Interviewed 6\23\93 by DC
Suzuki Roshi was a very solid trustworthy person.
DC: I’m thinking of doing a book on Suzuki Roshi when I finish the one
I’m working on (Thank You and OK!) and so, since I’m living here in
xx this year I thought I’d better talk to as many of the people here
who knew him as I can. When I came to Zen Center you were one of the older
students, one of the pillars. I remember how straight and steady you sat.
So, what do you remember that you’d like to share?
A1: I don't think there's anything I know that others don't know.
DC: No matter.
A1: It was [her husband] who took me to Zen Center. He
studied painting with [art teacher] who I eventually studied with and
she had a connection with a group of women who were connected with the
Vedanta Society. Then we heard about these Tuesday night lectures [or
maybe Wednesday night]. It was 1962. We started going to them and Suzuki
Roshi [called Rev. Suzuki or Suzuki Sensei back then] was lecturing on the
Blue Cliff Records. We set up chairs and he was lecturing at the Sokoji
zendo and his English wasn't so good.
I came one morning to sit finally in 1963 and Suzuki Roshi whispered in
my ear at five thirty in the morning. He showed me how to hold my hands
and pushed in my back and whispered about counting my breathes. And that
sufficed for the next three years until Tassajara.
DC: I’ve heard a lot of people mention that when they first sat at
Sokoji he came up and did something to recognize them.
A1: The publication of Phillip Kapleau's book [The Three Pillars of
Zen] in about 1965 was a big revelation. Before that there wasn't very
much on Zen practice and meditation. The other books weren't about
practice. I look back on that three years of sitting in abject ignorance
as being wonderful. We just went and listened to the heater going on and
off in the zendo at five thirty in the morning and Suzuki Roshi would come
and whisper in your ear. There were two periods. I was working at the UC
Medical center and I used to walk up Laguna Street from Haight and Laguna
to Sokoji every morning. It started at 5:30 in the morning. I got chased a
couple of times.
After zazen you'd file through that little room and bow to Suzuki Roshi
and he'd look at you and he'd give me this piercing look that deflected
off me in a poignant way. We'd walk through the little anteroom and bow to
him and then go out to where the coats were. At some point people got to
looking so weird in the zendo that he put a mirror up so you could see
yourself before you went into the zendo. That was at the height of the
wild hippie looks like ‘65 or ‘66.
Bill Kwong was there and Mel and Dick Baker I guess but I don't recall
him so often.
Mel and Silas and Stan White and I used to go sit with this Chinese
master that was in that same neighborhood - Dow Lun [sp?]
DC: Later called Master Hua Tim Buckley lived with him. He went on from
being an obscure teacher who was a tough landlord and sitting with a few
people to having his Taoist Zen place in Chinatown then to the Mission and
their translation society and Gold Mountain Monastery then got the mental
hospital in Mendocino which they called the City of the Ten Thousand
Buddhas. http://www.drba.org/branches/cttb/
A1: He was incredible. I sat sesshins there. It was only three or four
blocks from Sokoji. There would be three or four Chinese women cooking
furiously and we'd be eating fast. He'd get out his sutra charts. We
couldn't get enough so we were looking for places to sit. We were
amazingly stupid. It was wonderful to have the freedom to not know.
I've had two teachers who were able to teach me in indirect ways.
Suzuki Roshi and [art teacher]. She never said, this is a theory and we're
going to do it. We did it from the ground up. It was wonderful. It didn't
fit with our time conscious semester ideas. It's a very luxurious way to
learn. It's the old master student relationship in which you learned
without explicit theoretical constructs. It was very nice.
I think there are some drawbacks too. I think in my early training I
wasn't countered. I had a lot of energy and I didn't know what to do with
it. It's difficult for me to have a relationship in any kind of depth. I
don't move toward groups. I also think that Suzuki Roshi was pretty
overwhelmed with us. He had all these crazy Westerners searching for
something mental that would illuminate our lives rather than a spiritual
understanding.
When I came in ‘62 I was coming out of a pretty heavy drug scene. Acid
and peyote. I'd been drinking a lot in North Beach. And I started reading
Thomas Merton and I wanted a form to relate to, a practice. I lived in
North Beach. It was still a beatnik hangout.
DC: When did you come to San Francisco and from where?
A1: I left Omaha in 1959 and drove a rental car with my friend to San
Francisco and I got a job and went to San Francisco State but mostly I was
into the night life at North Beach. That's where I met [husband] - he was a
bartender at the Anxious Asp. As opposed to the later hippie scene, these
were intelligent people. I remember Stan White playing chess at the Coffee
Gallery. There was a bar called the Gino and Carlos which was the place to
be - it was on Green Street and was like a clubhouse - you played pool and
Janis Joplin used to come there and [husband] played pool with her. The
Anxious Asp was a few doors up. It was this cool little Italian
neighborhood and I lived in a little hotel above an Hawaiian bar. There
was a lot of alcohol and coffee and a little grass.
Then [husband] and I moved to the suburbs in ‘62 - Haight and Laguna. It
was very quiet. The convent was there and a block away was a Jewish girls
residence that became the Zen Center [in ‘69]. We lived right across from UC Extension. [right where Chris Pirsig was killed.] They had the big LSD
conference there at the extension that Alpert and Leary went to. I'd heard
about them from friends of mine who'd been with them in Mexico.
DC: Dick Baker put that on.
A1: I was very influenced by peyote. It gave me a glimpse of a gentler
way and I really wanted a way out of all that drug and alcohol and night
life scene. So I was reading Thomas Merton and I liked the idea of a
liturgical calendar - that the year is divided up into spiritually
oriented practice. I'd read Alan Watts and DT Suzuki and was into the beat
Zen but then when I started going to Suzuki Roshi's lectures it didn't
seem to have anything to do with any of the stuff that I'd read.
DC: And how did he strike you? I guess that’s not a good way to word it
considering he carried that little stick. How did he impress you?
A1: Suzuki Roshi was a very solid trustworthy person. I used to say
that everybody starts Zen practice for the wrong reason. Whatever my needs
were at that time I projected into that, but certainly I never had any
real doubt after sitting there that that's what I wanted to be doing and
that it was something important and most of it was just stirred on by this
rather unique person who never affirmed or negated what I was doing - he
was just there and I didn't ask a lot of questions and didn't receive any
answers that I recall but it was just what I needed at that time - it was
quiet and steady and it just planted a little seed that had to be tended
very carefully.
Suzuki Roshi didn't speak English very well and you'd only catch every
few words and the Blue Cliff Records were very opaque to me. I had no idea
what this was all about. But I liked the lectures.
DC: I wasn't so interested in them but I didn't care. I just liked
listening to him.
A1: I was using it as a place to get my life together.
What a contrast Three Pillars was.
He had to be very careful at that time about what he said. There were
two generations there. One, this older group of women that had some
experience with other things like Vedanta - Betty Warren and Della and
Jean.
It wasn't Suzuki Roshi's style to talk about enlightenment. He was
responding to the two generations. I was in the second one which was the
post beatnik pre hippie drug experienced group confusing what they thought
Zen practice would be with some sort of attainment of drug induced
experiences - special states of mind as he said it wasn't. Three Pillars
might have fed into that but I think it was helpful.
DC: Suzuki Roshi didn't usually say so much about drugs one way or
another and Yasutani and Kapleau I think were more outspoken against them.
There are times when Suzuki said if you wanted to practice you shouldn’t;
use drugs.
A1: I ended up in the American Church of God here in x for a couple
of years - the Peyote Church. It's the Anglo version of the Peyote Church.
I had a real problem with Zen Center when I left there. Suzuki Roshi in
as much said to me that he did not know what to do with female students. I
was there at the first training period and I never felt that I lacked for
being able to approach him or work with him but I think culturally it did
confuse him wondering how to work with female students. He initially
envisioned Tassajara as being only men and Dick Baker said no that's not
going to fly here. So he had already expressed some reservations - it just
never occurred to him. There were strange things like how could women
experience a deep hara type experience when they have other things in
their abdomen.
DC: That's a Japanese type way to think. Reminds me of a lot of things
I’ve heard over there.
A1: It came through the system but I don't know who to attribute it to.
DC: Tatsugami Roshi said that women had more smells and so should bathe
more - like during sesshin.
DC: But in 1974 when I left Zen Center, ostensibly to come to New
Mexico and study with [art teacher], I was getting pretty uptight about the
whole patriarchal imposition on the practice. All the male priests. I
wasn't a radical feminist though I have no problem with that term but
something seemed amiss to me and I think it was built into the structure
of Buddhism. I feel a lot more comfortable now - Rita Gross's book,
Buddhism after Patriarchy is wonderful. It's something every woman student
has to look at and has to feel comfortable about.
DC: Zen Center and Buddhism in general in America these days has a very
strong female component. I bet half the teachers are women. Maybe more.
A1: I found the succession extremely problematic. I had trouble with
Dick. Don't forget that Grahame Petchey was initially his choice but he
went to Japan and never came back.
I couldn't ask questions. I'm very critical of myself for how I was in
my first years of practice. I used a lot of Buddhist dogma to not be as
decisive as I could. Even in my marriage. There was a certain dullness I
justified in that way. I needed to be woken up. I needed a relationship
with a teacher that would make that apparent. We didn't come out of Suzuki
Roshi's death with the thought that we can think for ourselves. We were
very yea-saying and we were sleepy.
DC: Good, good. But see – it wasn’t permanent. You’re no yea-sayer now
and I think generally people have woken up some about all that.
A1: I was talking to some women at Zen Center about the patriarchal
overtones at Zen Center and Dick talked about monkeys forcing others off
the limb and I thought it was time to go.
DC: I remember that. He was saying he saw a picture of some monkeys on
a limb and he could see their competition and delusion and all and how we
were like that.
A1: [husband] had told me I'd never leave - I had it too good. Zen Center
supported me, I lived in the building, I had a place to paint. It was very
very comfortable. Thank god I left. It was too comfortable. It took me
years to get over Zen Center - much more difficult than a divorce. Very
few places are run as smoothly as Zen Center. It set the standard. And a
lot of that came from Dick.
I got a tremendous amount also from Tatsugami. He said a lot of things
to me that changed my life. One day he said to me, "you chant very well"
and I said I didn't feel it was so good and he said, "it doesn't matter
how you feel." He wasn't self-congratulating and he would laugh at us -
all of us and he broke down a lot of that serious style. He taught us all
that doan stuff. There's a sort of protestant streak in Zen,
self-searching, critical, more concerned with form than substance.
Buddhism would become allied with the earth oriented sort of practices
in Asian countries like Shinto in Japan and Bon in Tibet but here it was
very heady and didn't have the earthy practice to ally itself with.
DC: Gary Snyder and others have tried to bring that in.
A1: When I started using peyote in a ritual form, it's very powerful
stuff and I really felt that it would be better for Zen to have some sort
of body centering experience rather than some mental construct that was
leading us on. We got a militaristic black robed protestant thing but I
think of Suzuki Roshi dancing with a lampshade on his head at the New
Years party at Tassajara when we all got very drunk. It might have been
the first year.
DC: Yeah, I think so – at the New Year’s Eve party.
A1: Suzuki Roshi had a natural affinity for Trungpa. They greeted each
other with an intimacy that was very touching.
I think Suzuki Roshi got swallowed up by the institution that grew up
around him. He was a lot looser person than Zen Center became. That tends
to happen. But he remained a kind of mild farmer type teacher. I'm not
sure that's what he meant to happen but it did. I don't think it's a
reflection of his personality.
We really fell for that hierarchical thing. Very few people can handle
that kind of power. I think we have to sacrifice a generation. It will be
strong manure. We were all extremely individualistic group of people who
were trying to do something that went against our grain. We'd grown up
with strong ego development and I just think that we have to be generous
with ourselves and we may be the manure it grows out of.
DC: Maybe this is the meeting of the Japanese way and the American way.
A1: That will come will come out of the mistakes we've made and we
shouldn't be afraid to make mistakes. I had to learn to forgive the
institution and myself. I'm more aware of group dynamics now. I think I
need a teacher and I think it's hard to see what you're doing without a
teacher. I'd be happy to have a male teacher but I think we need female
teachers. You need someone to knock you down to size sometime - you need
feedback.
I was in a cabin at Tassajara in the fall and Tatsugami threw open my
door and he was such a powerful presence standing there and I don't know
what he said to me but I got some feedback. Suzuki Roshi would give me
feedback when we'd bow at the anteroom. I think there are problems with
practicing alone.
Suzuki Roshi's teaching was, like he said, walking through the mist and
your clothes become wet - enduring practice. He expected you to clean
every corner even if they weren't dirty. It was an extremely luxurious to
have him as a teacher. I thought I will do anything that was required. I
wasn't expected to get a job or be ordained or get enlightened.
He and [art teacher] were great intuitive teachers and they did not have a
system and didn't hand you a teaching with a progression on a platter. It
was very formal but there was no beginning course. Non systematic and very
intuitive.
DC: We tried to make it systematic and always asked for more rules.
A1: Tatsugami would say, if you're going to ask for a role I'll give
you one. He broke my idealization that Zen was Suzuki Roshi. I loved to
see the practice reflected in different personalities. Katagiri would
translate for Tatsugami but nobody would translate for Katagiri.
DC: Katagiri hated doing it and he didn’t like Tatsugami who treated
him like an inferior. Yoshimura was better but Dan was the best but then
who knows how much Dan understood. I went to Suzuki Roshi and said that
Dan translated for Tatsugami and it was so superior. Can't he translate
for Tatsugami? and Suzuki said, no, it's better for Katagiri or Yoshimura
to do that and I said that at the UN they always try to have people
translate into their own language from your second but no matter what I
said he wouldn't give in.
Do you think of yourself as a Buddhist?
A1: Yes. I didn't when I was in the peyote church but I've come back.
I'm not doctrinaire. I try not to get involved in new age things. I'm 52
and I figure I'm in the last third of my life. I explored pretty widely in
the middle third so now I want to focus on my priorities. Gertrude Stein
said it takes a lot of doing nothing to be able to do something. I
consider myself a hermit. I have time to read and ride my bicycle and sit.
And I have an intense job in the emergency room two days a week.
DC: What else do you remember about the old Zen Center?
A1: I remember Neville Warwick and he came with his girlfriend who had
black hair and bangs and he wore some sort of robes. [Warwick was a real
character who went on to for a group of hiking Shingon Buddhists who,
among other things, had a bus in which they went to fires and helped
people out. As the head of this group he was called Ajari San.]
Sometimes I think the Tibetans have more to bring and it may have a
deeper influence in the US. And when people ask me about Buddhism I direct
them to Vipassana. I'm very impressed by the Dali Lama and I like
Trungpa's writings more and more. Trungpa underestimated the incredible
strength of Western culture and it devoured him. Trungpa thought he was on
top of the negativity of the West and he thought he was too strong. We
tend to think we don't have a culture.
Something that I’ve hesitated to say because I don’t want to discourage
students is that because Suzuki Roshi's way was so gradual and intuitive,
when people did have special experiences or big experiences, I'm not sure
he knew how to deal with them. When I look at koan practice, it does at
least give people something to chew on. I know there were students there
that when something illuminating would happen to them, there didn't seem
to be a way of maturing them and of making that insight deepen and mature
and that's my main criticism of Soto from my experience.
Something happened to me at Tassajara in which I didn't know anything
had happened because I was not very cognizant and Suzuki Roshi sent for me
and acknowledged that something had happened but I didn't know what was
going on and I didn't know how to follow up with this and koan practice
would have been a way of illuminating it. People had experiences they
didn't know how to handle.
DC: So you think working with a koan would have helped you then?
A1: But I have a hard time relating to koan practice - I don't know
anyone who does it who I'd really trust. I went to that Catholic priest's
lecture - the one from Amarillo. I don't know. How can he wear two hats?
DC: I was glad to have heard him. He wasn't arrogant.
There was a fellow at the first practice period who Katagiri went on to
ordain later – Tim Burkett [now, 2005, the abbot of the Minneapolis Zen
Meditation Center http://www.mnzencenter.org/] He was pretty intense.
A1: Sure, I remember him.
DC: We were doing the meal chant one day and the part where you say we
should reflect on whether our virtue and practice deserve it, he folded
his bowls back up and refused food. Just that meal. Anyway, he had some
sort of breakthrough experience and he was dancing around babbling
outside. I think Suzuki Roshi had given him a mantra which I don't
remember ever having heard of his doing before. And my impression of it
was that it was out of control. But I’d like to hear what he has to say
about that now. I wonder what he’d say about how Suzuki dealt with it.
Mainly when people had experiences Suzuki just encouraged them to keep
sitting, keep practicing, and not to be attached to them.
A1: When I look at Tibetan techniques they seem to know what to do. In
Soto it seemed more like a twenty year experience and I'm not sure that
style is appropriate for Western time frames.