Dharma Library
A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.
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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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Daily Menu - A Cook's Retreat
Anonymous |Sunday
Courgette, coconut and Lemon soup.
Bread rolls
Citrus and poppy seed cake.
Mushroom and Lovage stew
Creamy polenta
Green allotment salad.The beginning of a Hua-Tou retreat, my first retreat of the year and I feel I really need it. Somehow, I’ve lost focus and cannot see beyond grey clouds. There is a nice group of people, balanced; John and Jake as teachers, which is quite a treat.
I came a…
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Clarity and Confusion
Anonymous |I’m not quite sure why it has taken me until now to write this report, nor why I have decided this moment to do it. Maybe it will become clear as I write it.
The retreat was a Silent Illumination retreat at Maenllwyd with John Crook and Fiona Nuttall in July 2010. Today is 5th November 2010. Maybe the lapse of time is portentous? I can see this as I write it.
The weather was totally beautiful…
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Self Ascending
Paul Atherton |Searching for the way
Gate on gate until
A fenced enclosure of the self
Spiky membrane of a mutating cell.
This single Centre with two nuclei
One old and dark, a sort of hell
One new and lit, yet secretive.Old dark labyrinth of the nightmare mind
Tomb of hanging beams and creeping things
Hidden ghouls and swinging bells
Dull black axes over torture fires
Eyeless skulls and human bones
Devil’s… -
Ode to 'It'
Jane Spray |October days of sunshine, nights of frost,
The chestnut leaves fan golden by the gate
With early mists, when all below is lost
Save field-tree tops. To us, the sun seems late,
Or is it just we rise and have a pee
And venture out in still dark air
To taste the day and feel the ground a while,
Before damp sheep begin to stir?
All standing, waves of movement, like the sea,
Then fingers curling round a mug of… -
The Illusion of Separateness
Žarko Andričević |Žarko Andricevic is the Teacher of Dharmaloka – the Chan Buddhist Community, Croatia.
Our incapability to live in harmony with others, the environment and ourselves is a consequence of deep ignorance of our nature and the nature of existence in general. All human suffering, misery and discontent, be it personal or collective, arises out of a fundamental ignorance that is called avidya…
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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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Prison Chaplaincy
Devin Ashwood |Talk by Devin Ashwood delivered 29th October 2011 at the WCF conference: "Western Buddhism: Engaged Buddhism?"
My name is Devin Ashwood and I work as a Buddhist Chaplain in the Prison Service.
I have been asked to talk a little about Buddhist Chaplaincy in Prisons and while I had very little idea of what I would talk about, I agreed. At first, I thought I could say all there was to say in about…
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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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A Day in the Life of Bruce in Sogenji
Bruce Stevenson |Last year Bruce Stevenson took himself off to Japan for a period of practice in a Zen monastery. This was not Bruce's first such expedition but it is the first he has written about for us. Let us continue this issue then with a further account of experiences in the distant East. Bruce tells us Sogenji is, as far as he knows, the only monastery in Japan full of Westerners - well this includes a…
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