Dharma Library
A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.
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No Guru, No Church, No Dependency
Susan Blackmore |Rushing off to begin a solitary retreat last month, I suddenly remembered that I wanted to check something in the liturgy so, in a hurry (yes, I know!!), I grabbed the first copy I could find and set off to my hut. Only later, once I’d settled down, did I take a look and realise that it was a very old copy indeed. To my surprise, there, on the front cover (see overleaf), is some writing in John’s…
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Poem for John
Fiona Nuttall |Because of your military background and Sandhurst voice,
Because of your wild white eyebrows, as mobile as eels,
Because I knew you before I knew you,
Because you could see with your third eye,
Because you saw me and smiled,
Because you said, ‘Are you ready for an adventure?’
Because I felt heard and known,
Because of your delight in chocolate biscuits,
Because of the predictability of cauliflower cheese… -
The Path to Transmission
Fiona Nuttall |When I was asked to write something for New Chan Forum about how I ended up as Simon’s Dharma heir I took a sharp intake of breath. How could I get that down in sentences? It has been a long, perhaps even tortuous, journey with many side roads and incursions into various unexpected places. I discussed this with some Christian friends of mine who I consider to be part of my wider Sangha and whom I…
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Who?
Ken Jones |I turn up the flame
from the snaking wick
coiled in my flammable heartAlthough he is my lifelong friend I’m in two minds about him. Sometimes I don’t recognise him at all, with his ugly old face. Or I don’t like the way he can behave.
Perched on the wing mirror
robin preens himself
and shitsThen I play at being top dog and growl at him. But when he’s being helpful and kind, now there’s a man…
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How to do Everyday Buddhism
Ken Jones |Below I have tried to explain my understanding of ”Everyday Buddhism” in a concise paper designed to assist the reader, step by step, to learn what is involved in its practice. For more, please see my website, www.kenjoneszen.com.
This manual incorporates the essentials learnt from over ten years of leading retreats. It is aimed at any reader who would like to experience the practice at first…
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Why Buddhism and the West Need Each Other: The Nonduality of Personal and Social Transformation
David R Loy |Paper given at the conference "Western Buddhism: Engaged Buddhism?" by David Loy on 30-Sep-2011, Bristol UK.
Within Western Buddhism the importance of social engagement is now generally accepted; certainly many Buddhist individuals and groups are seriously involved in activities such as prison dharma, raising money for impoverished people, and so forth. But almost all such activities involve what…
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Towards a Radical Culture of Awakening
Ken Jones |Talk by Ken Jones delivered 30 October 2011 at the WCF conference: "Western Buddhism: Engaged Buddhism?"
“Suffering I teach and the way out of suffering.”
Part One of this talk will explain how the origins of social suffering lie ultimately in the human condition itself. Part Two will offer a way out of social suffering.
Part One
Delusion
Buddhists regularly remind themselves of their great…
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8. How to be Kind
Ken Jones |This is one of an ongoing series of writings which encapsulate talks given on various retreats. Several of the originals were not recorded at all or else have been recorded in different locations, with much overlap. This series is produced in response to several requests for a more permanent and edited record, for distribution to past retreatants on my mailing list and to anyone else who might…
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7. Don't Know Mind and Storehouse Consciousness
Ken Jones |This is one of an ongoing series of writings which encapsulate talks given on various retreats. Several of the originals were not recorded at all or else have been recorded in different locations, with much overlap, and with the disadvantages of unedited, ad hoc records. This series is produced in response to several requests for a more permanent and edited record, for distribution to past…
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Master Yen Wai of Hong Kong
Jackson Peterson and John Crook |When I arrived in Hong Kong (1953) on my National Service during the Korean War, I soon set about trying to meet Chinese people. I wanted to follow up my reading of Buddhism carried out during the several weeks' voyage on the troop ship from Southampton. Through contacts with the HK university I met Professor Ma Meng who introduced me to a Mr Yen Shi liang, a Buddhist merchant with an embroidery…
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The articles on this website have been submitted by various authors and the views expressed do not necessarily represent the views of the Western Chan Fellowship.
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