Modern Zen

by Jon Rappoport

May 25, 2022

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One thing I’ve learned from giving lectures to audiences over the years: never meet expectations.

“Expectations” is a large container waiting to be filled up. People have these containers. They lug them around with them. They want them to be filled up.

For example, if they expect shocking information from the speaker, and they get it, their expectations are met.

Audiences train themselves to be audiences, and their expectation-containers are ready when they sit down to listen.

There is something missing. Something monumental.

The present moment. The present now. The alive moment. Because, for all its fanfare and interest, the event is not really in the present.

This is by design. No one wants the moment. People’s whole lives are devoted to avoiding the moment, because it is spontaneous. That’s what a moment is. Spontaneous.

“Everyone can act. Everyone can improvise. Anyone who wishes to can play in the theater and learn to become ‘stage-worthy.’” (Viola Spolin)

No one is used to spontaneity. No one is prepared for it.

No one knows what they would do or how they would react in the spontaneous moment. That’s why it is avoided.

“Through spontaneity we are re-formed into ourselves.” (Viola Spolin)

Yet, the paradox is: people yearn for the spontaneous moment. They yearn for that freedom. It’s not freedom as an idea or concept, but freedom as a living thing.

I bring all this up because passivity is the universal effect of living for most people. In that state, they still have expectations and those big containers, but the way they receive information—they certainly don’t intend to climb up out of their own passivity. That’s the last thing they would do.

“It [spontaneity] creates an explosion that for the moment frees us from handed-down frames of reference, memory choked with old facts and information and undigested theories and techniques of other people’s findings. Spontaneity is the moment of personal freedom when we are faced with reality, and see it, explore it and act accordingly. In this reality the bits and pieces of ourselves function as an organic whole. It is the time of discovery, of experiencing, of creative expression.” (Viola Spolin)

So when I speak to audiences at live events, I find a way to remind them that we’re in a kind of false relationship. It’s interesting and false at the same time. There we are in a room, and I’m the speaker and they’re the audience. I’m active and they’re passive.

Those are our roles. Those are our functions. It’s accepted, but it’s unworkable. It’s self-defeating, unless we all want to be existing in a dead space outside the living present moment. And I don’t.

This means I have to readjust things. I have to let people know that I know they’re there. Right now. I know they’re listening, and I know they’re absorbing, and I know that beyond a certain point (10-15 minutes), they’re going to shift down into passive mode.

Finding a way, an interesting way to let them know is a challenge.

It’s really a challenge that extends to the whole world.

Are we alive or are we doing it by the numbers?

Look at any set-up, which is “the way things are supposed to be,” and “the parts that people are supposed to play,” and you can see light. The light is what could happen to upset that situation and turn it into something else. Something that would bring people in from the cold, into the moment itself.

Spontaneity means everything is created now.

That’s why I keep writing about imagination, because imagination will change a life. It won’t only change the content. It’ll change the way life happens.

Here’s something I can guarantee anywhere in the universe where beings populate planets, where they think, plan, strategize. They’re not living in the moment, but they claim they are. They’ll say, “How could I be anywhere else? We’re all in the present. That’s all there is.”

But they’re wrong. Their big containers are in the moment, and they’re waiting outside to accept the flow of information from the containers.

If a person (usually a hard-headed realist) thinks he’s already in the moment, have him go up on a stage with another person and take on the role of a galactic cop on patrol, questioning a suspect who is accused of stealing a planet. If the realist can eventually improvise and do it, he’ll experience being in the moment in a way he never has before.

Likewise, if he painted 200 paintings, something different would happen to him. He would come to the edge of what he already knows (which he’s expressing in the paintings), and then he would step off. He would do something on the paper or canvas which is not what he knows. It would arise spontaneously, and he would feel a new space, a new energy, a new now.

Imagination. Alive imagination. That’s the key. The key to the door that leads out of the Matrix.


What’s wrong with Zen?

Nothing is wrong with Zen, except the people who practice it.

That’s a joke. Sort of.

In the modern style, especially in America, Zen is mostly meditation, and more meditation, and more meditation, and the point of it seems to be to get to a zero point, where you can watch your own mind, your own thoughts, and finally, without effort, stay separate from them, separate from all that radio static, and separate also from your own unbidden parade of emotions that swing by with tooting horns and crashing cymbals and clacking drums and gawking dancing clowns.

A laudable goal.

But on the whole, how many people who do this wind up becoming passive? That’s the thing. People tend to opt for quietness.

Whereas, the whole idea ought to be: launch a tremendous amount of dynamic action from the platform of zero-stillness.

Because stillness as a way of life sooner or later begins to disintegrate.

In original Zen, there were ordeals. The teacher gave the student things to do, tasks which eventually became absurd, without discernible purpose. The teacher spoke to the student in riddles and wisecracks. The teacher drove the student into a state of desperation, because the student’s rational faculties, which were obsessively involved in systems, couldn’t supply answers to questions which defied logic.

The teacher did whatever he had to do to bring the student out over the edge of the cliff, where in mid-air, there were no foundations…and the student felt terror. But the teacher persisted.

And then, in one explosive moment, the student found himself floating in the air. He saw there was no need to explain his existence. There was no need to place a veil between himself and the present moment. He didn’t die. He was, finally, alive.

Who knows how this radical approach actually worked out in the many cloisters and huts and cottages where it was practiced, where the stories grew and expanded in their retelling.

Those old teachers were tough characters. They weren’t merely meditation instructors.

There was another aspect of Zen, which survives to this day. It could be summarized as: “become the other.” The archer becomes the target. He becomes the bow, the arrow, and the target.

The runner becomes the road and the air and the sky and the clouds. The artist becomes the canvas.

The theater of merging with the other.

And as in any theatrical setting, the actor can, by choice, merge with, and un-merge from, his role.

But again, in these times, the main thrust of Zen teaching seems to be meditation, and the culture of stillness, quietude, and passive acceptance.

I’m not saying the meditation is easy to do. It isn’t. But somehow, its environment has become circumscribed.

This is unsurprising in America, where every philosophic and spiritual import from Asia has been distorted and watered down for the seeker-consumer. The overriding intent has been to create The Quiet Person.

The world of action has been painted as too disturbing to the “student seeking inner peace.” Therefore, retreat. Therefore, set up a buffer zone within which all is harmonized and balanced.

Where is the Zen now that sends people out into the world to revolutionize it down to its core, that stimulates the desire to find and invent a Voice that will shatter delusions and create new realities that have never been seen before?

If the moment of insight, satori, doesn’t instigate this, what good is it?

How can satori be “seeing into one’s true nature,” if the result is a wan gaze out on a uniform landscape of soft-boiled bupkis?

The answer is obvious. Breaking apart, exploding the primary illusions and fears that hold an individual in check is not the goal of most Zen as it is now practiced. That objective has been replaced with the false promise that some ultimate “consciousness” will reconcile the soul with itself.

The way this promise is offered and the way it is taught and the way its surrounding social culture is embroidered is a dud. Dead on arrival.

It’s time for a few new koans.

What is the real sound of David Rockefeller? What does Henry Kissinger say when somebody finally puts him in a small bottle with a cork on it? How does an android disguise himself as a human?

If I need a Zen teacher, I’ll go to Henny Youngman: “A doctor gave a man six months to live. The man couldn’t pay his bill, so he gave him another six months.”

In the beginning, the whole point of Zen was to shake things up, not calm them down.

The master assumed a new student was an annoying clod. But that doesn’t comfortably mesh with today’s “tolerant culture.” Today, annoying clods are a special interest group.

Silence, as a key Zen feature, isn’t only about a desired inner condition now. It’s about a synthetic attitude. So show me a temple where the meditation room is outfitted with a few dozen giant TV screens. The students do their meditation while CNN, Christingle Matthews, Sean Hannity, Oprah, news-boy-on-a bike Brian Williams, Hawaii Five-O, the Shopping Channel, Pawn Stars, Jimmy Fallon and his screaming pubescent audience, and four or five Spanish soaps are going full blast.

That would be a start.

Or throw on 20 or 30 TED lectures simultaneously—prancing grasshoppers extolling the future of technology.

I submit that if the one of the ancient Zen teachers walked into a modern American Zen cloister today, that’s exactly what he’d do. Turn on a few hundred TV sets, computers, and mobile devices and say, “Okay, try being quiet in the middle of this!”

Zen is sacred? What? When was it ever sacred? Soft bells, empty halls?

No, you must have Zen confused with a funeral home.

Every age has its massive collection of heavily loaded apple carts, and the job of Zen is to overturn them. When up is down, and insanity is called normal, that’s where you begin…


Exit From the Matrix

(To read about Jon’s mega-collection, Exit From The Matrix, click here.)


Jon Rappoport

The author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world. You can sign up for his free NoMoreFakeNews emails here or his free OutsideTheRealityMachine emails here.

11 comments on “Modern Zen

  1. Zoe says:

    So very provocative! What a wonderful post. xo

  2. Claudette says:

    I laughed out loud. At 84, that’s hard to do.

  3. Paul says:

    Waiter: “And what will you have, sir?”

    I’ll take a 2 inch New York steak, rare. Baked potato, slathered with sour cream & butter. And broccoli, lightly steamed.

    Waiter: “Do you want chives on your potato?”

    What the hell are chives ?

    Waiter: “Well… they’re like onions.”

    Well why didn’t you just say onions.

    Waiter: “Well they’re dark green & they look nice on the sour cream.”

    You know I’m going to eat this stuff, right ?

    Waiter: “Would you like a second vegetable?”

    Thank you, but I’ll pass on the bupkis.

  4. Paul says:

    The Moment of Now

    Vision. True story.

    I’m standing in darkness. I see a bright, perfectly circular light in the distance, let’s say 100′ away.

    It becomes brighter as it approaches me, stopping at ~ 60′ from me. The circle is slowly rotating to the right.

    (I was in my 20’s working construction. This type work makes one very logical & objective).

    So as I watch this object, I say within myself casually, “It’s turning clockwise.”

    As soon as I think the ‘-ise’ of the last word, a voice comes close to my left ear & says, “Look closer.”

    So…not thinking such a request is unfounded, I agree internally & as soon as that intention is made, I am launched forward in an instant to be placed right next to the object. AND IT IS HUGE. Diameter ~ 40′. ~ 2′ thick.

    In fact, I’m actually a bit scared at its enormity. While it is still slowly rotating, the top of it (12 o’clock position) begins to slowly lay down backwards as the 6 o’clock position raises up. So its rotating again, in a different plane, around its central axis. A little scared again, I think ‘If this thing slides just a little towards me, it will crush me.’ But it didn’t, thankfully.

    So the object levels out horizontal & I’m standing right next to it at the 9 o’clock position. It’s about navel height.

    I now realize…it is NOT actually rotating. And it is composed of 12 humongous diamond-like, triangular, heavily faceted stones.

    (I say 12 because I focused on the 90 degree quadrant at the 1-3 o’clock positions. I didn’t actually count the other 9, just gazed quickly at the whole.)

    So I watch the 2 o’clock stone & it is oscillating up & down (rotating slightly up/down along its radial axis).

    ‘A Dance’, as it were, is occurring throughout the object. That is, all abutting edges of adjacent stones move perfectly together. (As abutting edges b/w stones 1-2 move up, stone edges 2-3 move down).

    Vision ends.
    *

    I didn’t know what to think of it really, & put it out of my mind.

    ~ 5 years later, reading a book, I saw an almost exact representation of it & learned it’s called a mandala.

    If you look up the meaning, it is exhausting because it can mean just about anything.

    But I still wonder about a possible representation of time.

  5. Tina Marian says:

    I have a T-shirt on that reads, “Sometimes I talk to myself, then we both laugh and laugh.” I have an incredibly busy and entertaining mind. The last thing I would want to do is quiet it down. I love to write and people have told me I am good at it. Jon I love your podcasts, newsletters and find your work incredibly thought provoking and laugh out loud funny too.

  6. “No one knows what they would do or how they would react in the spontaneous moment. That’s why it is avoided.”

    This *is* by design, as Jon also wrote. The CONs use fear to CON-TROLL us.

    Don’t let them.

    Be spontaneous. Be creative. Be flirtatious with the NOW.

    Because courting the future is playing their “artificial elevation to fame” game, and dwelling in the past is playing their “re-live ancestral trauma” drama game.

    Be the divine spark of the Creator that you are meant to be.

    That’ll really fuck them up.

  7. bertibear says:

    I am in full agreement.After years of going on retreats I am angrier than before.This need to see the matrix is still there.No regrets because at least I can see it but..

  8. bertibear says:

    After years of zen retreats I am still angry but at least I am aware of the matrix

  9. Lisa says:

    I can see this passivity all around me. Seems many people confuse it with peace, and not wanting to be uncomfortable. Sooner or later everyone is going to be pretty uncomfortable. Why not do something to change that trajectory? Thank you for your insight.

  10. Dogen was right says:

    I used to read a lot of Zen. The ancients called the Zen you described here as “dead leaves.” The samurai called these Zen types as “smelling of old books.”

  11. Roundball Shaman says:

    “What’s wrong with Zen? Nothing is wrong with Zen, except the people who practice it. That’s a joke. Sort of.”

    In the simplest of terms, Zen is about unplugging from the chaotic, noisy, baseline level of Life that we live within most of the time. It is finding freedom from the restrictions and limitations of Mind and re-grounding ourselves within the World of No Limits and deeply-felt Experience. Experience without walls and definitions.

    Life is not the false movie we create within our Minds most of the time. Real Life is a fizz of ‘particles’ flashing in and out of existence that our Mind patches together into some kind of story line.

    Zen is where we stop looking at the fictional movie our regular Mind is making and we just experience the magic of those ‘particles’ without body that sparkle into a magic soup of light and energy. The greatest fireworks show that you will ever see. And this show never ends. No big climax and finale to mourn that it’s over like the one of the Fourth of July. This one just keeps on going with better and more colorful fireworks.

    In Zen, we find our true identity is ‘outside’ ourselves. Outside of the normal boundaries that we erect to define who and what we are. We re-imagine and re-feel that our true home is OUT THERE. But of course, there is no ‘out there’. Everything happens inside our Consciousness. That is, if Consciousness even had an inside.

    Does one ‘practice’ Zen? Not really. Zen is a state of being. Does one ‘practice’ the feeling of Love? Hardly. You either feel love or you don’t. There is no practice needed.

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