Dharma Library
A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.
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Letting go of this, letting go of that: what then?
Anonymous |I arrived at my first Western Zen retreat with no expectations and was looking forward to spending five days meditating in the beautiful Welsh countryside. When I arrived I felt immediately at home in the old converted farmhouse and the fact that there was no electricity supply only added to the atmosphere.
I had been on many retreats previously but this was my first retreat combining both…
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Not a Bad Starting Point!
Anonymous |The WZR was my first retreat with the WCF. Before that I had been practicing Zen in the Soto tradition for about eight years. I participated in about half a dozen sesshins with Roshis from Japan, and sitting one period of forty minutes daily at home.
What brought me to the WCF were two things: firstly at his age Roshi had became too fragile to come to Europe to hold sesshins; secondly and more…
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30 Years Later
Anonymous |The retreat gave me a space and context to deal with a situation that seemed overwhelming and allowed me to feel grief and sadness freely, without any preconditions or parameters but just simply for what they were. It helped me to reconnect with my feelings and allow them to flow through me or out of me. The support of the group and everybody working together on their inner world within the…
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Until Next Time...
Anonymous |As I neared Maenllwyd I could see where I needed to get to as I recognised it from the pictures but I wasn’t sure which way to go. One way had a closed gate and appeared to go further away from where I wanted to be, and the other way was an open gate and appeared to head more in the direction of where I was trying to get to. I decided to take the route which seemed to go towards where I wanted to…
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Chinese Zen Comes West: Finding New Expressions While Preserving Authenticity
Simon Child |This is an edited version of a talk given as part of the Distinguished Buddhist Practitioner Lecture series at Ho Center for Buddhist Studies at Stanford California USA May 3rd 2012. It is based an earlier version of the talk given at the Chan Meditation Center in Elmhurst, Queens, New York, USA in October, 2008.
I am going to explore some of the issues which arise in teaching Buddhist practice…
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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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Seeing the Mountain
Anonymous |The following is a practitioner's report of a silent illumination retreat led by Simon Child from November 20-27, 2010. As is the custom, the retreatant's name is not being published. The report was edited for the Chan Magazine by Simon Child.
The first day and a half of the retreat was strangely tumultuous. I have been to retreat many times but this was only the second time this decade that I…
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The Buddhist Legacy of John Crook
Simon Child |One day many years ago, in a short break on a retreat, I was standing outside the Chan Hall in the sun. I noticed a beetle stuck on its back, trying to roll over. I squatted down, flicked it over the right way up, and moved on. Later that day, in interview, John asked me, “How is your beetle?” I hadn’t known that he had observed me, and it seemed such an insignificant act not worthy of comment,…
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Hidden Assumptions, Fixed Views
Simon Child |The following Dharma Talk is from a Silent Illumination Retreat, November 2010 at Dharma Drum Retreat Center. It was transcribed by Catherine Burns and edited by Eddy Street. Published in Chan Magazine Spring 2012.
Perception and Sensation
At each morning service and evening service we chant The Heart Sutra together. In one part it says:
Form is precisely emptiness
and emptiness precisely… -
John's Life
Jake Lyne |John Crook was born in 1930 in Southampton into a moderately well-to-do family. He was educated at Oakmount School, a preparatory school in Southampton, and at Sherborne School, a boarding school in Dorset. At school he studied biology, physiology and physics. He frequently commented on the effect of the environment of “all male, firm discipline, a lot of sports especially Rugby football which I…
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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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