Category: buddhism

  • What’s
    Your Name, a film by Makato Shinkai, based on his novel.  With Ryunosuke Kamiki, Mone Kamishiraishi, Ryo Narita. I’ve been reading Kobun Chino’s commentary on the Song of Awakening, and the day before I saw this film read the following passage: “When the body of all the buddhas penetrates my nature there is interpenetration and fusion.  My nature ...
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  • The Paradox of Desire
    The 10,000 pages of the Pali Canon  (Most of which I haven’t read) I have spoken before of an Amazon reviewer that I stumbled across some years ago, a woman named Laurie from New Zealand who writes wonderfully informed and opinionated reviews.  Most of them are favorable, but occasionally she gets puckish, especially with contemporary spiritual ...
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  • Absolute Belief in Zazen
    Embracing Mind: The Zen Talks of Kobun Chino Otogawa. Edited by Judy Cosgrove and Shinbo Joseph Hall.  Jikoji Zen Center. Kobun Chino Otogawa came to the United States for the first time to train the novice monks at the Tassajara Mountain Monastery, which had just been founded.  After a couple of years he returned to Japan ...
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  • Beckett in the Bardo
    The Unnamable from Three Novels by Samuel Beckett. Grove Press. 407 pp. $15.95. The mystery of Samuel Beckett continues, at least for me.  Some months back, when I had finally tackled his Three Novels—which had been sitting on my shelves for years—I finished the first two, but admitted publicly, in this space, that I gave up ...
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  • It Sure Ain’t a Science
    The Art of Loving by Erich Fromm.  Harper Perennial Modern Classics.  123 pp. $14.99. It’s hard for me to imagine having the nerve, at the age of 56, to publish a book entitled The Art of Loving.  This from a man who grew up with a mother who adored her only child to the point of ...
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  • How Long, Baby How Long, Has That Evenin’ Train Been Gone?
    The Grass Flute Zen Master: Sodo Yokoyama by Arthur Braverman.  Counterpoint.  148 pp.  $16.95. How much time should we give to spiritual practice?  It’s a question I often ask myself.  Twenty minutes twice a day, as Maharishi Mahesh Yogi suggested?  A forty minute sitting, ten minutes of walking, and a thirty minute sitting, as we do ...
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  • Doing Nothing for No Good Reason
    Dogen Zen.  Translations by Shohaku Okamura.  Kyoto Soto Zen Center.  1988.  $198 pp. Hara: The Vital Center of Man by Karlfried Graf Durckheim.  Inner Traditions.  202 pp.  $14.95. I have been known to complain—mostly to myself—that many of the works of a man I consider one of the great religious minds of the twentieth century have not ...
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  • Dat Fig Tree Had It Comin’
    A Buddhist Reads the Bible: Gospel of Mark from the New Revised Standard Version.  Oxford University Press. (This is my eighth and final piece on the Gospel of Mark; the other pieces are here, here, here, here, here, here, and here.) There are any number of things toward the end of the Gospel that I don’t understand, ...
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  • What Does It Mean to Love God?  Jesus and the Bean Counters
    A Buddhist Reads the Bible: Gospel of Mark from the New Revised Standard Version.  Oxford University Press. (This is my seventh piece on the Gospel of Mark; the other pieces are here, here, here, here, here, and here.  I’ll blunder along at my snail like pace until I finish.) The pace of the Gospel of Mark has ...
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  • And Get Knocked Down the Stairs
    Eat Sleep Sit: My Year at Japan’s Most Rigorous Zen Temple by Kaoru Nonomura.  Kodansha. 328 pp.  $16.95. “He’s making the fallacious distinction between the ends and the means.” That sentence was uttered at a Friends Meeting that I attended some fifty years ago, by the man I considered the leading authority in that meeting on Quakerism.  ...
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  • Difficult Teachings
    A Buddhist Reads the Bible: Gospel of Mark from the New Revised Standard Version.  Oxford University Press. (This is my sixth piece on the Gospel of Mark; the other pieces are here, here, here, here, and here.  I’ll blunder along at my snail like pace until I finish.) The Gospel continues with what is for me a ...
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  • Having Faith Is Not Knowing
    A Buddhist Reads the Bible: Gospel of Mark from the New Revised Standard Version.  Oxford University Press. (This is my fifth piece on the Gospel of Mark; the other pieces are here and here and here and here.  I’ll blunder along at my snail like pace until I finish.) My impression of the early part of Mark ...
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  • God Is in the Body
    The Awakening Body: Somatic Meditation for Discovering Our Deepest Life by Reginald Ray.  Shambhala.  176 pp.  $16.95 Touching Enlightenment: Finding Realization in the Body by Reginald Ray.  Sounds True.  416 pp.  $19.95 Ever since I began meditating, I’ve found it natural to focus on the body.  When my first teacher Larry Rosenberg gave his initial instructions, he ...
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  • There Is Enough
    A Buddhist Reads the Bible: Gospel of Mark from the New Revised Standard Version.  Oxford University Press. (This is my fourth piece on the Gospel of Mark; the other pieces are here and here and here.  I’ll blunder along at my snail like pace until I finish.) There is still, as the Gospel enters Chapter 6, a ...
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  • Nothing is Hidden
    A Buddhist Reads the Bible: Gospel of Mark from the New Revised Standard Version.  Oxford University Press. (This is my third piece on the Gospel of Mark; the other pieces are here and here.  I’ll blunder along at my snail like pace until I finish.) One reason that the Gospel of Mark seems an authentic historical document ...
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  • The World Needs Healing
    A Buddhist Reads the Bible: Gospel of Mark from the New Revised Standard Version. Oxford University Press. (This is my second piece on the Gospel of Mark, reading it not as a Buddhist or Christian but just an interested reader; the first piece is here.  I’ll blunder along at my snail-like pace until I finish.) It seems that ...
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  • My First Teacher Was a Rabbi
    A Buddhist Reads the Bible: the Gospel of Mark from the New Revised Standard Version.  Oxford University Press. Various things are conspiring to make me read the Bible, which I last read—a rather thorough reading—in 1966-7, when I was a freshman at Duke.  At a recent sesshin, I did dokusan with Shohaku Okumura and he mentioned ...
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  • Zazen as True Religion
    The Wholehearted Way: A Translation of Eihei Dogen’s Bendowa With a Commentary by Kosho Uchiyama Roshi.  211 pp. “My late teacher Sawaki Kodo Roshi used to say that when we read Buddhist scriptures, we should illuminate our own mind with the ancient teachings and squeeze out the Buddha-dharma as our own expression.  I have been following ...
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  • No Final State
    How to Cook Your Life: From the Zen Kitchen to Enlightenment.  Dogen’s classic Instruction for the Zen Cook with commentary by Kosho Uchiyama.  Shambhala.  122 pp.  $16.95. There are people in this world who believe that spiritual practice involves working and working and working, or suffering and suffering and suffering (or—on the other hand—not working at ...
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  • Greatest Zen Book Ever
    Opening the Hand of Thought: Foundations of Zen Buddhist Practice.  By Kosho Uchiyama, Translated and Edited by Tom Wright, Jisho Warner, and Shohaku Okumura.  Wisdom Publications.  205 pp.  $16.95. Factoids that I’ve picked up about Kosho Uchiyama through years of being obsessed with him:  He was an expert at origami, as his father had been, and ...
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