Saturday, February 28, 2009

Pema Chödrön



Beautiful... Bows to this dynamite lady of the dharma.

- Rin

Zen Poetry with Sungsan


All - 

I really liked this interview from the Zen Mirror blog with Sungsan titled 'Zen and Poetry: a Brief Conversation.'

Enjoy!

- Do'on

Dosho Port's Talk in Ann Arbor



This is part 2 of 5, I loved them all...

Bows,

- Rinsen

Friday, February 27, 2009

Winter Morning Canton


     birdsong


a
 tear flows
down
the 
curve 
of my
cheek

this
 our bow



Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Japanese Tea Ceremony

Bowling Green State University's Japanese Club is sponsoring a Japanese Tea Ceremony, to be presented by Professor Akiko Kawano Jones on Friday, February 27 at 7:00 pm. The ceremony will take place in the Hiroko Nakamoto Japanese Tea Room, which is located inside the Bryan Gallery in BGSU's Fine Arts Building. A map of campus can be found here; the Fine Arts Center is Building 31 and parking is available very close by in Lot 14/Lot N.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Trusting What Can't Be Taken


Jay Rinsen Weik gives a talk and leads discussion at the Toledo Zen Center on July 16, 2008.

"Mostly, our mind remains fixed in what's called a dualistic state...which means being trapped, unawaredly in a way of perceiving the universe such that everything is shattered, separate and distinct... In the practice of Zen, there is uncovered another way of perceiving, a way that's not bound by the traps of this and that, or the distinctions of high and low... You have to be willing to drop your images of what God is to be able to really see God's face. As long as you have an image in your mind, your mental construction of what you think that's supposed to be, there's a block. There's a stage at which having an image can be a useful thing. There's a stage at which it becomes a problem and needs to be transcended."

This Drinking Gourd Podcast is available via iTunes or at www.thedrinkinggourd.org For more information about the Toledo Zen Center, please visit toledozen.org. The Toledo Zen Center is a member of the Hermitage Heart Sangha, online at hermitageheart.org.

Ceaseless Prayer

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Radiant Brokenness

in the zendo
upright practitioners

cannot see
ego bones
topple
and
crack


dark to the mind
this birth
this truth
this beauty


Gassho,
Do'on



Tuesday, February 17, 2009

When all Buddhas are Buddhadharma

Blessings,
Do'on

Monday, February 16, 2009

Winter






"When it is cold,
cold finishes
the monk."
           - Dogen



Farm in the Heartland

on an ancient lake bed
hard brown
with winter 
shaggy horses
lie in morning sun

children giggle
stomp around
slam doors
Catch Me If You Can

water flows
generously
over
these 
dishes
and aging hands

the troubled world
too
is here

Resting

Bows,
Do'on

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Out of the Dharma Treasury

For you
I put on this dress of winter rain
set a grey cloud on my head
perfumed my body with rising mist

No need to check it in the mirror

Bows,
Do'on

Friday, February 13, 2009

Zen Practice and the Life Cycle of Religious Tradition

Visited by a local University World Religions class, Rinsen
contextualizes Zen practice and awakening within religious Tradition.

"Most religious traditions are founded with the experience or
essential insight of an individual or group of individuals who have
some unique way of perceiving themselves and the world that fits the
society that they find themselves in, in a way that hadn't happened
before."


This Drinking Gourd Podcast is available at www.thedrinkinggourd.org or via iTunes

For more information about the Toledo Zen Center, please visit toledozen.org. The Toledo Zen Center is a member of the Hermitage Heart Sangha, online at hermitageheart.org.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

At ZMM

During sesshin 
the girls bunked
 in the cabin

heads to pillows
egg shaped mouths
sucking on
blue velvet night

sure you could say it was snoring

but for me

awake

it was God's kittens
come to unravel the
tightly
bound
Ear
of this heavenly dragon

Bows,
Do'on

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Oh Bodhisattvas

Thus I have heard
from the  gentle graze
of a horse's tail.
  
The thaw
of late winter winds
flows in and around
the skin bag

do not brace against it

Love is Breathing

simply stand

Trust

the formless field of benefaction

that you are

Bows,
Do'on

Monday, February 9, 2009

Sheng Yen Items from Susan


Sangha -

A few things to follow up on the conversation from last weeks practice together:

1. I recommend Master Sheng Yen's book, Song of Mind: Wisdom from the Zen Classic Xin Ming, Shambhala, 2004. Xin Ming, the root text, is by Niutou Farong (594-637), who was a disciple of the fourth patriarch of Ch'an, Dayi Daoxim (580-651). Other translations of this root text on the internet are highly unreliable in my view, so I recommend reading Shifu's translation first and last. The book is in the form of a Ch'an retreat for laypeople, and takes the form of responding to and discussing the asked and unasked questions of the retreatant. It is a very enjoyable, and profound, book.

2. Master Sheng Yen's students maintain the Dharma Drum website, where one can find a link to streaming video and audio of the Buddha rememberance practice (Ni'en fo or Buddha name "Amitabha" recitation), where a continous perambulation and recitation of the Buddha name can be watched or joined in. This is done at the death of Ch'an masters as well as widely among Chinese buddhist families wherever they may live. This practice will continue 9 am--9am daily until February 14, when the cremation ceremony is performed. We have little time in our short human life to practice well, may we do our best at all times.

Bows,

Susan Purviance

Zen Forum International

I was browsing the web this morning and found a new Zen internet forum that I thought people might be interested in checking out - it's the Zen Forum International. It looks like the forum is new and doesn't have much posted yet. But I did notice that there is a link to a website on the teachings of Huang Po, who is the subject of Rinsen's next workshop on the ancestors, here.
Gassho,
Simon.

Friday, February 6, 2009

"Meticulous Kindness," Part 4 of 4



Dedicated to the late Chan Master Sheng Yen. There are some photos of the TZC retreat and poem at the end of this, the last one of the series...

Master Sheng Yen's Death Poem:


"Busy with nothing, growing old.
Within emptiness, weeping, laughing.
Intrinsically, there is no I.
Life and Death, thus cast aside."

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Superdeformed Sutras

My husband pointed me toward this insanely cute Japanese website, wherein an animated Zen practitioner guides you through reading the Heart Sutra in phonetic Japanese.

If you know your kana well enough, you can follow along with the chanting. If you're not so well-versed (like myself), you can enjoy listening for the words "paramita" and "gate gate paragate."

Tricycle's "The Big Sit"

I thought sangha members might be interested to hear that Tricycle magazine is starting a "Big Sit" - a 90-day "Zen Meditation Challenge." The webpage for the happening is here.
Simon.

Master Sheng Yen

Ven. Master Sheng Yen, founder of the Dharma Drum Mountain Monastery in northern Taiwan, died Tuesday at the age of 78.



Endless Deep Bows...

Monday, February 2, 2009

Encountering the Ancestors: Haung Po

"All Buddhas and all Sentient beings are nothing but the One Mind, besides which, nothing exists. This mind, which is without beginning is unborn and indestructable." - Huang Po

On Sunday, Feb 22nd we will hold a special afternoon workshop from 1:30-4:30pm on the zen teachings of Huang Po. Everyone is welcome to join in! There will also be a morning zazenkai from 9-noon for those who wish to sit in preparation for the afternoons study.

On this winter morning



three shaggy horses
lie in the sun

resplendent jewels
embroidered
onto a mantel
of silver white brocade

all are covered

this world freely
rests
in our hearts


2.

The Great Ocean of Perfection

outside
the window
on a
winter afternoon
drip drip drip

Gassho
Do'on