WARRIORSHIP
by Sensei Robert Joshin Althouse (c) 2007
"The essence of warriorship, or the essence
of human bravery, is refusing to give up on anyone or anything.
We can never say that we are simply falling to pieces or that anyone
else is, and we can never say that about the world either "
from Shambhala: the Sacred Path of the Warrior by
Chogyam Trungpa
When speaking of heroes, we have every right
to be cynical. The heroes we idolize, such as Rambo or John Wayne
help perpetuate the illusion of our innocence. Real soldiers
have lost any trace of innocence, so they often feel alienated
and disoriented upon returning to the homeland they fought and
risked their lives to protect.
Perhaps it would help if we could appreciate
heroes in the context of warriorship. Such traditions are common
in many traditional cultures; they are also common in Mahayana
Buddhism, of which Zen is a part. In Zen we speak of such a warrior
as a Bodhisattva which means "one with an awakened heart". Such
Bodhisattva warriors have forged their sanity and generosity
out of the crucible of their own misery and suffering. They have
descended to confront their own fear and aggression. They emerge
from this descent with an unconditional commitment to liberate
and heal the suffering of all beings.
Zen training begins with a descent, touching
what Chogyam Trungpa often referred to as our "sad and tender heart".
This is spiritual work that requires rigor, discipline and commitment.
It is done on a meditation cushion in the life of the sangha
community. Awareness of our own vulnerability is humbling but
through such practice we learn, slowly to emerge from our darkness
into the light of day with more openness, humor, inspiration
and fearlessness. Until we have fully descended in this manner,
any ascent is premature.
This is how we activate the inner warrior and take
the enormous and heroic step of orienting our lives towards the
liberation of all beings. The qualities displayed by Bodhisattvas
are truly inspiring for those around them. A high degree of personal
mastery and moral integrity is evident, along with generosity,
fearlessness and loyalty. Bodhisattvas discover enormous resources
within themselves. The world is workable. Obstacles are further
opportunities for spiritual practice. They are brave because they
have faced their own fears and have no need to project them onto
others. They nurture and support life and their sanity is never
on display or inflated with a sense of self-importance.
We are always in need of Bodhisattva warriors. This is why the
traditions of warriorship are so sacred in other cultures. Such
cultures had extensive rituals and rites of passage for transforming
soldiers into warriors. We have very few of these rites of passage
left in our society today. And what we see are the broken young
men and women returning from war, many unable to find their way
back home, in a civilian culture that is strange and foreign to
them.
We spend enormous resources recruiting and sending them off to
war, and almost none helping them once they return. Since we have
little awareness of the importance of warriorship, our soldiers
remain stuck in a dark, private world of war and violence that
often manifests as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
In "War and the Soul", Edward Tick, a psychologist
who has worked with veterans for several decades claims that
PTSD is an identity disorder. He has found that many of the medications
and treatments offered to veterans are of little help because
they don't address the root cause of the problem. He suggests,
that PTSD may not have been so prevalent in other cultures because
they had rituals to integrate soldiers back into their society
with new identities as warriors.
But modern war has increasingly made it more difficult
to maintain such warrior traditions. Warriorship must be directed
towards transcendent goals. When nations enter into war on false
pretenses, a moral vacuum results. Is it surprising that soldiers
find it difficult to enter into battle whole heartedly? When the
enemy is de-humanized, atrocities such as Mai Lai and Abu Ghraib
happen. How can a warrior tradition survive in such a context,
where modern technologies have depersonalized war making it possible
to kill on a massive scale?
Japan had a samurai warrior tradition that reflected
qualities of fearlessness, mastery and loyalty. So it is instructive
to appreciate how this tradition was distorted by technolgies of
modern warfare and a strident nationalism. The Chinese were de-humanized
by the Japanese and the brutal training that Japanese soldiers
received helped to de-humanize them as well. As Japanese
soldiers marched from Shanghai to Nanking in 1937 some of them
sent reports back to their home towns of their sportsman-like competition
to see who could behead the most Chinese. Once the
Japanese reached Nanking, and overtook that city, they performed
horrific acts of torture, rape and mass murder on innocent Chinese
civilians. These action hardly reflected the nobility of the
samurai tradition.
The soul knows the difference between soldier
and civilian. Because mass war does not easily distinguish the
two, soldiers incur not only physical wounds, but spiritual
wounds as well. If PTSD is an identity disorder, it may also well
be a loss of soul. Edward Tick says, "Ancient peoples
and traditional societies recognized soul wounding and soul loss,
as authentic conditions. Their shamans and spiritual healers
practiced many forms of soul healing and retrieval."
Whether we are a military veteran or civiliian, Zen
offers a spiritual training as rigorous as any military boot camp
that awakens and activates the self mastery of warriorship. It
is a path of descent and return. As shown in the tenth ox herding
picture, the Bodhisattva returns to the market place with gift
bestowing hands. His unconditional vow to contribute to the well
being of all beings guides him step by step, and can guide us too.
This is an old and ancient tradition, yet it is still up-to-date
in our troubled times. As Lao Tsu said, "Stay
with the ancient. Move with the present."
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