An experimental podcast exploring the healing and life-sustaining potential of Zen insight, meditation and mindfulness in a modern world of existential challenges to health, happiness and our very survival.Credits:Recorded by: Paul Gerstein, MDPodcast channel creation and website design: James Kieffer, Kieffer Consulting, LLCIntro music: Dancing for the Answers, Nick Mulvey
In this episode, Paul gives a teisho (Zen lecture) on a koan from The Blue Cliff Record (a Tang and Sung dynasty collection of 100 teaching stories). Recorded by: Paul Gerstein, MD Intro music: Dancing for the Answers by Nick Mulvey Ending music: Kerosene Hat by Cracker
In this episode, we discuss the rapidly worsening pandemic in the U.S. and the troubling opposition by many to proven mitigation efforts. We examine the famous statement by Milarepa, an 11th century Tibetan master: “Abandon hope and fear.” Finally, a teaching story from The Blue Cliff Record points to a way out of struggling against painful difficulties of everyday life.Recorded by Paul Gerstein, MDIntro music: Dancing for the Answers, Nick MulveyEnding music: Fearless, The Neville Brothers
In this episode, Paul starts with a brief bio of his training in both medicine and Zen followed by a deep dive into facts and fictions regarding COVID-19. The contrast between blind beliefs and careful observation highlights how the scientific method and mindfulness practice counters the false narratives of anti-science, political propaganda in the setting of an alarmingly worsening pandemic.Recorded by: Paul Gerstein, MDPodcast channel creation and website design: James Kieffer – Kieffer Consulting, LLCIntro music: Dancing for the Answers, Nick MulveyEnding music: Look At Miss Ohio, Gillian Welch
The release of a cellphone video of the killing of an African American jogger, followed by one of a Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd, leads to a world-wide explosion of outrage over racism and police brutality. Added to the trauma of the pandemic and its associated economic collapse, we connect the failure of president Donald Trump to inspire and lead Americans and the world to a higher moral ground against an array of unprecedented challenges. The role of mindfulness is further explored as a prime coping mechanism when the whole world seems to be falling apart. How ‘noticing’ is a stepping-back without withdrawing. Zen master Rinzai’s famous quote regarding the Dharmakaya (the ‘body’ of absolute Truth) gets a close look. We investigate developing the facility and appreciation of noticing that things, most fundamentally, appear (before any other meaning we might ascribe to them). Dharmakaya koans are presented and placed into context with today’s global crises.Paul Gerstein, MDWebsite: pandemic-zen.comIn print: Form Is Emptiness: An Insider’s Guide to the Heart of Zen Buddhism, P. Gerstein, 2013, www.levellerspress.com/?s=form+is+emptinessRecorded by: Paul GersteinChannel and website design: James Kieffer – kiefferconsulting.comIntro music:Dancing for the Answers, Nick MulveyEnding music:For What It’s Worth, Buffalo Springfield
Paul discusses the ongoing pandemic and its effects on our psyches and everyday lives. Taking an even deeper dive into the “Stopping…” koan, Paul associates insights from quantum physics’ theories of time and reality with the Zen approach of directly experiencing the elements of one’s actual life with openness, attentiveness and the letting go of story-making. Credits: Recorded by:Paul Gerstein, MD Podcast channel creation and website design:James Kieffer – kiefferconsulting.com Intro music:Dancing for the Answers, Nick Mulvey Ending music:Time Has Come Today, The Chamber Brothers
Podcast channel is given the name, “Pandemic Zen” and the general theme of using mindfulness to deal with real-life adversity. Paul explains the Zen phrase, “Jumping on the back of the horse thief’s horse” to describe methods of intentionally turning the concept of meaning to one’s advantage in exploring an underlying truth. Credits: Recorded by:Paul Gerstein, MD Podcast channel creation and website design:James Kieffer – kiefferconsulting.com Intro music:Dancing for the Answers, Nick Mulvey Ending music:Riders On The Storm, The Doors
Going further into “Stopping” and the reliance on intellectual meaning vs. the “meaning” of the sheer experience of sensory actuality. Paul discusses the insight of “What it means is that it is (and nothing more).” We look into the non-interference of naming with directly-experiencing. Awakening and enlightenment are explored in a fresh way. “Awakening is waking up the fact that things appear.” Credits:Recorded by:Paul Gerstein, MDPodcast channel creation and website design:James Kieffer – kiefferconsulting.comIntro music:Dancing for the Answers, Nick Mulvey Ending music:The Lantern, The Rolling Stones
In this first episode, Paul discusses the implications of the global COVID-19 pandemic and how attending to one’s sensations can be a doorway to a fresh relationship with the challenges of everyday life. Using the koan, “Stop the sound of the distant temple bell”, we explore a method of looking both through and behind the world of form to contact the ‘Source’ of reality. Credits: Recorded by:Paul Gerstein, MD Podcast channel creation and website design:James Kieffer – kiefferconsulting.com Intro music:Dancing for the Answers, Nick Mulvey Ending music:Who’ll Stop The Rain, Creedence Clearwater Revival