Knowing and Not Knowing
I was using huatou method of asking the question “What is Wu?” during the
meditation session this morning. This practice is quite tricky at times because
there is not much to hold onto while asking the question of what is
‘nothingness’. And there were times when I did experience frustration in the
process, as I began to realize that there is no object of ‘knowing’ in this question. The question itself becomes
an interrogation into the meaning of ‘knowing’ and ‘searching’ for what is to
be known.
To know: what is there to know? Maybe I can begin by exploring this
question a bit. Whenever I seek to know something, am I not creating a kind of
object in my mind: something to be seen, felt, heard, etc.? This becomes hard
to do when we start to talk about mind. First of all, there are not really any
empirical qualities attached to mind, so the search for mind in this way can
seem a bit strange. Second of all, mind seems to be the basis upon which all
observations arise, so it seems odd to try to look for the mind, the way one
does look for an object.
“Wu” is a method where I start to investigate that which cannot be known
as an object, or that which is the basis for all knowledge of subject and
object. But no sooner do I start to practice it, and I become frustrated by my
inability to try to know that which has no object. But today, I started to
realize that perhaps this question is more like a process than a result. The
process is to let go of the search for mind in an object of mind, but it is
also recognizing a subtle mystery. If knowing “What is Wu?” cannot entail
finding an object that can be said to be mind, I wonder what kind of knowing we
use to know what is wu? I think this is the direct awareness that only mind is
capable of. But maybe it is a knowledge I am frightened of, because I am used
to subject/object as the way of knowing.
Letting go of subject/object seems to be the only way to resolve the
question, but what does this letting go look like? It may be a kind of process
of unknowing, where the mind is no longer drawn in by dualism but keeps waiting
to see its own process. But it is not easy to get out of this special kind of
dualistic knowing that I engage in every day. I think part of the challenge is
to relate that there is another way of knowing, and I can never know that way
through the mindset of subject and object.
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