Author Topic: Empty your cup  (Read 4599 times)

sonamdhargey

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Empty your cup
« on: April 07, 2013, 01:37:51 PM »
A university professor went to visit a famous Zen master. While the master quietly served tea, the professor talked about Zen. The master poured the visitor's cup to the brim, and then kept pouring.

The professor watched the overflowing cup until he could no longer restrain himself.

"It's overfull! No more will go in!" the professor blurted.

"You are like this cup," the master replied, "How can I show you Zen unless you first empty your cup."

What i get from this story is we have to unlearn what we have learn to learn. What is your take?

Tenzin K

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Re: Empty your cup
« Reply #1 on: April 07, 2013, 03:31:29 PM »
People who come and ask for teaching, but their cup is full; you can’t put anything in.
Before someone can teach, you’ll have to empty your cup.
 This is harder than you might realize. By the time we reach adulthood we are so full of, um, stuff that we don't even notice it's there. We might consider ourselves to be open minded, but in fact everything we learn is filtered through many assumptions and then classified to fit into the knowledge we already possess.

The Buddha taught that conceptual thinking is a function of the Third Skandha. This skandha is called Samjna in Sanskrit, which means "knowledge that links together." Unconsciously, we "learn" something new by first linking it to something we already know. Most of the time, this is useful; it helps us navigate through the phenomenal world.

But sometimes this system fails. What if the new thing is utterly unrelated to anything you already know? What usually happens is misunderstanding. We see this when westerners, including scholars, try to understand Buddhism by stuffing it into some western conceptual box. That creates a lot of conceptual distortion; people end up with a version of Buddhism in their heads that is unrecognizable to most Buddhists. And the whole is Buddhism philosophy or religion? argument is being perpetrated by people who can't think outside the box.
To one extent or another most of us go about demanding that reality conform to our ideas, rather than the other way around. Mindfulness practice is an excellent way to stop doing that, or at least learn to recognize that's what we're doing, which is a start.

brian

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Re: Empty your cup
« Reply #2 on: April 07, 2013, 04:22:43 PM »
I think the term of emptying the cup here means that one have to unlearn to learn something new. In other words is that someone will have to start to start afresh by letting go what he learned in the past to learn something new as we were fixed in our perception from what we have be taught/learned as we grew up. In order for someone to pick up new perception, first the person have to let go of (unlearn) their past perception. I think this is applicable to people who is new into Buddhism, they have to change their perception of the past. For example, some might think having kids or getting married is happiness but in fact if we read from Dharma books or hear from teachings, it is actually one of the cause for our suffering.

dondrup

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Re: Empty your cup
« Reply #3 on: April 07, 2013, 05:34:03 PM »
The professor must practise humility before the Zen Master.  Instead of continuing to talk about Zen, he should have remained silent and waited patiently for the Zen Master to speak.  If the Professor continues to be arrogant, he would not be able to receive teachings from the Zen Master.  The Zen Master’s action in pouring the tea continuously without stopping is already a teaching for the professor.  Had the professor been more mindful and aware, he would have understood its meaning! The professor thought he knew more about Zen than the Zen Master!