A monk lived alone in a small temple perched above the sea.
Every morning before dawn, he swept the stone courtyard, lit a single stick of incense, and painted an ensō upon a sheet of rice paper.
One circle.
No corrections.
No second attempt.
Then he hung the painting on the wall and watched the sun rise.
For forty years he repeated this practice.
Some circles were thick.
Some were thin.
Some nearly closed.
Others remained open.
Travelers occasionally climbed the mountain to see the old monk.
One day a young scholar arrived carrying many books.
"I have come to understand infinity," he said.
The monk nodded and poured tea.
The scholar spoke for hours.
He described endless numbers, endless stars, endless worlds beyond worlds. He drew symbols and equations and diagrams that filled the temple floor.
When he finished, he smiled proudly.
The monk listened quietly.
Then he dipped a brush into black ink and painted a single ensō.
The scholar frowned.
"That is not infinity," he said.
"It ends where it begins."
The monk handed him the brush.
"Show me."
The scholar painted a larger circle.
The monk shook his head.
The scholar painted an even larger one.
Still the monk shook his head.
Days passed.
The scholar filled hundreds of sheets with circles of every size.
Some stretched from edge to edge.
Some spiraled endlessly inward.
Some overlapped one another like galaxies.
Yet none satisfied him.
Exhausted, he finally asked, "What is wrong with my circles?"
The monk led him outside.
Night had fallen.
Above them the stars shone across the sky.
The sea below reflected the moon.
The wind moved through the pines.
"Where does the sky end?" asked the monk.
The scholar looked upward.
"I cannot see an end."
"Where does the sea begin?"
The scholar listened to the waves.
"I cannot say."
The monk nodded.
"Then where is infinity?"
The scholar searched the horizon.
Far away, sea and sky merged into a single darkness.
He could not find a boundary.
The monk returned to the temple and pointed to the ensō hanging on the wall.
"You think the circle represents infinity because it has no beginning and no end."
The scholar nodded.
The monk smiled.
"The circle does not represent infinity."
"It reveals the impossibility of drawing a boundary around it."
The scholar sat silently.
For the first time, he noticed the opening in the monk's circle.
It was not complete.
A small gap remained.
Through that gap, the blank paper could be seen.
The empty space seemed larger than the circle itself.
Larger than the temple.
Larger than the sea.
The scholar suddenly understood.
The brushstroke was finite.
The ink was finite.
The paper was finite.
Yet the emptiness from which the circle emerged—and into which it disappeared—could not be measured.
The ensō was not a prison for infinity.
It was a doorway.
Years later, after the monk had passed away, the scholar remained at the temple.
Each morning before dawn he painted a single circle.
One winter morning, as snow drifted across the courtyard, he noticed his hand trembling with age.
The brush left a broken and imperfect stroke.
He almost threw the painting away.
Then he laughed.
The gap was wider than ever.
Through it, the entire universe seemed to enter.
The mountains.
The clouds.
The stars.
The dead.
The living.
The countless generations yet unborn.
All flowing through a space no brush could ever contain.
The old scholar hung the circle on the wall.
Outside, snow continued to fall.
Inside, the ink slowly dried.
And in the silence between the beginning of the stroke and its end, infinity remained exactly as it had always been—
unpainted,
unbounded,
and complete.
