Popular Culture Review Vol. 26, No. 1, Winter 2015 | Page 11

Raymond is “listening and coming out of the little tragedy in [his] head”—a great definition of samsara by the way—the narrator asks him again (146). Unable to answer, the narrator says, “Then you’re dead right now” 146). That is, if you don’t know who you are right here, right now, you are already dead because you are either living in the lost past or the unknowable future to come, neither of which exist. We might even liken this brief violent interchange to the Zen kOan interviews addressed below. In Chapter 2 we learn that the narrator has been regularly attending several free evening support groups for terminally ill people to help alleviate his own insomnia and make him feel better about himself. The one group which really moves him—and the only one in which he is able to cry—is called “Remaining Men Together," a testicular cancer support group which acts as a sort of Zen sangha or community for the narrator. He is finally able to let go when he acknowledges the transient nature of existence: “Everything you can ever accomplish will end up as trash. Anything you’re ever proud of will be thrown aw ay.. . . [R]ight now, your life comes down to nothing, and not even nothing, oblivion” (7). While this recognition sounds nihilistically bleak, from the Buddhist perspective it is actually quite affirmative. That is, once one embraces the transient nature of existence—that nothing, not even notions of self are permanent—one can move on with life in the present moment. The language here, though, is highly negative: “trash,” “thrown away,” “oblivion." Oblivion—to lose conscious awareness— is a tricky word in this context. In distinguishing “nothing” from “oblivion,” he is acknowledging that nothing implies its opposite, something; whereas oblivion, or emptiness or the void— whatever you want to call the ineffable— is something. At Remaining Men Together the narrator gets “lost inside oblivion, dark and silent and complete” (12). Indeed, after his sessions he “felt more alive than [he’d] ever felt” (12). “Every evening, [he] died, and every evening, [he] was born” (13). However, as D.T. Suzuki suggests in An Introduction to Zen Buddhism, “This may be called ecstasy or trance, but it is not Zen. In Zen there must be safori; there must be a general mental upheaval which destroys the old accumulations of intellection and lays down the foundation for a new life; there must be an awakening of a new sense which will review the old things from a hither to un-dreamed-of angle of observation” (66). Although the narrator is able to get lost in the suffering of others, and although Tyler enables him to “review the old things from a hither to un-dreamed-of angle of observation,” he is and will remain far from satori (enlightenment). 7