Fate Zen poetry

Yuan's Zen poems are as follows:

1, everything is like a dream.

2, the origin is like the wind, and the cycle of life and death.

3, the fate is scattered, and the world of mortals is like a dream.

4, the edge is deep and shallow, like a dream.

5, fate is born and died, and cause and effect are not empty.

6, the origin of fate, everything goes with fate.

7. Fate is determined by heaven, not by people at all.

8. Fate is the cause and effect of past lives, and it is the encounter of this life.

9. From sex, sex comes from the heart.

10, the fate is shallow, but the fate is deep.

Poetry expresses the Zen meaning of "fate"

In other words, everything is the result of karma and fate. In Buddhism, "fate" refers to the mutual relationship and influence between things, including fate, karma, reincarnation and so on between people. By describing the ups and downs of fate and the inevitability of karma, these poems express Buddhist views on life, fate and interpersonal relationships. At the same time, these poems also emphasize the importance of being born with fate, not clinging to the secular, and cherishing the present.

In addition, these poems are also highly artistic in expression, depicting the wonder and profundity of fate with refined language and vivid metaphor. For example, "the origin is empty, and everything is like a dream" expresses the emptiness essence of everything that is born by reason and dies by reason.

Fate is born when it gathers, and it dies when it disperses, which depicts the impermanence of fate and the inevitability of life and death. "Fate is the cause and effect of previous lives, but the encounter in this life" expresses the concept of predestination and karma in previous lives.