Archives for posts with tag: The Three Attitudes

It was a book called The Three Attitudes. In it, the woman, an educated traveller, fascinated by the differences among the three main divisions of ShiO — ZirCong, RoMayZine and SurGaKu – organised her observations of the people of the ShiO clans who, within fifty years, had started the war that would unify the whole world of O.


ATTITUDE TO THE BODY

ZirCong | Famously enigmatic, the ZirCong seem to consider the world neither ideal nor material, but in an unresolved state, or in a state that is constantly resolving towards both flesh and idea. They despise the “world of dust”, and strive for the Dustless condition. When they speak of the body, therefore, they speak of an illusion, a “thing of dust”. Even the mind, viewed from an unilluminated perspective, is to the ZirCong a thing of dust, an illusion. It is said that they do not feel pain — or, if pain is felt, they are not ZirCong. Their bodies do not belong to them: they have cast them aside.

To the ZirCong, as with all ShiO Marks, the MarIsQuess — the “building without motion”, or the “still building”, or, more simply, “the Building” — is the state or condition reached by meditation, with each ShiO division using meditation techniques peculiar to their own culture. The ZirCong use their celebrated, mysterious “Starless Darkness” techniques to achieve MarIsQuess. This is not a state ordinary people can attain. True ZirCong are said never to leave the Building, but always to dwell within it. Suspicious of language and of the “traps of definition”, the ZirCong insist that the Building can’t be described, but must be experienced. The Building must be built, through hours, days, years of arduous meditation. In this process of building, the weak eliminate themselves, as lacking the spiritual purity to maintain their path upon the Way. The foolish, the braggarts, the impatient, the greedy, all of these types of soul can never, without change, erect the Building within themselves, but must languish and perish, stranded in “the world of dust and donkeys”.

This constant striving to found and construct the Building within themselves has made the ZirCong admired, revered, feared and, by many, hated. One informal document, which has been publicly circulated, details the ZirCong attitude as follows:

What the common people call “body” and “mind”, these are merely pathways to the Building. They are gates of dust, leading to the Dustless state. Once inside the Building, all outside and inside ceases. New relations are inaugurated: all the old buildings and languages of dust, though they continue to float in the void, and are used by the common people as the limits of their world, for the Dustless one, are errors of matter and thought, imperfect perception, the toys of innocent children. People will live and die, will age and grow sick, just as they have always done — only, if you dwell in the Building, then living and dying, aging and sickening, these are changed, and their meanings are changed. The laws of sickness, the laws of age, of living, and dying, do not apply to true ZirCong. Life, death, tall, short, weak, strong, body, mind, above, below, finitude, infinity, moments, eternity, these are all categories of a diseased and limited vision: the perfect and entire vision of the Dustless ensures serenity, even as the sword goes through you, or the cancer grips. A healthy body and a diseased body are, within the Building, the same thing: an arrangement of dust.

RoMayZine | For the RoMayZine, the body is a source of struggle, the flesh is a piece of dust that may be caught hold of, polished, sharpened, hardened, quickened, improved. Men and women, both, are encouraged to exercise and to work their bodies until they are the perfect instruments of war. Both sexes swim, box, run, vault, lift weights, perform intricate ritual dances, practise with sword, bow, spear, lance, axe, they are keen horsemen, and work endlessly on their balance and speed of reaction.

There is a RoMayZine saying: The eyes for the arrow, the arms for the sword, the hands for fists, the legs for running.

For the RoMayZine, the body is very important in their philosophy. They adore action: they love to train their bodies and spirits until they are exhausted, and then they feel a tremendous peace. When they are in movement, they are irresistible; and when they are at rest, they seem sated, complete.

Life, on all levels, is a battle for them. Their Way is through action. It is not uncommon to see lords or ladies of RoMayZine clans with facial bruises, scars, misaligned bones, missing teeth.

They are warrior clans. Obviously, during war they are much sought-after as allies. In peace, their company is perhaps less pursued. It is said, among the houses of ZonO – “Society” – that when matrimonial alliances are made, then if you are not from a RoMayZine clan, but marry a RoMayZine partner, then there is often trepidation and anticipation regarding coitus. As lovers, both men and women of RoMayZine culture, are considered unsubtle, crude, demanding. A RoMayZine woman, with her strongly defined musculature and powerful limbs, is usually physically much stronger than most SurGaKu men. ZonO consider RoMayZine men as, frankly, brutes.

Love of the body is love of the Way, the RoMayZine believe. Enjoy the body, and make it do your will. But do not become obsessed with it. At the right moment, throw it away. Nothing is better than dying in battle. At such a moment, the tree both flowers and fruits: where the fruit falls, no one can say.

SurGaKu | A subtle and educated woman of ZonO explained to me that the divisions of ShiO can be broken down, very roughly, into three qualities: ZirCong, wisdom; RoMayZine, action; SurGaKu, beauty.

It is said that the SurGaKu, so concerned with beauty, find the body troubling. The SurGaKu TanZo is the effort to render the world beautiful through meditation and the practice of various forms of art. They are highly conscious of the passage of time, and of the mutability of all things. The moment has pitched its tent at the heart of every particle of dust, the SurGaKu explain, but the tent is empty.

Put simply, while the ZirCong deny the body any effective reality, and the RoMayZine treat the body with a kind of rude pragmatism, the SurGaKu are perplexed and uneasy with their bodies. They are more prone to romance, to melancholy, to dolour. They have purified their sensibilities so that they are sensitive to tiny nuances in the human and the natural world. Conscious that all pleasure and pain is fleeting, their TanZo is haunted by loss. Loss, though, is beautiful: it is the necessary condition for the existence of the world.

Their poetry, songs, prints, paintings, all celebrate the power of the ephemeral. The body, then, is a point of sensitivity, of vulnerability, of delicacy, to the SurGaKu. They know that bodies are fragile, can sicken, can break. They admit the tidal powers of sexual desire, the sweep and sway of it. Ironically, although in many ways the most refined of the three divisions of ShiO, the SurGaKu are in some ways the most fleshly, the most prone to lapse and delirium. They value tenderness and restraint, gentleness, patience, yet can be the most explosively ill-disciplined of all ShiO.

A SurGaKu love poem, from the Era of Storms, goes:

Between the room of parturition,
and the Temple of Ashes,
between the bleeding at birth,
the fire coming to death,
my body has swung, moment by moment,
like pearl beads strung
upon a wire, made into a necklace.

That necklace, my love, you wear.
Lying on your breast, my head
rises and falls,
in time with your breathing:
at sea, the waves also rise and fall,
and beneath the surface
on the shadowed bed
young pearls are forming.


Re-post

It was a book called The Three Attitudes. In it, the woman, an educated traveller, fascinated by the differences among the three main divisions of ShiO — ZirCong, RoMayZine and SurGaKu – organised her observations of the people of the ShiO clans who, within fifty years, had started the war that would unify the whole world of O.


ATTITUDE TO PAIN

ZirCong | A pure person feels no pain. What is called “pain” among the common people, and people of flawed purity, is a sign of immaturity and a clinging to the body, which is to cling to dust and to sensations of dust. Although TanZo (“the Way”) is in all things, not all things are in TanZo. To feel pain is selfish, and to be selfish means you have not achieved true illumination. A Dustless person will feel neither the pain belonging to him or to her, nor the pain belonging to others. Pain is useful, as others — the impure — feel pain, and can be reached through pain and through the cessation of pain. All sensation is dust, leading to the void. Pain is dust, leading to the void. Pain is a false understanding of the world. Those who feel pain go towards the void. Achieve purity, true illumination, and there will be no pain. A Dustless person can walk among the sufferings of the damned in barbarian hells, and be unmoved; similarly, a Dustless person can walk among the blisses of the blessed in barbarian heavens, and be unmoved. Hells and heavens belong to the dust: to be truly ZirCong, one must be Dustless.

RoMayZine | Pain is real, a sign of life and of TanZo. Life is battle, and incurs pain. A woman gives birth through pain, and overcomes hardships in order to bring a child into the world. There is thus pain at the very gates of life. It cannot be avoided. But the RoMayZine spirit is never to retreat: where pain is inevitable, it is to be welcomed, as a means to prove one’s purity. The purity of the RoMayZine, the RoMayZine TanZo, is in a great, a warlike spirit. To be alive, one must fight a spiritual battle: nothing else matters. Pain is not to be inflicted needlessly, or received needlessly, but a RoMayZine will never run from pain. To fight through pain, and to win, or to lose, without wavering in one’s spirit: that is RoMayZine.

SurGaKu | Life is one event. The SurGaKu TanZo is through beauty, through appreciation of the world of natural things and through the world of things made by men and by women. Pain is an inevitable part of life, unless one is Dustless. If one is in pain, make it beautiful, do not bow before it and turn ugly, grow weak, become full of dirt and dust. Remain pure. The giving and taking of pain is to be avoided: it is not TanZo, the desire for power of one over another is a sign of weakness, a sign of impurity. Bullying, use of force, malice, the desire for triumph over others, this is not TanZo, and is a disgrace to the Way. At the pure core of all things, there is emptiness, the Dustless state: at the pure core of all life, there is nothing, there is no dust, it is a state beyond peace or war, beyond pleasure or pain, for there is no one to commit acts, no one to receive acts. Few, though, become Dustless: a handful, among billions. For the rest, there is striving through TanZo. It is idle to consider pain an easy or a pleasant thing: but to confront and survive pain, the best course of action is to become TanZo, to show courage and not to dwell too much in the illusion of the present, where painful things must befall all of us. Life is one event: that event is not here, or there, not now, or then. The Way is beauty: make your Way beautiful.

%e2%80%a2dustless-fin11

It was a book called The Three Attitudes. In it, the woman, an educated traveller, fascinated by the differences among the three main divisions of ShiO — ZirCong, RoMayZine and SurGaKu – organised her observations of the people of the ShiO clans who, within fifty years, had started the war that would unify the whole world of O.


ATTITUDE TO PAIN

ZirCong | A pure person feels no pain. What is called “pain” among the common people, and people of flawed purity, is a sign of immaturity and a clinging to the body, which is to cling to dust and to sensations of dust. Although TanZo (“the Way”) is in all things, not all things are in TanZo. To feel pain is selfish, and to be selfish means you have not achieved true illumination. A Dustless person will feel neither the pain belonging to him or to her, nor the pain belonging to others. Pain is useful, as others — the impure — feel pain, and can be reached through pain and through the cessation of pain. All sensation is dust, leading to the void. Pain is dust, leading to the void. Pain is a false understanding of the world. Those who feel pain go towards the void. Achieve purity, true illumination, and there will be no pain. A Dustless person can walk among the sufferings of the damned in barbarian hells, and be unmoved; similarly, a Dustless person can walk among the blisses of the blessed in barbarian heavens, and be unmoved. Hells and heavens belong to the dust: to be truly ZirCong, one must be Dustless.

RoMayZine | Pain is real, a sign of life and of TanZo. Life is battle, and incurs pain. A woman gives birth through pain, and overcomes hardships in order to bring a child into the world. There is thus pain at the very gates of life. It cannot be avoided. But the RoMayZine spirit is never to retreat: where pain is inevitable, it is to be welcomed, as a means to prove one’s purity. The purity of the RoMayZine, the RoMayZine TanZo, is in a great, a warlike spirit. To be alive, one must fight a spiritual battle: nothing else matters. Pain is not to be inflicted needlessly, or received needlessly, but a RoMayZine will never run from pain. To fight through pain, and to win, or to lose, without wavering in one’s spirit: that is RoMayZine.

SurGaKu | Life is one event. The SurGaKu TanZo is through beauty, through appreciation of the world of natural things and through the world of things made by men and by women. Pain is an inevitable part of life, unless one is Dustless. If one is in pain, make it beautiful, do not bow before it and turn ugly, grow weak, become full of dirt and dust. Remain pure. The giving and taking of pain is to be avoided: it is not TanZo, the desire for power of one over another is a sign of weakness, a sign of impurity. Bullying, use of force, malice, the desire for triumph over others, this is not TanZo, and is a disgrace to the Way. At the pure core of all things, there is emptiness, the Dustless state: at the pure core of all life, there is nothing, there is no dust, it is a state beyond peace or war, beyond pleasure or pain, for there is no one to commit acts, no one to receive acts. Few, though, become Dustless: a handful, among billions. For the rest, there is striving through TanZo. It is idle to consider pain an easy or a pleasant thing: but to confront and survive pain, the best course of action is to become TanZo, to show courage and not to dwell too much in the illusion of the present, where painful things must befall all of us. Life is one event: that event is not here, or there, not now, or then. The Way is beauty: make your Way beautiful.


Re-post | Originally posted October 2014

Be Dustless…

•DUSTLESS-FIN8

It was a book called The Three Attitudes. In it, the woman, an educated traveller, fascinated by the differences among the three main divisions of ShiO — ZirCong, RoMayZine and SurGaKu – organised her observations of the people of the ShiO clans who, within fifty years, had started the war that would unify the whole world of O.


 

ATTITUDE TO THE BODY

ZirCong | Famously enigmatic, the ZirCong seem to consider the world neither ideal nor material, but in an unresolved state, or in a state that is constantly resolving towards both flesh and idea. They despise the “world of dust”, and strive for the Dustless condition. When they speak of the body, therefore, they speak of an illusion, a “thing of dust”. Even the mind, viewed from an unilluminated perspective, is to the ZirCong a thing of dust, an illusion. It is said that they do not feel pain — or, if pain is felt, they are not ZirCong. Their bodies do not belong to them: they have cast them aside.

To the ZirCong, as with all ShiO Marks, the MarIsQuess — the “building without motion”, or the “still building”, or, more simply, “the Building” — is the state or condition reached by meditation, with each ShiO division using meditation techniques peculiar to their own culture. The ZirCong use their celebrated, mysterious “Starless Darkness” techniques to achieve MarIsQuess. This is not a state ordinary people can attain. True ZirCong are said never to leave the Building, but always to dwell within it. Suspicious of language and of the “traps of definition”, the ZirCong insist that the Building can’t be described, but must be experienced. The Building must be built, through hours, days, years of arduous meditation. In this process of building, the weak eliminate themselves, as lacking the spiritual purity to maintain their path upon the Way. The foolish, the braggarts, the impatient, the greedy, all of these types of soul can never, without change, erect the Building within themselves, but must languish and perish, stranded in “the world of dust and donkeys”.

This constant striving to found and construct the Building within themselves has made the ZirCong admired, revered, feared and, by many, hated. One informal document, which has been publicly circulated, details the ZirCong attitude as follows:

What the common people call “body” and “mind”, these are merely pathways to the Building. They are gates of dust, leading to the Dustless state. Once inside the Building, all outside and inside ceases. New relations are inaugurated: all the old buildings and languages of dust, though they continue to float in the void, and are used by the common people as the limits of their world, for the Dustless one, are errors of matter and thought, imperfect perception, the toys of innocent children. People will live and die, will age and grow sick, just as they have always done — only, if you dwell in the Building, then living and dying, aging and sickening, these are changed, and their meanings are changed. The laws of sickness, the laws of age, of living, and dying, do not apply to true ZirCong. Life, death, tall, short, weak, strong, body, mind, above, below, finitude, infinity, moments, eternity, these are all categories of a diseased and limited vision: the perfect and entire vision of the Dustless ensures serenity, even as the sword goes through you, or the cancer grips. A healthy body and a diseased body are, within the Building, the same thing: an arrangement of dust.

RoMayZine | For the RoMayZine, the body is a source of struggle, the flesh is a piece of dust that may be caught hold of, polished, sharpened, hardened, quickened, improved. Men and women, both, are encouraged to exercise and to work their bodies until they are the perfect instruments of war. Both sexes swim, box, run, vault, lift weights, perform intricate ritual dances, practise with sword, bow, spear, lance, axe, they are keen horsemen, and work endlessly on their balance and speed of reaction.

There is a RoMayZine saying: The eyes for the arrow, the arms for the sword, the hands for fists, the legs for running.

For the RoMayZine, the body is very important in their philosophy. They adore action: they love to train their bodies and spirits until they are exhausted, and then they feel a tremendous peace. When they are in movement, they are irresistible; and when they are at rest, they seem sated, complete.

Life, on all levels, is a battle for them. Their Way is through action. It is not uncommon to see lords or ladies of RoMayZine clans with facial bruises, scars, misaligned bones, missing teeth.

They are warrior clans. Obviously, during war they are much sought-after as allies. In peace, their company is perhaps less pursued. It is said, among the houses of ZonO – “Society” – that when matrimonial alliances are made, then if you are not from a RoMayZine clan, but marry a RoMayZine partner, then there is often trepidation and anticipation regarding coitus. As lovers, both men and women of RoMayZine culture, are considered unsubtle, crude, demanding. A RoMayZine woman, with her strongly defined musculature and powerful limbs, is usually physically much stronger than most SurGaKu men. ZonO consider RoMayZine men as, frankly, brutes.

Love of the body is love of the Way, the RoMayZine believe. Enjoy the body, and make it do your will. But do not become obsessed with it. At the right moment, throw it away. Nothing is better than dying in battle. At such a moment, the tree both flowers and fruits: where the fruit falls, no one can say.

SurGaKu | A subtle and educated woman of ZonO explained to me that the divisions of ShiO can be broken down, very roughly, into three qualities: ZirCong, wisdom; RoMayZine, action; SurGaKu, beauty.

It is said that the SurGaKu, so concerned with beauty, find the body troubling. The SurGaKu TanZo is the effort to render the world beautiful through meditation and the practice of various forms of art. They are highly conscious of the passage of time, and of the mutability of all things. The moment has pitched its tent at the heart of every particle of dust, the SurGaKu explain, but the tent is empty.

Put simply, while the ZirCong deny the body any effective reality, and the RoMayZine treat the body with a kind of rude pragmatism, the SurGaKu are perplexed and uneasy with their bodies. They are more prone to romance, to melancholy, to dolour. They have purified their sensibilities so that they are sensitive to tiny nuances in the human and the natural world. Conscious that all pleasure and pain is fleeting, their TanZo is haunted by loss. Loss, though, is beautiful: it is the necessary condition for the existence of the world.

Their poetry, songs, prints, paintings, all celebrate the power of the ephemeral. The body, then, is a point of sensitivity, of vulnerability, of delicacy, to the SurGaKu. They know that bodies are fragile, can sicken, can break. They admit the tidal powers of sexual desire, the sweep and sway of it. Ironically, although in many ways the most refined of the three divisions of ShiO, the SurGaKu are in some ways the most fleshly, the most prone to lapse and delirium. They value tenderness and restraint, gentleness, patience, yet can be the most explosively ill-disciplined of all ShiO.

A SurGaKu love poem, from the Era of Storms, goes:

Between the room of parturition,
and the Temple of Ashes,
between the bleeding at birth,
the fire coming to death,
my body has swung, moment by moment,
like pearl beads strung
upon a wire, made into a necklace.

That necklace, my love, you wear.
Lying on your breast, my head
rises and falls,
in time with your breathing:
at sea, the waves also rise and fall,
and beneath the surface
on the shadowed bed
young pearls are forming.

It was a book called The Three Attitudes. In it, the woman, an educated traveller, fascinated by the differences among the three main divisions of ShiO — ZirCong, RoMayZine and SurGaKu – organised her observations of the people of the ShiO clans who, within 50 years, had started the war that would unify the whole world of O.


 

The RoMayZine | After ZirCong, the RoMayZine Marks are considered the oldest of the three divisions of ShiO. Famous RoMayZine clans include the Three Swans, the Falling Snow, the Firetree and the Blue Gate. The RoMayZine take their name from the RoMayZuthZine, which is known in the common Imperial tongue as The Metal Book of the Sutras of War. Two great Ancient texts shape the history of Shar, and of the Land of O: the AmorZine (The Book of the Way) and the RoMayZuthZine. It may be said, very generally, that the ZirCong follow both of these books equally, while the RoMayZine favour The Metal Book, and the SurGaKu favour the AmorZine.

The RoMayZine, concerning themselves | The clans of the RoMayZine Marks have been tempered by generation after generation of battle and war. They consider themselves as unique, and their interpretation and practice of the Way to be proven and undeniable. Although they revere their ZirCong cousins, and admire the purity of the ZirCong Way, they have no intention of becoming ZirCong. RoMayZine are confident, powerful, intensely proud of their culture. They live their entire lives in a state of spiritual war, testing themselves through training the mind and body in a relentless fashion. Men and women, both compete and train, revelling in their physiques, valuing contest. Duelling, wrestling, racing on horseback, swimming against each other, boxing, performing vigorous, hypnotic dances, the RoMayZine fashion themselves so that they are ready to fight at a moment’s notice: they value the speed of their reactions, their lightness of foot. They can endure pain, they act quickly, instinctively. They think of themselves as rough and ready, simple, direct, not weighed down by complex thoughts, by useless subtleties. They think of their ShiO cousins as lacking in humour, inhibited, insufficiently connected to the world around them, too prone to reverie and trivialities. A RoMayZine sage once wrote: “Our RoMayZine spirit means just this: to live ferociously, according to the Way”.

The ZirCong, concerning the RoMayZine | Although the ZirCong are forever elusive in their writings and utterances, yet it is thought, even among the clans of ShiO themselves, that the ZirCong have a quite fraternal view of their RoMayZine comrades. However, it is very much the view of an older and wiser brother for a younger, more reckless one. A famous ZirCong sage from the Era of Four Decays has said, of the RoMayZine: “A small, strong lens, focusing the rays of the sun, can kindle a fire that may burn a whole forest”. Some RoMayZine have responded to this saying in a prickly fashion, interpreting the phrase “A small, strong lens” as a deliberate method of patronising and diminishing their Way. Others, though, revering the ZirCong, prefer to take it as a form of praise, and to be grateful — “for the ZirZong rarely praise, even when they praise” as a RoMayZine philosopher drily noted. The ZirCong admire the courage and the discipline of the RoMayZine, but it is thought they view the RoMayZine stress on the physical world and the worship of the human body as a limitation to true illumination. They find it difficult to believe that one may grow perfectly Dustless if the body is made such an object of attention, for the body is only dust in various forms. Despite these differences, ZirCong and RoMayZine clans and Marks have more and more tended to fight together for the good of the Way. The “two brothers” recognise they are from the same family.

The SurGaKu, concerning the RoMayZine | The SurGaKu follow a Way that is more to do with the arts of peace than of war. There is no major rift between any of the three main divisions of ShiO, for all revere TanZo and the purity and greatness of the Way: however, it is no secret that SurGaKu and RoMayZine are furthest apart in terms of their vision and temperament. SurGaKu view the martial prowess of the RoMayZine with a mixture of admiration and disdain. When distilled to extremes, SurGaKu find dealing with the RoMayZine as a somewhat frustrating experience. SurGaKu dislike the RoMayZine emphasis on physical power and instinct, and the RoMayZine, aware of the dislike, tend to exaggerate this very trait in their make-up when responding to the SurGaKu. The RoMayZine are perfectly capable of refinement, and can create exquisite works of art, but this is hardly their main desire in life — indeed, they might be accused of a certain affectation regarding art, suggesting that their own creations are half-thought, throwaway things, of no importance on a battlefield, and of little importance anywhere else. The SurGaKu, who see the Way as a matter of creating and exhibiting beauty, sometimes appear to feel themselves treated disrespectfully by the RoMayZine. As in the saying of the common people, these two divisions of ShiO can, on occasion, “bring out the worst in each other”. What to a RoMayZine is a forthright, direct simplicity can seem to a SurGaKu rude, thoughtless or even brutal behaviour, a crudeness, lacking in good manners. For all of this, is there a covert respect between the two divisions? An admiration each keeps from the other, and perhaps even half from themselves?

It was a book called The Three Attitudes. In it, the woman, an educated traveller, fascinated by the differences among the three main divisions of ShiO — ZirCong, RoMayZine and SurGaKu – organised her observations of the people of the ShiO clans who, within 50 years, had started the war that would unify the whole world of O.


 

The ZirCong | ZirCong Marks are the most ancient of all. ZirCong Marks, such as the Long Night, the Shepherd, the Red Cloud, contain the clans with the most venerable histories in the Western Lands. Numbered among their ranks throughout the eras are the greatest warriors, the most brilliant thinkers, sublime artists, victorious rulers. Their blood is considered untainted by malady or decadence. “ZirCong” means, in the modern Imperial tongue, “absolute darkness”. A “ZirCong night”, in the central cantons, means a “night without stars, utterly black, intensely dark”. So, the Marks of the ZirCong are known as Marks of Starless Darkness.

The ZirCong, concerning themselves | The clans of ZirCong Marks consider themselves — as all other clans consider them — the epitome of TanZo [the Way]. They have long given up consideration of material power, except in that it may further the Way. They believe they are the spiritual leaders of the Western Lands, and therefore, the spiritual leaders of humanity. The Way is always in the process of being constructed: as people pursue and build the Way, so the Way alters the people who practice it. The ZirCong are ahead of everyone else: they have gone out further into the “starless darkness”, the unexplored world of the mind and spirit. They have left the rest of humanity behind. From the darkness, they look back: they wait for slower, less perfect people to catch them up.

Their knowledge of the Way is higher than that of any rival Marks. The Way they practice, the particular spirit of their TanZo, is unimpeachable, a purity so perfect as to render the ZirCong superior to all divergent traditions. They have put aside earthly emotion, terrestrial desire: if they exert power, it is in the service of TanZo. It is their obligation to rule: not to rule, would mean allowing inferior humanity to lead, which would dilute the Way, and create havoc and degeneration.

Intensely private, they keep much of their world hidden behind the gates of their mansions and temple complexes. They believe that they have transcended common human values, bonds and feelings. Their austerity and dedication to TanZo is considered fanatical to outsiders, but to the ZirCong, all their efforts are insufficient: they only seek to do more, to strive harder for TanZo — to meditate more deeply, to study, to follow the way of the sword, to grow illuminated. They strive for the Dustless state. It is said that a true ZirCong believes that, if one is Dustless, one could walk through a barbarian hell, and see the sufferings of the damned everywhere, and not be moved by what is witnessed.

The RoMayZine, concerning the ZirCong | The RoMayZine attitude to the ZirCong is one of reverence. They consider the ZirCong as without doubt justified to lead the spiritual war which is the RoMayZine vision of life, and believe that the ZirCong are utterly pure, and represent the peak of TanZo. Yet, for all that, the RoMayZine are very distinct in their culture, and they do not seek to emulate the ZirCong. The RoMayZine, despite their intense practice of meditation and wholehearted pursuit of the Way, have an earthbound philosophy: they love action and the physical exertion of the body: they adore contest. Struggle, the pitting of oneself against an opponent, battle, effort, the laying out of strength in display — these are RoMayZine virtues. They are rough, instinctive and sociable: there is in fact a ZirCong saying — Without an enemy, a RoMayZine is lonely. The RoMayZine, in turn, sometimes speak of the “pale ZirCong”. In their eyes, the ZirCong spend too much time in study and meditation. The ZirCong are “too given to moonlight”, and “suffer their own intelligence too deeply”. The ZirCong are “occult”, “too inwards”, “a secret, all the way through”. So, although their admiration for the ZirCong is genuine and profound, the RoMayZine prefer their own thrilling, competitive world.

The SurGaKu, concerning the ZirCong | The SurGaKu, like the RoMayZine, revere the ZirCong. Yet, like the RoMayZine, the members of SurGaKu Marks don’t entirely seek to model themselves on their ZirCong cousins. It is harder, in fact, to arrive at a clear picture of SurGaKu attitudes: SurGaKu clans and traditions are more varied, more distinctive, in a way more complex than those of the RoMayZine. The SurGaKu are aesthetes: for this reason alone, they have tremendous respect for the historic works of the ZirCong. An unfathomable amount of time back into the Clouded Era, before there was RoMayZine, and before there was SurGaKu, there was ZirCong. The ZirCong were the first to declare themselves followers of TanZo, and their ancient poets and philosophers, calligraphers and artists, building a culture hundreds of years old, are worshipped by the younger, more recent SurGaKu Marks. One SurGaKu philosopher, though, has written of the “frightening greatness” of the ZirCong. Another has written (in typical SurGaKu fashion) of “too much perfection, not enough flaw” in the ZirCong Way. “Cold”, “aloof”, “inhuman” — these fairly common SurGaKu terms for the ZirCong, although in some ways meant as praise, also contain ambivalence. Of the ZirCong, one SurGaKu sage has said: “They tend to the absolute: we tend to depart from the absolute”. In this modern day, it might be said that, although the RoMayZine possess the martial tradition, the pride and the strength to make them seem the only viable challengers to ZirCong authority, it is the gentle, aesthetic SurGaKu who perhaps provide the most obvious resistance to the acknowledged order of the great capital city, Shar.

It was a book called The Three Attitudes. In it, the woman, an educated traveller, fascinated by the differences among the three main divisions of ShiO — ZirCong, RoMayZine and SurGaKu – organised her observations of the people of the ShiO clans who, within fifty years, had started the war that would unify the whole world of O.


 

The three divisions of ShiO

The city of LuinShar, city of cities, the City of Towers, the Heart of Eternity, has long been riven by ancestral feud: far back into the Clouded Era, so far back that calendars have broken down and record of time been lost, the great families of Shar have clashed and plotted, treated and battled, seeking terrestrial power.

At some point, it is believed — although the history of O and of the whole world of O-yon is in itself a war, contested by the historians of different allegiances and views — that distinct clans gathered formally together, to seek advantage of security and mutual belief, and assembled under a certain common emblem, known as a Zor, or Mark.

Just as clans gathered under Marks, so, eventually, like-minded Marks gathered themselves into groups.

How is it possible to make sense of the arrangements of Marks? As those who study living things divide them into orders, then subdivide orders into families, then families into genera, and finally, genera into species, so it is possible to sort Marks into rank and state.

Looking now, in this modern day, at the situation in Shar, the most obvious division is between those Marks who follow TanZo [the Way], and those who do not.

Power is currently, very strongly, with those who follow TanZo. And there is a tremendous — and, some might say, frightening — concentration of power in the hands of a certain group of Marks, who call themselves “ShiO“, which means, roughly “those who pursue the heights of the world”, or “those at the summit of the world”. These ShiO Marks contain the purest, most austere, most formidable clans in Shar. They are devout, and despise those who do not follow TanZo. Marks which do not follow TanZo, ShiO know as ZonO, which means, roughly, “those whose place is on the ground”, or even, “those whose place is in the dirt”. Some of the wealthiest, oldest clans in Shar belong to ZonO: however, because of the weight and severity of power in the hands of ShiO, the ZonO clans must follow the rule of ShiO — they dare not show themselves as “deviant”, they must follow the Way.

Within ShiO, there are three main cultures, each one ancient. These are: ZirCong, RoMayZine and SurGaKu.

It was a book called The Three Attitudes. In it, the woman, an educated traveller, fascinated by the differences among the three main divisions of ShiO — ZirCong, RoMayZine and SurGaKu – organised her observations of the people of the ShiO clans who, within fifty years, had started the war that would unify the whole world of O.


 

ATTITUDE TO PAIN

ZirCong | A pure person feels no pain. What is called “pain” among the common people, and people of flawed purity, is a sign of immaturity and a clinging to the body, which is to cling to dust and to sensations of dust. Although TanZo (“the Way”) is in all things, not all things are in TanZo. To feel pain is selfish, and to be selfish means you have not achieved true illumination. A Dustless person will feel neither the pain belonging to him or to her, nor the pain belonging to others. Pain is useful, as others — the impure — feel pain, and can be reached through pain and through the cessation of pain. All sensation is dust, leading to the void. Pain is dust, leading to the void. Pain is a false understanding of the world. Those who feel pain go towards the void. Achieve purity, true illumination, and there will be no pain. A Dustless person can walk among the sufferings of the damned in barbarian hells, and be unmoved; similarly, a Dustless person can walk among the blisses of the blessed in barbarian heavens, and be unmoved. Hells and heavens belong to the dust: to be truly ZirCong, one must be Dustless.

RoMayZine | Pain is real, a sign of life and of TanZo. Life is battle, and incurs pain. A woman gives birth through pain, and overcomes hardships in order to bring a child into the world. There is thus pain at the very gates of life. It cannot be avoided. But the RoMayZine spirit is never to retreat: where pain is inevitable, it is to be welcomed, as a means to prove one’s purity. The purity of the RoMayZine, the RoMayZine TanZo, is in a great, a warlike spirit. To be alive, one must fight a spiritual battle: nothing else matters. Pain is not to be inflicted needlessly, or received needlessly, but a RoMayZine will never run from pain. To fight through pain, and to win, or to lose, without wavering in one’s spirit: that is RoMayZine.

SurGaKu | Life is one event. The SurGaKu TanZo is through beauty, through appreciation of the world of natural things and through the world of things made by men and by women. Pain is an inevitable part of life, unless one is Dustless. If one is in pain, make it beautiful, do not bow before it and turn ugly, grow weak, become full of dirt and dust. Remain pure. The giving and taking of pain is to be avoided: it is not TanZo, the desire for power of one over another is a sign of weakness, a sign of impurity. Bullying, use of force, malice, the desire for triumph over others, this is not TanZo, and is a disgrace to the Way. At the pure core of all things, there is emptiness, the Dustless state: at the pure core of all life, there is nothing, there is no dust, it is a state beyond peace or war, beyond pleasure or pain, for there is no one to commit acts, no one to receive acts. Few, though, become Dustless: a handful, among billions. For the rest, there is striving through TanZo. It is idle to consider pain an easy or a pleasant thing: but to confront and survive pain, the best course of action is to become TanZo, to show courage and not to dwell too much in the illusion of the present, where painful things must befall all of us. Life is one event: that event is not here, or there, not now, or then. The Way is beauty: make your Way beautiful.