Jealousy Is a Warning -
Middle Way Manager
Shozan Jack Haubner FALL
2015 tricycle
Think your teacher is not
competitive? Think again.
At night I lie in bed,
unable to sleep. Worst-case scenarios run through my head—and then
I remember that they’re not worst-case scenarios at all. I’m living
them. My teacher died, our community has torn itself apart in his
absence, and I’m 42, single, and still not totally sure what I want
to do with my life.
Plus I have the prostate of
a 70-year-old man, which is not as fun as it sounds. At night I pee
in an old plastic mozzarella cheese bucket I keep by the side of
the bed, because I pee a lot and the bathroom is too far down the
hall. I mean, it’s not in another zip code or something, but the
stone hallway tile is really hard and cold, and anyway, don’t judge
me. One man’s sad little habit is another man’s life
hack.
I live at and manage a city
temple founded by my teacher 50 years ago. The halls are haunted by
his absence. The place is full of ghosts. At night they all seem to
take up residence in my room—in my head. I can’t stop worrying.
Mostly I worry about how the temple will survive on my limited
charisma and Cracker Jack insights. Who will want to come study
with me? Is it my job to be spiritually impressive, to draw in new
students, or is this just ego?
I never wanted to make a
career out of Zen. I simply wanted to find a way to live. Making a
living at being wise seems to come so naturally to some people.
They write a few books, smile from a few lifestyle magazine covers,
and suddenly they’re filling auditoriums. Bastards. I belong to a
different class. Not a spiritual superstar, but not a freshman
practitioner either. Not enlightened, but I can help a rookie
upgrade her practice. I deal in small volumes of local
dharma.
I’m a middle way
manager.
After my suiji-shiki, or
priest/teacher ordination ceremony, they put me in the temple
tearoom as a kind of dharma show pony. There I stood, in 30 pounds
of hand-sewn garments, trying to make sense of my new red and gold
fan, when a Japanese woman, about 50 years of age, approached me,
went down on her knees before me, and began bowing and saying
“Shozan-san! Thank you! Thank you!” “Okay,” I said, bowing my head,
“Yes, thank you.” “Thank you! Thank you Shozan-san!” She stayed
down there an awfully long time and I began to go red in the face.
“Okay, yes, thank you too. Okay . . . ” “Thank you Shozan-san!
”
There were tears in
people’s eyes. Everyone looked so in love with their idea of me
just then. And who was I to argue? Much of your job as a new Zen
priest involves pretending that you actually are the kind of person
that people keep mistaking you for. You are constantly walking the
thin line between growing into your new role and faking the
part.
That being said, whatever
you do, don’t try to hide your weaknesses. This is the spiritual
equivalent of the guy who combs the hair down by his ears up over
the shiny bald spot on the top of his head. No one’s fooled. The
only thing worse than trying to look younger than you are is trying
to look wiser than you are.
Of course you can’t win,
because once you’re open about your flaws, students judge you every
bit as harshly as you used to judge the teachers in your own life.
They even compare you to your own spiritual heroes, often with a
look on their face as though they’ve eaten a bad piece of fish, and
suddenly you realize that those deep souls who inspired you are
somehow now your competitors—and you go from admiring to envying
them.
I started thinking about
how many truly extraordinary Buddhist teachers there are in this
world, and how lucky I am that they all live so far
away.
Envy is born from
insecurity. We often think that insecurity comes from a weak ego,
but in my experience it is the result of an inflexible ego that has
mistaken itself as the center of the universe, which keeps
contradicting it on this key point. Whatever its origin, envy is
not the proper response to spiritual decency in others. Yet there
it was, rising up in me just the other night after I had peed in my
cheese bucket. I lay back down and started thinking about how many
truly extraordinary Buddhist teachers there are in this world, and
how lucky I am that they all live so far away. I mean, how could I
compete for students with the Dalai Lama?
I tried to puff myself up
by thinking about the book I wrote and its dozens of fans. Then I
remembered who is shelved next to me at Barnes & Noble. Thich
Nhat something or other. There are about 500 titles in the Eastern
religions section, and at least one thousand of them are written by
him. Who writes this many books? How does he do it?
I went on in this vein
until the sun started to rise and I had to pee again. I stumbled
out of bed and stepped right into my bucket of urine—at which point
I utterly freaked out. I thought I’d fallen into a frigid pool of
death or something. I screamed and kicked my foot, and the pee
bucket shot right through my paper shoji screen and across the
room, where it hit the wall and landed with a thud.
I cleaned up my mess,
cursed a great deal, crawled back in bed, and lay there like the
middle-aged ersatz Eckhart Tolle I am. No way I was falling asleep
now. I replayed the pee bucket incident again and again in my head,
audibly groaning each time. The worst person to be embarrassed in
front of is yourself, because out of everyone you know you’re
probably the least willing to forget any of the stupid things that
you do.
Humility, however, brings
clarity. Sometimes you’re just too busy thinking about yourself to
really see yourself clearly. That’s when life puts a banana peel—or
a pee bucket—in your path. That morning I clearly saw just how
heavy I had grown with the burden of trying to be someone who I am
not. I needed to go back to the core of Zen practice: doing simple
things completely, not trying to do big things for a large
audience. I’m a monk, not Tony Robbins. If people get something out
of practicing with me, great. But I can’t carry anyone into the
zendo with me, either through charisma, insight, or marketing.
That’s just not what this path is about. People have to bring
themselves to the practice. And when they do, I’m there to practice
with them.
My job as a middle-aged
middle manager of the middle way is the same as that of any lay
practitioner, right on up to the most enlightened being on the
planet: we all must commit wholeheartedly, moment after moment, to
the life we have, instead of fantasizing about a different life
while putting down or envying those who are supposedly living it.
When I start feeling jealous of others, it’s a warning sign that
I’ve become a little bit too entranced by some idea of myself and
have lost touch with the reality of my life. Someone else seems to
better represent this idea of myself than I do, and suddenly I want
his life instead of my own.
Zen practice, however,
teaches you to completely be yourself—if you don’t, who will?
Someone’s got to hold down your corner of the universe, and no one
else is qualified. If you are not fully present in your life, there
will be an absence in the world where you should be. That absence
won’t be big or small, it will be the exact same size as your
presence: perfectly you-sized.
After the Japanese woman
finally got up from her knees that day in the tearoom, a tall,
funny-looking monk friend of mine took her place before me. He saw
my expression and growled. “Don’t forget the most important thing
about being a Zen priest—wear your responsibilities
lightly!”
It was one of those rare
moments where someone says something that you didn’t know you
needed to hear, and it makes all the difference. A well-put
spiritual phrase usually happens like this, by accident or chance,
in response to some particular need. Genuine teaching arises in
small moments, person to person. At least that’s always how it’s
been for me. When you’re fully present in your life, the teachings
have a way of finding you—and when you’re not, a bucket of piss
becomes the Buddha and wakes you up.