Category: meditation

  • Relaxing the Frontal Lobe
    The Light That Shines Through Infinity: Zen and the Energy of Life by Dainin Katagiri.  Shambhala.  229 pp.  $16.95. I’ve always thought of Dainin Katagiri as a difficult Zen teacher, partly because I read Returning to Silence when I was new to Zen and found it confounding.  He was a rough contemporary of Shunryu Suzuki, and ...
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  • Ways to Truth
    Gurdjieff Reconsidered: The Life, the Teachings, the Legacy by Roger Lipsey.  Shambhala.  342 pp.  $24.95. **** I read this book as a tribute to my friend Levi, who used to talk about Gurdjieff and various of his disciples almost every time we got together.  He was introduced to the man by a woman who was breaking ...
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  • Gateway to Eternity
    Okumura Zen In the first week of this month we hosted Shohaku Okumura for a Genzo-e sesshin, a special retreat where there are two ninety-minute lectures per day, in a classroom setting, and we spend the rest of the time in zazen, except for our hour-long work period.  Okumura Roshi lectured this time on Menju, the ...
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  • Don’t Fight the Water
    Zazen in the Spirit of Shinjin The Spring 2019 issue of Tricycle includes a marvelous teaching by Kenneth Tanaka entitled “The Seven Phases of a Drowning Sailor.”  Apparently the story itself exists in Shin Buddhism, but Tanaka divided it up into seven parts to indicate stages of realization.  He had in mind the Ten Oxherding pictures ...
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  • Why Not?
    Why Religion? A Personal Story by Elaine Pagels.  Ecco.  235 pp. $27.99 ****1/2 Why Religion? is a slender graceful memoir, a rare thing in these social media days when people think their every moment is worth recording.  It is directed at the question which the title asks, which meant different things to author Elaine Pagels at ...
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  • Unlikely Master
    Ambivalent Zen: A Memoir by Lawrence Shainberg.  Pantheon.  318 pp. $24.00. ****1/2 After sesshin this year, I felt an urge to read books about Zen (usually I want to read anything but), not dharma books, but memoirs of Zen experience.  First I turned to a book that only a sideways look at Zen, by a man ...
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  • That Sinking Feeling
    Another Rohatsu Sesshin Down the Tubes             The day before sesshin began—we always start on Friday evening—I told a friend from the Zen Center that I didn’t think I’d be able to have lunch with her on Friday after all. I had too much to do.  “Yeah,” she said.  “Me too.  It’s kind of like you’re preparing ...
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  • Infinity in a Grain of Sand
    Forever a series by Alan Yang and Matt Hubbard.  With Maya Rudolph, Fred Armisen, Catherine Keener, Noah Robbins.  ***** Forever is one of the most unusual things I’ve ever seen on a screen.  It’s composed of eight episodes roughly thirty minutes long, so my wife and I watched it over two nights.  The difficulty with writing ...
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  • Your Body Is the Universe
    The Practice of Pure Awareness: Somatic Meditation for Awakening the Sacred by Reginald Ray.  Shambhala.  286 pp.  $18.95. ****1/2 It’s said that we read dharma books originally for inspiration, then years later for confirmation of what we’ve learned.  Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind, for instance, I’ve read at least ten times, and it’s been a different book ...
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  • Seeing Things as One
    Coming Home: The Experience of Enlightenment in Sacred Traditions by Lex Hixon.  Larson Publications.  215 pp.  $14.00.  ***1/2 Coming Home is simultaneously one of the most inspiring and frustrating books I’ve ever read.  Lex Hixon led a short life which he devoted to his conviction that all of the spiritual traditions have a common core.  His ...
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  • #MeToo Meets Déjà Vu
    Making Enlightened Society Possible (but not Probable) “Why does a dog lick his balls?  Because he can.”  –old joke. “Men are addicted to ejaculation.”  Statement of a man on NPR’s Fresh Air, explaining male sexual behavior. I will sound naïve to say so, but I was utterly shocked by the sex scandal that recently rocked Shambhala International, and ...
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  • Stumble He Did
    The Gods Drink Whiskey: Stumbling Toward Enlightenment in the Land of the Tattered Buddha by Stephen T. Asma.  HarperOne.  256 pp. $14.99  ***1/2 Talk about your feeble excuses for reading a book: I was getting my computer worked on when I noticed this book on a nearby work desk.  I picked it up and flipped through ...
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  • The Other Side of Addiction
    Now What? Reading Sabbath’s Theater has gotten me started on the subject of addiction again.  I’ve read books about sex maniacs before, I’ve even written one, but never have I come across a character like Mickey Sabbath, who masturbates on his mistress’ grave, showed up at her house (when he was alive) with an erection already ...
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  • Religious
    What Is That? “ is not far from any one of us. ‘For in him we live and move and have our being.’ As some of your own poets have said.” –Paul, to the Athenians, in the Book of Acts. “If you want to experience the unnameable, you need to be a person who is the unnameable.  Since ...
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  • Trusting the Mind
    The Buddha’s Ultimate Message Some years ago, a publisher asked me to write a Young Adult biography of the Buddha.  It was an obvious assignment in a way; two of my novels had been published as YA’s (though I hadn’t written them that way), and I’d written a fair amount about Buddhism as well.  I could ...
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  • God Is in the Belly
    Hara: The Vital Center of Man by Karlfried Graf Durckheim.  Inner Traditions.  202 pp. $14.95.  **** Years ago—27 years this fall, it would seem—when I got my first meditation instructions at the Cambridge Insight Meditation Center, Larry Rosenberg told us we had our choice of where to follow the breathing.  Some people follow it at the ...
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  • Catholic Means Universal
    Pope Francis: A Man of his Word a film by Wim Winders.  **** I was moved and inspired by the new movie about Pope Francis, which opened recently to almost no acclaim whatsoever.  The IMDb site has virtually nothing on it, including no quotations, and if any movie ever deserved to have quotations, like maybe every ...
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  • He Wore a Special Bra
    The Buddha: An Alternative Narrative of his Life and Teaching by Mukunda Rao.  Harper Element.  192 pp. $14.99  ***? I agree with the basic premise of this book.  The Buddha’s life is exemplary, not strictly factual, and we can fill it in any way we want.  (Thich Nhat Hanh, to mention one more “biographer,” created a ...
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  • Unlikely Hero
    Deepest Practice, Deepest Wisdom: Three Fascicles from Shobogenzo with Commentaries by Kosho Uchiyama.  Translated by Daitsu Tom Wright and Shohaku Okumura.  Wisdom Publications.  318 pp. Last week at our temple a priest gave a talk about Kodo Sawaki’s famous remark “Zazen is good for nothing,” which is startling the first time you hear it.  We know ...
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  • Drunken Saint
    The Dharma Bums from Road Novels 1957-1960 by Jack Kerouac.  Edited by Douglas Brinkley.  Library of America.  864 pp. ***1/2 Jack Kerouac is the spiritual father of every whacked-out hippie who ever stumbled his way through the Sixties, head bobbing in mild agreement, mouth perpetually grinning, a beard flowing around his collar.  Kerouac himself was a ...
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