The Fractal Mind by Source Potential

Zen #3 - Hyakujō and the Fox

13 min · 5 de ene de 2026
Portada del episodio Zen #3 - Hyakujō and the Fox

Descripción

A Zen master in T'ang dynasty China tells his monks about an old man who attended his teachings for months without anyone knowing who he was. The old man reveals he was once a priest on this same mountain, centuries ago, who answered a student's question wrongly and spent five hundred lives as a fox because of it. The question was simple. Does an enlightened person fall under the law of cause and effect? His original answer trapped him. Hyakujō's answer set him free. The difference between them is just one word, but that word changes everything. This is one of the most famous koans in Zen Buddhism, and it touches something we all wonder about. Does spiritual growth exempt us from ordinary consequences? Does awakening make us special, or does it place us more fully within life as it actually works? The story doesn't answer these questions through argument. It answers through what happens when understanding finally arrives. Part of The Fractal Mind Podcast, by Source Potential. New episodes every Sunday! Awakening Binaural Meditation iOS app: https://sourcepotential.org/awakening/ Official Website: https://sourcepotential.org Original Music by: Source Potential

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Fractal Mind by Source Potential!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

5 episodios

episode Zen #5 - Ryōkan and the Coins artwork

Zen #5 - Ryōkan and the Coins

A poet-monk sits with an old friend in the shade of a temple gate. The friend mentions a simple pleasure. Finding coins on the road, he says, brings a particular kind of delight. Ryōkan takes this observation to heart. He tries to recreate the experience by scattering his own coins and picking them back up. Nothing happens. No delight arrives. Confused but undeterred, he keeps trying until he loses the coins entirely in the tall grass. What he discovers while searching for them opens a door that deliberate effort could never unlock. Part of The Fractal Mind Podcast, by Source Potential. New episodes every Sunday evening (Eastern US)! Awakening Binaural Meditation app (14-day free trial): https://sourcepotential.org/awakening Official Website: https://sourcepotential.org Original Music by: Source Potential

18 de ene de 202615 min
episode Zen #3 - Hyakujō and the Fox artwork

Zen #3 - Hyakujō and the Fox

A Zen master in T'ang dynasty China tells his monks about an old man who attended his teachings for months without anyone knowing who he was. The old man reveals he was once a priest on this same mountain, centuries ago, who answered a student's question wrongly and spent five hundred lives as a fox because of it. The question was simple. Does an enlightened person fall under the law of cause and effect? His original answer trapped him. Hyakujō's answer set him free. The difference between them is just one word, but that word changes everything. This is one of the most famous koans in Zen Buddhism, and it touches something we all wonder about. Does spiritual growth exempt us from ordinary consequences? Does awakening make us special, or does it place us more fully within life as it actually works? The story doesn't answer these questions through argument. It answers through what happens when understanding finally arrives. Part of The Fractal Mind Podcast, by Source Potential. New episodes every Sunday! Awakening Binaural Meditation iOS app: https://sourcepotential.org/awakening/ Official Website: https://sourcepotential.org Original Music by: Source Potential

5 de ene de 202613 min
episode Zen #2 - The Ultimate Path is Without Difficulty artwork

Zen #2 - The Ultimate Path is Without Difficulty

The second in a weekly series of ancient koans retold. In T'ang dynasty China, the master Joshu lived to 121 years old. Where other teachers shouted or struck their students, he preferred conversation. One morning he addressed his monks with the Third Patriarch's famous verse about avoiding picking and choosing. Then he added something unexpected. "This old monk does not abide within clarity." A student saw his opening and pressed him. What followed became one of the most studied exchanges in Zen. Part of The Fractal Mind Podcast, by Source Potential. New episodes every Sunday! Awakening Binaural Meditation iOS app: https://sourcepotential.org/awakening/ Official Website: https://sourcepotential.org Original Music by: Source Potential

28 de dic de 202511 min