POPULARITY
Taiun Michael Elliston began practicing Zen in 1966 With Matsuoka-Roshi at the Chicago Zen Buddhist Temple. He was ordained as a Zen priest in 1970 by Matsuoka-Roshi and in 1983 received full Dharma transmission. Has also studied with Sayrin Barbara Kohn of the Austin Zen Center and Shohaku Okumura of the Sanshin Zen Community. He is the founder and current about of Atlanta Soto Zen Center.More about Atlanta Zen Center:- https://www.aszc.org/More about Simplicity Zen Podcast:- https://simplicityzen.com/
Shohaku Okumura Roshi is the head teacher at the Sanshin Zen Community in Bloomington, Indiana. Their website is sanshinji.org. He also founded the Dogen Institute.
For this episode, host Daniel Aitken speaks with Shohaku Okumura Roshi, Japanese Soto Zen priest and revered writer and translator. Shohaku Okumura is also the founder and current abbot of the Sanshin Zen Community in Bloomington, Indiana. In this conversation, you'll hear Okumura Roshi tell powerful stories, not only from his own life, but from […] The post Shohaku Okumura Roshi: Stories from Modern Zen Masters appeared first on The Wisdom Experience.
JF and Phil tackle Genjokoan, a profound and puzzling work of philosophy by Dogen Zenji. In it, the 13th-century Zen master ponders the question, "If everything is already enlightened, why practice Zen?" As a lapsed Zen practitioner ("a shit buddhist") with many hours of meditation under his belt, Phil draws on personal experience to dig into Dogen's strange and startling answers, while JF speaks from his perspective as a "decadent hedonist." "When one side is illumined," says Dogen, "the other is dark." For proof of this utterance, you could do worse than listen to this episode of Weird Studies. REFERENCES Dogen Zenji, [Genjokoan](http://www.thezensite.com/ZenTeachings/DogenTeachings/GenjoKoan8.htm)_ Shohaku Okumura (http://www.sanshinji.org/) and the Sanshin Zen Community in Bloomington, Indiana Peter Sloterdijk, [You Must Change Your Life](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YouMustChangeYourLife) Weird Studies, Episode 8 (http://www.weirdstudies.com/8): "On Graham Harman's 'The Third Table'" Gilles Deleuze, [Cinema 1: The Movement Image](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinema1:TheMovementImage) Jun'ichiro Tanizaki, [In Praise of Shadows](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InPraiseofShadows)_ Thomas Aquinas, [Summa Theologica](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SummaTheologica)_ Henri Bergson, [Matter and Memory](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MatterandMemory) Søren Kierkegaard, [Fear and Trembling](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FearandTrembling) Joris-Karl Huysmans, À Rebours (Against Nature) (https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/35341/against-nature/) Chogyam Trungpa, Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism (https://www.shambhala.com/cutting-through-spiritual-materialism-458.html)
Dharma talk given at Sanshin Zen Community, Bloomington, Indiana. Speaker: Judith Ragir License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
Dharma talk given at Sanshin Zen Community, Bloomington, Indiana. Speaker: Judith Ragir License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
Dharma talk given at Sanshin Zen Community, Bloomington, Indiana. Speaker: Judith Ragir License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi’s commentary on Dogen Zenji’s Tenzo Kyokun – Instructions for the Zen Cook. (Covering the third paragraph on page 37). In the previous paragraph of Tenzo Kyōkun, Dōgen said we should see things not with our common eyes, but we should see things with the dharma eye or Buddha’s eye; and here he’s saying: anyway, we do have a competitive mind. How can we use this competitive mind for our practice? First he said: “If you’re resolute in your intention and are most sincere, you will vow to be more pure-hearted than the ancients and surpass even the elders in attentiveness.” So he said that instead of competing with the contemporaries, the people around you, you should compete with the ancient masters, or elders. This is kind of a tricky thing, an interesting thing. Dōgen said when we really, sincerely want to work as a tenzo, in order to develop or improve our ability to make better dishes, somehow we need to compete; compete with ourselves and compete with others. How can we use this competitive mind to become better? Listen to the podcast for more. This talk was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on September 26, 2007. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com), at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/), or at the Dōgen Institute website (http://dogeninstitute.org/home/donate/).
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi’s commentary on Dogen Zenji’s Tenzo Kyokun – Instructions for the Zen Cook. (Covering the second paragraph on page 37). Beginning with the passage studied in this podcast, Dōgen describes the most important point in the attitude of the tenzo. The meaning of Dōgen’s admonition is very clear: don’t complain. The tenzo receives food ingredients from storage, and whatever the tenzo receives, they don’t complain, they just accept things as they are and work together with those things to make them into the best food or dish possible. But if we carefully read the expressions and sentences, what Dōgen is saying is not so simple. Of course, the meaning is to avoid “like and dislike.” But the reason for that attitude is very deep and important within the essence of Buddhist teaching. In the English translation alone, we cannot see that connection. Listen to the podcast for more. This talk was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on September 12, 2007. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com), at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/), or at The Dōgen Institute (http://dogeninstitute.org/home/donate/) website.
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi’s commentary on Dogen Zenji’s Tenzo Kyokun – Instructions for the Zen Cook. (p. 36). Okumura Roshi speaks about the tenzo’s attitude toward his work in the kitchen: the importance of not judging the quality of the ingredients that are provided. Just prepare them carefully, paying attention to the three important things in cooking: quality, quantity, and timing. The tenzo’s life is at the intersection between discrimination and non-discriminating. He receives the food with no judgment and then makes determinations about the best way to use it. This is mind (as subject) and things (as object) working together as zenki – total function. This talk was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on September 9, 2007. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page, at Sanshin's home page, or at the Dōgen Institute website.
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi’s commentary on the modern classic Opening The Hand of Thought written by his teacher Kosho Uchiyama Roshi. (Section 4, p.66). Okumura Roshi continues the theme of his previous talk, offering a description and examples of “self-power” and “other power” in both Pure Land Buddhism and Zen. There is no separation between self-power and other power; other power includes self-power. Yet the individual determination or personal ability of self-power cannot reach the deeper power; we need to awaken to the larger context, the interconnectedness of self and other beings, in which we are living as an individual. This talk was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on November 28, 2010. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page, at Sanshin's home page, or at The Dōgen Institute website.
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi’s commentary on Dogen Zenji’s Tenzo Kyokun (p. 35). Okumura Roshi discusses the importance of cooking the rice carefully and returning the kitchen utensils to their appropriate places. In this way, we can study dharma in our everyday lives—by attending to and valuing things without discriminating mind. This talk was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on June 20, 2007. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com), at Sanshin's home page(http://sanshinji.org/home/), or at The Dōgen Institute (http://dogeninstitute.org/home/donate/) website.
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi’s commentary on the modern classic Opening The Hand of Thought written by his teacher Kosho Uchiyama Roshi. (Section 4, p.66) Okumura Roshi describes two categories of Buddhism: ji riki (self-power) and ta riki (other-power). Traditionally, Zen is considered to be “self-power” and Pure Land Buddhism to be “other-power,” but Uchiyama Roshi says that our practice of zazen is before separation between self-power and other-power. This talk was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on November 14, 2010. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com), at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/), or at The Dōgen Institute (http://dogeninstitute.org/home/donate/) website.
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on Dogen Zenji's Tenzo Kyokun. Okumura Roshi discusses the difference between our normal attitude toward preparing food and the teaching Dogen Zenji offers to the tenzo. Preparing meals is a metaphor for making choices about the lives we live. It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on May 23, 2007. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on Dogen Zenji's Tenzo Kyokun. It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on May 16, 2007. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on Dogen Zenji's Tenzo Kyokun. In this talk he begins addressing Dogen's Instructions for the Cook directly. It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on May 9, 2007. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk is part of Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on Dogen Zenji's Tenzo Kyokun. He discusses the history of monastic practice in China, the creation of monastic regulations (Shingi), and the Eihei Shingi in which we find the Tenzo Kyokun. It was originally given as part of the 2007 practice period at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on April 25, 2007 Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on Dogen Zenji's Tenzo Kyokun. This talk includes a substantial introduction to the Yogacara (Mind-only) and Madhyamika schools and their relationship to our practice of Dogen's teaching. It was originally given during the 2007 practice period at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on April 18, 2007 Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk is part of Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on Dogen Zenji's Tenzo Kyokun. In it he sets the stage by discussing one of the most important texts for understanding Dogen's teaching, the Jijuyu Zanmai section of Bendowa. It was originally given as the beginning of the 2007 practice period at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on April 11, 2007 Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
Shohaku Okumura is a Japanese Soto Zen priest and the founder and abbot of the Sanshin Zen Community located in Bloomington, Indiana. Our audio dharma talks are offered free of charge and made possible by the donations we receive. If you would like to support Brooklyn Zen Center, please visit the “Giving” section of our … Genzo-e: Studying Dogen’s Shobogenzo Zenki (Total Function) and Tsuki (Moon) -Day 5 (morning), by Shohaku Okumura (07/28/2013) Read More »
Shohaku Okumura is a Japanese Soto Zen priest and the founder and abbot of the Sanshin Zen Community located in Bloomington, Indiana. Our audio dharma talks are offered free of charge and made possible by the donations we receive. If you would like to support Brooklyn Zen Center, please visit the “Giving” section of our … Genzo-e: Studying Dogen’s Shobogenzo Zenki (Total Function) and Tsuki (Moon) – Day 5 (afternoon), by Shohaku Okumura (07/28/2013) Read More »
Shohaku Okumura is a Japanese Soto Zen priest and the founder and abbot of the Sanshin Zen Community located in Bloomington, Indiana. Our audio dharma talks are offered free of charge and made possible by the donations we receive. If you would like to support Brooklyn Zen Center, please visit the “Giving” section of our … Genzo-e: Studying Dogen’s Shobogenzo Zenki (Total Function) and Tsuki (Moon) – Day 4 (afternoon), by Shohaku Okumura (07/27/2013) Read More »
Shohaku Okumura is a Japanese Soto Zen priest and the founder and abbot of the Sanshin Zen Community located in Bloomington, Indiana. Our audio dharma talks are offered free of charge and made possible by the donations we receive. If you would like to support Brooklyn Zen Center, please visit the “Giving” section of our … Genzo-e: Studying Dogen’s Shobogenzo Zenki (Total Function) and Tsuki (Moon) -Day 4 (morning), by Shohaku Okumura (07/27/2013) Read More »
Shohaku Okumura is a Japanese Soto Zen priest and the founder and abbot of the Sanshin Zen Community located in Bloomington, Indiana. Our audio dharma talks are offered free of charge and made possible by the donations we receive. If you would like to support Brooklyn Zen Center, please visit the “Giving” section of our … Genzo-e: Studying Dogen’s Shobogenzo Zenki (Total Function) and Tsuki (Moon) – Day 3 (afternoon), by Shohaku Okumura (07/26/2013) Read More »
Shohaku Okumura is a Japanese Soto Zen priest and the founder and abbot of the Sanshin Zen Community located in Bloomington, Indiana. Our audio dharma talks are offered free of charge and made possible by the donations we receive. If you would like to support Brooklyn Zen Center, please visit the “Giving” section of our … Genzo-e: Studying Dogen’s Shobogenzo Zenki (Total Function) and Tsuki (Moon) -Day 3 (morning), by Shohaku Okumura (07/26/2013) Read More »
Shohaku Okumura is a Japanese Soto Zen priest and the founder and abbot of the Sanshin Zen Community located in Bloomington, Indiana. Our audio dharma talks are offered free of charge and made possible by the donations we receive. If you would like to support Brooklyn Zen Center, please visit the “Giving” section of our … Genzo-e: Studying Dogen’s Shobogenzo Zenki (Total Function) and Tsuki (Moon) – Day 2 (afternoon), by Shohaku Okumura (07/25/2013) Read More »
Shohaku Okumura is a Japanese Soto Zen priest and the founder and abbot of the Sanshin Zen Community located in Bloomington, Indiana. Our audio dharma talks are offered free of charge and made possible by the donations we receive. If you would like to support Brooklyn Zen Center, please visit the “Giving” section of our … Genzo-e: Studying Dogen’s Shobogenzo Zenki (Total Function) and Tsuki (Moon) – Day 2 (morning), by Shohaku Okumura (07/25/2013) Read More »
Shohaku Okumura is a Japanese Soto Zen priest and the founder and abbot of the Sanshin Zen Community located in Bloomington, Indiana. Our audio dharma talks are offered free of charge and made possible by the donations we receive. If you would like to support Brooklyn Zen Center, please visit the “Giving” section of our … Genzo-e: Studying Dogen’s Shobogenzo Zenki (Total Function) and Tsuki (Moon) -Day 1 (morning), by Shohaku Okumura (07/24/2013) Read More »
Shohaku Okumura is a Japanese Soto Zen priest and the founder and abbot of the Sanshin Zen Community located in Bloomington, Indiana. Our audio dharma talks are offered free of charge and made possible by the donations we receive. If you would like to support Brooklyn Zen Center, please visit the “Giving” section of our … Genzo-e: Studying Dogen’s Shobogenzo Zenki (Total Function) and Tsuki (Moon) -Day 1 (afternoon), by Shohaku Okumura (07/24/2013) Read More »
This talk is part of Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on Dogen Zenji's Shobogenzo Zuimonki. Here he continues his discussion of the six points of wholesome speech and communication. It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on November 27, 2005. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk is part of Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on the modern classic Opening The Hand of Thought written by his teacher Kosho Uchiyama Roshi. In it Okumura Roshi continues his exploration of the meaning of the style of sesshin created by Uchiyama Roshi and practiced at Sanshinji. It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on October 31, 2010. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on the modern classic Opening The Hand of Thought written by his teacher Kosho Uchiyama Roshi. In it Okumura Roshi explores the meaning of the style of sesshin created by Uchiyama Roshi. What does it mean to be "before time" and "before 'I' effort"? It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on October 24, 2010. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk is part of Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on Shobogenzo Zuimonki. Here he continues his discussion of the six points of wholesome speech and communication, focusing on "Not engaging in idle talk". It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on November 13, 2005. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk is part of Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on Shobogenzo Zuimonki. Here he continues his discussion of the six points of wholesome speech and communication, focusing on "Not speaking words which cause enmity between people". It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on October 30, 2005. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on the modern classic Opening The Hand of Thought written by his teacher Kosho Uchiyama Roshi. In it Okumura Roshi explores Uchiyama Roshi's description of what we encounter in zazen practice as the scenery of our lives, and explains that the process of sleeping or thinking and then returning to sitting is itself zazen. It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on September 26, 2010. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on the modern classic Opening The Hand of Thought written by his teacher Kosho Uchiyama Roshi. In it Okumura Roshi explores the ways we encounter, react to, and deal with our thoughts in our daily lives and our zazen practice. It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on September 12, 2010. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
Shohaku Okumura Roshi discusses Dogen Zenji's dharma talk on the occasion of the traditional celebration of Buddha's enlightenment (December 8th each year). In this piece, Dogen describes Buddha's enlightenment in the context of his zazen practice. It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on December 11, 2011. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on the modern classic Opening The Hand of Thought written by his teacher Kosho Uchiyama Roshi. Okumura Roshi discusses how we are carried away by the three poisonous minds (desire, hatred, and delusion). Through our zazen practice we can find a peaceful foundation for our lives without running around chasing our desires. It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on July 25, 2010. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on the modern classic Opening The Hand of Thought written by his teacher Kosho Uchiyama Roshi. Okumura Roshi discusses how we wake up in our zazen practice. An excerpt: "We simply repeat waking up from thinking or sleeping. That’s all we do. So there’s no goal. The point is just to be, right now, right here. Right now right here is just sitting. So whenever we find we deviate from just sitting we return to here and now and just sit. There’s no goal, nowhere to go." It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on July 18, 2010. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
Shohaku Okumura Roshi investigates section 2-20 of Dogen Zenji's Shobogenzo Zuimonki. Okumura Roshi shares his thoughts (and relief!) on Dogen and Shakyamuni Buddha's assertion that so-called enlightenment is not dependent on having a superior intellect or knowledge, nor is it anywhere other than right at hand. Shohaku Okumura Roshi investigates section 2-20 of Dogen Zenji's Shobogenzo Zuimonki. Okumura Roshi shares his thoughts (and relief!) on Dogen and Shakyamuni Buddha's assertion that so-called enlightenment is not dependent on having a superior intellect or knowledge, nor is it anywhere other than right at hand. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk continues Shohaku Okumura Roshi's commentary on the modern classic Opening The Hand of Thought written by his teacher Kosho Uchiyama Roshi. Okumura Roshi explores the meaning of shikantaza and the origins of the expression "opening the hand of thought". It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on July 11, 2010. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)
This talk is part of Shohaku Okumura Roshi's ongoing commentary on the modern classic Opening The Hand of Thought written by his teacher Kosho Uchiyama Roshi. This talk focuses on what happens in our minds during zazen - how should we handle the unstopping flood of thoughts? It was originally given at Sanshinji in Bloomington, IN on March 21, 2010. Please consider supporting Okumura Roshi's teachings and the activities of Sanshin Zen Community by making a contribution on this podcast's page (http://sanshin.podomatic.com) or at Sanshin's home page (http://sanshinji.org/home/)