Zen and with it Buddhism over the years has turned out to be somewhat of a flop: a low budget movie with not much of an audience. These days it mainly survives in academic circles. About all that resonates with the public is doing seated meditation and listening to someone chant a mantra. In this interpretation it is about learning how to relax in a stressful day today world.
But wait a minute, my complaint is really about youth which is almost always impulsive and in the final analysis wrongheaded.
Relative to this day and age where emotions dominate becoming stuck on various ideas which then become either fanciful or ideological, we are far from being able to appreciate the subtlety of Zen and most of all Buddhism. The subtlety of which I am speaking is about being able to transcend language going to that mysterious place from which our illusory existence begins.
“There is no language to describe Chan [Dhyāna, Zen]. One must achieve his understanding through an enlightenment experience” (Dahui 大慧).
When language fails to enter into Siddhartha’s awakening and convey it to us, what then must we do? (At this point we are still hoping that language will give us a clue.) Here we have arrived at the point where both Zen and Buddhism fail to meet the expectations of the public who depend upon dichotomous knowing/vijñāna (perceiver and perceiving knowing). Truth be told, it is this kind of knowing that dominates the Western mind keeping it from true reality.
Slowly, we are moving closer to the real problem that we face today which is our inability to go where the mystics went; to see that which is beyond the sphere of language. Worse still, we have little or no respect for these mystics.