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The Monk Who Looked for Space Final Version

05 Wednesday Nov 2025

Posted by nightingale108 in Questions in Logic

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buddhism, meditation, mindfulness, philosophy, spirituality

The Monk Who Looked for Space

by Andrew Nightingale

Adapted from the Dhamma for Children


Once upon a time, there was a monk who wanted to know where Space was.

So he meditated and meditated and meditated, until his mind reached the angels.

He asked the angels, “Oh Angels, where is Space?”

The angels replied, “We don’t know. But if you meditate longer, you will reach even higher angels. They might know.”

So the monk meditated and meditated and meditated, and his beard grew long and grey as he sat still, until he saw the higher angels.

He asked the higher angels, “Oh High Angels, where is Space?”

And the High Angels replied, “We don’t know. But if you meditate longer, you will reach the Highest Angels. Maybe they will know.”

So the monk meditated and meditated, until his beard grew down to his feet and turned white as he sat unmoving, until he saw the Highest Angels.

He asked them, “Oh Highest Angels, where is Space?”

And they replied, “We don’t know. But if you meditate even longer, you will reach Brahma, the Highest of the High, Creator of all the worlds. He will know.”

So again, the monk meditated and meditated, until his hair fell out and his skin sagged from his bones, spotted and pale with age. At last he reached Brahma.

The monk asked, “Oh Brahma, Highest of the High, Creator of all the worlds, where is Space?”

And Brahma replied, “I am Brahma! Highest of the High, Creator of all the worlds!”

For some, this would have been enough. But the monk persisted.

“Yes,” said the monk, “and… where is Space?”

Brahma realized the monk would not go away. He drew him aside, away from his choir of angels, and whispered,

“Look, don’t tell anyone—but I don’t know where Space is. You are asking a dangerous question. If you must know, go ask the Buddha. But go at your own risk, for you go beyond my domain.”

And so the monk rose slowly from his meditation. His body trembled with age, his steps were unsteady, but his will was clear. Luckily for him, the Buddha was living then, residing in a nearby town.

He reached the Living Buddha, sat respectfully to one side, and asked his question:

“Oh Buddha, the Well-Gone, where is Space?”

The Buddha replied simply,

“It is good you came to me, for no one can answer this question except one who has finished the Noble Eightfold Path. Space can only be found in the mind of the Saint — one who has followed the Way and gone to the end of the world with his mind. For he has found Space, and it is in his mind.”

Then the Buddha, saying nothing more, imparted this knowledge in silence. And at that very moment, the monk attained Enlightenment.

From then on, he lived in supreme peace, knowing the bliss of the boundless mind, until his death and beyond.

Sorry, I don’t do policy

04 Tuesday Feb 2025

Posted by nightingale108 in Questions in Logic

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Tags

buddha, buddhism, dharma, meditation, religion

Bill Murray in the movie “Broken Flowers” (2005) plays a lonely character who receives word that he has a son through one of his past lovers. He looks for him but never finds him. In the end (spoiler for this 20 year old film) he is sitting and enjoying company with a young man he doesn’t know. He realizes that this young man could be, or might as well be, his son. The young man asks for advice and Murray says “Well, the past is gone, I know that. The future, isn’t here yet, whatever it’s going to be. So, all there is, is, is this. The present.” The young man asks if Murray is Buddhist, and Murray says “No.”

It is like this with the truth. The Buddha does not claim the truths he taught. He said he found an old path to enlightenment, and just cleared the way for others to follow it more easily. But the task is not done. We must investigate the here and now (Dhamma), and try to communicate it with each other. We must use the common words we know, rewrite them, redefine them, until the path the Buddha took is clear again. The old words the Buddha offered don’t have the same effect; words change and move. Words are impermanent. Also, the reality we face is different now, less stable (I would venture to say). The days when the Earth could withstand all our hatred and pain are nearly over.

Unfortunately, some Buddhists mistake the teaching they find in the holy books to be the teaching of the Buddha, and worse, they believe this is Buddha’s teaching, while that is not Buddha’s teaching. The Buddha gave us work to do, the most important work: liberating our minds, our purest mind, from this world-moment-already-enveloped-in-flame. The desire to shock us awake and begin working again is desperately portrayed in the call of a Zen Master:

“Zen Master Seung Sahn says that in this life we must all kill three things: First we must kill our parents. Second, we must kill the Buddha.” https://kwanumzen.org/teaching-library/1997/10/01/kill-the-buddha

The Dhamma is not the Word. Aj. Sumedho has a famous teaching “It is like this.” We don’t understand it with words and descriptions. We use “it is like this” because it is so unhelpful, so useless, that we are compelled to deal with reality as it is directly sensed. This moment I am writing is not the same moment you are reading this. but a poet can capture more depth in this moment, with a simplicity that is vastly improved from the minute steps of mathematics. A poetic text invites a sense of touch, a euphoria of touching and sharing the texture of words. one can understand a poem better with “Our poem is like this.” because by the time these leaves of thought are revisited by a future reader, “this” is no more. But Buddhism was about “this.” Now “this” has changed. My words have moved off-target. The mark has moved too. Everything is impermanent. Missing the mark is all we ever do. Our poem can share in this melancholy of the failure of words. Our poem begs to be excused and at the same time it is our most widely intimate shared moment.

I want to dedicate this message to Buddha, Dhamma (the teaching), and Sangha (the community of monks and followers).

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