years ago, I went into the Shinto shrine of Fushimi-Inari in the lovely city of Kyoto for the first time. It was a warm and humid summer visit to this thousand-year-old shrine, and a few of us made the pilgrimage together. A lovely spiritual guide led us through the experience. We walked mostly in silence, as one should, on this journey. We walked under thousands of torii Japanese gates that marked the path.

After about an hour of walking, I kept wondering when we would get to the shrine itself. Eventually, a little bit tired and impatient, I turned to the guide and asked, “Where is the shrine?”

He stopped, paused, and smiled in that knowing way that some guides do. With the most graceful motion, his right hand turned heavenward, he motioned his hand from right to left, pointing to everything in sight, and said: “Friend, the whole mountain is the shrine.”

It was one of those bolt-of-lightning realization kind of moments that has stayed with me even after all these years.

The whole mountain is the shrine.

It made me realize how linear my thinking had become, assuming that the path is there to bring us to a destination, and the “experience” would be had at the top of the destination. No, in this beautifully wise tradition, the whole mountain is sacred.

The torii, the Japanese gate, is said to mark the threshold between the sacred and the profane. Yet the torii is famously open. Sacred on this side, sacred on that side. Sacred to the right, sacred to the left. And while the thousands of torii do mark the path that one is encouraged to stay on, there are also hundreds if not thousands of sideway paths into other shrines, other bamboo-filled forests to wander and reflect. Ultimately, all is sacred, all is illuminated.

For the ones who walk on the path, it is all sacred.

It was The Matrix that had the memorable line:

“There’s a difference between knowing the path and walking the path.”

There are a number of signs on the path here that have stayed with me. There are reminders to “stay on the path.” And to “stay on the right path.” As a Muslim who has been raised with the opening prayer of the Qur’an, asking God to guide us to and keep us on the right path (Qur’an 1:5-6), these words are especially resonant.

There are hundreds of little shrines to the left, to the right, and on detours. Pilgrims step away, light a candle, fold their hands, and say a little prayer.

The first time I was at the shrine there were tens of thousands of pilgrims there, making it hard at times to take a single step. There was a beauty to being part of the multitudes, but I also yearn for solitude and the open spaces. So for this second visit I went back before sunrise, at four in the morning. The mountain shrine is of course open, no tickets required. You just walk the path. There is little that is required in terms of ritual, other than walking and walking under the torii gates. They are open to the left, open above, open to the right. Walking through them, you see the shrine that is the whole mountain almost like a series of moving images. But you just focus on the path. One step at a time.

How lovely would it be to treat one’s spiritual path like this: an awareness that the path is open, the path is everywhere, the path is the destination, and that what matters is to walk the path, be on the path. It is true, as the sages say, a journey of a thousand steps begins with one step.

And so I walked and walked. Listening now to the song of the birds offering their own praise. Seeing now a lake so still that the whole cosmos is reflected in it. I saw perhaps ten people in the whole two-hour pilgrimage up the mountain. The cycle of solitude would be interrupted for a few breaths by meeting a fellow seeker. Are they there to pay respect to their ancestors? To be in the mountain shrine? For exercise? I did not ask, and they did not volunteer. We simply made eye contact, silent pilgrims all of us, a subtle bow of the head, shared a smile, and kept walking…they on their path, me on mine.

Watching some of the pilgrims pause to pay respect to their ancestors also opened me up to how in our lives we are so disconnected from ancestors. If we pay attention, it is at most to parents, possibly grandparents. If we manage to rise above our own ego, we direct our compassion towards our babies. And yet how lovely to also remember those whose love and sacrifice has brought us here. We are who we are because somebody loved on us, because somebody sacrificed for us.

Watching this cycle of birth and death and reverence also attunes one to a different sensitivity. I saw under my feet a large insect (maybe a roach) being carried away for food by a whole army of ants. One death becomes sustenance for others.

The torii, the magnificent reddish-orange gates, go on and on. By some measures, there are tens of thousands of them marking the whole mountain. I paused at one point and saw that some of the torii gates themselves are in the process of decomposing. At least some of them are a cover over a tree. And the trees making up the torii gates are themselves participating in the same cycle of birth and death and return to the elements that we are. The gates marking the path decompose to the very soil that marks the path itself.

And so do we.

We are cosmic dust, spinning out of the Nothingness of pre-existence, breathed and birthed into existence by a Merciful God whose love necessitated creation. Here we stand for a few breaths, loving, yearning, seeking, finding, hoping, grieving, birthing, dreaming… and then our bodies go back into that same cosmic dust, our spirit/breaths go back to that same Loving Divine.

So let us, friends, keep walking on the path.

Let us stay on the path.

Let us follow any path that brings us to the mountaintop where Moses met God, where Jesus went, where Muhammad went to behold the Divine.

Let us remember those who loved us into being and those whom we love onto being.

Let us stay on the path and recall that the whole mountain is the path.
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
Your post reminds me of the words of encouragement I have read elsewhere. I have avidly read the books on Zen experiences by Janwillem van de Wetering, a Dutch author, who started out his relationship with Zen by studying it for a year while staying in a Japanese monastery. This period is described in 'The Empty Mirror', his first non-fiction book and the first of his Zen trilogy.
At the end of the book (spoiler alert!) he is deeply depressed. He suffers from a feeling of complete lack of progress and he thinks that his whole Buddhist adventure is one huge failure. He decides to leave, there is no more reason for him to stay in Japan. When he finally goes to visit his master to say goodbye, this is what happens:

"The head monk gave me tea, didn’t show any disappointment, and took me to the master’s house. The master received me in his living room. He gave me a cigarette and sent the head monk to the meditation hall to fetch a stick, the sort of stick which the monks used to hit each other. He drew some characters on it with his brush, blew on the ink, waved the stick about, and gave it to me.
“The characters mean something which is of importance to you. I wrote down an old Chinese proverb, a saying taken from the Zen tradition. ‘A sword which is well forged never loses its golden colour.’ You don’t know it, or you think you don’t know it, but you have been forged in this monastery. The forging of swords isn’t limited to monasteries. This whole planet is a forge. By leaving here nothing is broken. Your training continues. The world is a school where the sleeping are woken up. You are now a little awake, so awake that you can never fall asleep again.”
The head monk looked at me kindly and the master smiled. The heavy gloomy feeling which hadn’t left me in Kobe fell away from me. I bowed and left the house."
 
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MEGA thanks to you for sharing this most appreciated quote/post.
very well received - especially during this time now.
Grazie e saluti - claudia

(will now look up those books of van de Wetering that you mentioned)

Your post reminds me of the words of encouragement I have read elsewhere. I have avidly read the books on Zen experiences by Janwillem van de Wetering, a Dutch author, who started out his relationship with Zen by studying it for a year while staying in a Japanese monastery. This period is described in 'The Empty Mirror', his first non-fiction book and the first of his Zen trilogy.
At the end of the book (spoiler alert!) he is deeply depressed. He suffers from a feeling of complete lack of progress and he thinks that his whole Buddhist adventure is one huge failure. He decides to leave, there is no more reason for him to stay in Japan. When he finally goes to visit his master to say goodbye, this is what happens:

"The head monk gave me tea, didn’t show any disappointment, and took me to the master’s house. The master received me in his living room. He gave me a cigarette and sent the head monk to the meditation hall to fetch a stick, the sort of stick which the monks used to hit each other. He drew some characters on it with his brush, blew on the ink, waved the stick about, and gave it to me.
“The characters mean something which is of importance to you. I wrote down an old Chinese proverb, a saying taken from the Zen tradition. ‘A sword which is well forged never loses its golden colour.’ You don’t know it, or you think you don’t know it, but you have been forged in this monastery. The forging of swords isn’t limited to monasteries. This whole planet is a forge. By leaving here nothing is broken. Your training continues. The world is a school where the sleeping are woken up. You are now a little awake, so awake that you can never fall asleep again.”
The head monk looked at me kindly and the master smiled. The heavy gloomy feeling which hadn’t left me in Kobe fell away from me. I bowed and left the house."
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.

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