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The critical phrase (huatou)

Fixing the mind on a single baffling word until the pressure of "great doubt" cracks open into insight.

Huatou (Chinese 話頭, "the head of the word") is a meditation method from the Chan tradition of Chinese Buddhism — the school known in Japan as Zen, which prizes direct, wordless insight into the mind's true nature over book-learning. Buddhism in general is the path taught by the Buddha ("the awakened one") for waking up from the confusion that makes ordinary life unsatisfying. Huatou is one of Chan's sharpest tools for forcing that awakening.

The method grows out of the gong'an, or koan — a short, often baffling story or question used in Chan training (for example, a monk asks, "Does a dog have buddha-nature?" and the master Zhaozhou answers simply, "No" / Chinese "Wú"). Instead of pondering the whole story, the practitioner concentrates on its single pivotal word or phrase — the "head" of the saying — and holds it relentlessly, asking inwardly something like "What is this 'No'?" The point is not to find a clever answer. It is to keep questioning until ordinary reasoning runs out and a state called "great doubt" builds up: a total, whole-bodied not-knowing that the thinking mind cannot resolve.

The tradition teaches that when this concentrated doubt reaches a breaking point, it can suddenly shatter, opening into a flash of direct insight that words could never have delivered. The technique was systematized in China during the Song dynasty, especially by the twelfth-century master Dahui Zonggao, who promoted it as a focused, portable practice anyone could carry into daily life. Huatou belongs specifically to the East Asian Chan/Zen stream and is not part of the older Indian or Theravāda forms of Buddhism.

Key passages(20)

Essays in Zen Buddhism (First Series) · D. T. Suzuki

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