Dharma Library
A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.
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A Western Zen Retreat Interview
Anonymous |Teacher: Tell me who you are?
Participant: I am the answer.
Teacher: What is the question?
Participant: Moment to moment.
Teacher: What do you feel?Participant: Space with no boundary or pressure. (THIS SPACE DID NOT FEEL VAST OR LARGE OR IN ANY WAY OVERWHELMING, YET ONE SENSED IT HAD NO END, WAS TIMELESS, AND HAD EXISTED BEFORE THE BIG BANG, WHICH WAS EXTENDING INTO IT.)
Teacher: What do you hear?
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The Prajnaparamita Heart Sutra
John Crook |Edited text of a series of three lectures on the Heart Sutra given by Dr John Crook to the Bristol Chan Group in 1992
Part 1 - 4th November 1992
Introduction and Background to the Sutra
When the Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara
was coursing in the deep Prajnaparamita,
he perceived that all five skandas are empty,
thereby transcending all sufferings.
Sariputra, form is not other than emptiness
and… -
Not Noticing
John Crook |This talk is dedicated to the memory of Georgina Marjorie Crook. It was delivered to the assembly of practitioners at the Two Day Retreat in Rickford, October 24th 1992.
Two things are omnipresent in our lives and yet day after day we fail to notice them - death and the sky. Every day people are dying: if they are our dear ones we know and feel it but the fact of everyday dying, next door, in the…
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No Path at All!
John Crook |from the "Sermons to the Stones and Trees" tapes, Summer 1992
There comes a moment in Zen training, a moment both shocking and surprising, when one realises intuitively that there is no path at all.
Ho! What then is Zen practice?
Practice is the realisation that there is no path at all, yet one keeps on going, going on, going on beyond, always becoming being.
Listening to a talk on Buddhism on…
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Christ at the Maenllwyd
Hebe Welbourne |Hebe Welbourne, who died a few months ago at the age of 100, was one of the first people to attend John Crook’s retreats at the Maenllwyd and continued to sit with the Bristol Chan group until just before the Covid lockdown. Even then she went on meditating alone with the group in her room every Thursday evening until her death, and we always lit an extra candle to symbolise her ‘presence’ with…
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Chan and Psychoanalysis
Chan Master Sheng Yen |This dialogue is reprinted with permission from the Institute of Chung Hua Buddhist Culture in New York. It was first published in Chan Magazine Volume 12, Number 4, Fall 1992.
Question: How is Chan similar or different from psychotherapy? Is the relationship between student and Master similar to that of patient and therapist?
Shifu: There are similarities and differences. The goals of Chan are…
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Zen and Christianity, The Dialogue
John Crook |Christianity lies at the root and heart of Western culture. Today intellectually rejected because of its failure to relate effectively with science, and sentimentalised by those who seek popularity within a world of adolescent values that last a lifetime, the traditional European religion none the less continues to stir the heart. Perhaps it is the story of Christ himself, rather than the…
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Darkness
Ron Henshall |It's a dark night
The trees stretch their limbs in the breeze.
The air is cool and the nostrils flare.
Suddenly, the clouds part
And there stands the moon, bright and serene. -
Taliesin, At The Court Of Maenllwyd
Roger Green |A poem in old Welsh style
I am chief doctor unto six thousand,
My country of origin was the Land of Angles.
Ruth and Hilda called me Roger.
I was the question set Sir Gwain;
I am the father of three doctors;
I am the husband of their mother;
I am the voter much misled;
I am a debtor, yet a householder;
I am little Gwion's hurt child;
I am a sleeket cowering timorous beasty;
I am a dense thicket of thorne;
I… -
Dharma Hunger
Eddy Street |A Western Zen Retreat Poem
The Universe is as the Boundless Sky,
I should have had another piece of bread and jam
As lotus blossom above
I wonder if we'll have tea after this meal
unclean water,
Pure and beyond the World is the mind
Bloody Buddhist Ceremonials
of the trainee,
O Silence of Nature
Don't like him
We take refuge in Thee
Here we go again.
Calm and Clear
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