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298 – Framing Your Dharma Practice in a Helpful Way

The Zen Studies Podcast

Release Date: 03/31/2025

323 – Zazen As Defiant Self-Care show art 323 – Zazen As Defiant Self-Care

The Zen Studies Podcast

Since the term arose in 1950’s, “self-care” has referred to a number of different things. If we consider self-care to be things you do to remain physically and mentally healthy, then Zazen – simple, goalless, Zen meditation – can be seen as excellent self-care. In these troubled times, such self-care can even be seen as defiant – refusing to be broken down by challenging circumstances. Other forms of meditation can also be seen as self-care, of course, but Zazen can be a little difficult to get your mind around. Framing it as self-care may help you appreciate what it’s all about....

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322 – Q&A: Relationships, Cultural “Zen,” No-Self, and Confession show art 322 – Q&A: Relationships, Cultural “Zen,” No-Self, and Confession

The Zen Studies Podcast

This a Q&A episode based on questions I’ve received from listeners: Does Zen have anything to say about human relationships? Can we learn anything from the cultural popularization of the term “Zen”? If we have no independent self-nature, what about our sense of enduring self? Do Buddhists practice confession like Catholics?

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321 - How Buddhist is Zen? The Buddha's Teachings Compared to Radical Nondualism show art 321 - How Buddhist is Zen? The Buddha's Teachings Compared to Radical Nondualism

The Zen Studies Podcast

Viewed historically, Zen is a form of Mahayana Buddhism that evolved from the original forms Buddhism that were established in India after the Buddha’s death around 2,500 BC. Many aspects of original Buddhism are retained in Zen, including respect for Shakyamuni Buddha and his teachings. However, the degree of transformation Buddhism underwent when it took root in China and evolved into Chan (later called “Zen” in Japan) is difficult to overestimate, resulting in a path of radical nondualism. Both the ultimate goal of practice and the means to achieve that goal changed so radically that...

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320 – Two Ends of the Spiritual Practice Tunnel: Self-Power Versus Other-Power show art 320 – Two Ends of the Spiritual Practice Tunnel: Self-Power Versus Other-Power

The Zen Studies Podcast

Zen Buddhism exemplifies practice based in self-power, or jiriki. Pure Land Buddhism exemplifies practice based in other-power, or tariki. These are very different entry gates, but when we examine self-power and other-power more closely, we see that the ultimate goal of practice requires both.

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319 – Q&A: Universal Life, the Bodhisattva Vow and Monasticism, and Other Traditions show art 319 – Q&A: Universal Life, the Bodhisattva Vow and Monasticism, and Other Traditions

The Zen Studies Podcast

This is one of my unscripted Q&A episodes, where I answer questions submitted by listeners. If you have a question, go ahead and send it to me at zenstudiespodcast.com. I discuss: What does Kosho Uchiyama mean in his book Opening the Hand of Thought, when he talks about “settling as universal life?” Isn’t the Zen emphasis on monastic practice and self-liberation at odds with the Bodhisattva Vow to free all beings? What can we learn from practicing with other Buddhist traditions than our own, and is this recommended if we don’t live near a Zen center?

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318 – Loving Your Enemies: Extending Metta Does Not Mean Capitulation show art 318 – Loving Your Enemies: Extending Metta Does Not Mean Capitulation

The Zen Studies Podcast

Unlike Jesus, the Buddha didn’t explicitly instruct us to “love our enemies.” However, he did instruct us to extend goodwill, or Metta, to all beings unconditionally – including, of course, our enemies. In this time of growing divisiveness, what does it really mean to follow this teaching? Most people will admit that nurturing resentment and hatred is probably a bad idea, but on the other hand it feels completely unacceptable to capitulate to – surrender to or stop resisting – those who we perceive as causing harm. Fortunately, there are many benefits to loving our enemies, and...

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317 – Keizan’s Denkoroku Chapter 1: Mahakashyapa's Smile show art 317 – Keizan’s Denkoroku Chapter 1: Mahakashyapa's Smile

The Zen Studies Podcast

In this episode I read and reflect on Chapter One of Keizan’s Denkoroku: Record of the Transmission of Illumination. In it, Shakyamuni Buddha holds up a flower and blinks. Keizan says, "No one knew his intention, and they were silent." Then Mahakashyapa gives a slight smile, and the Buddha acknowledges him as his Dharma heir. What is going on in this koan? Keizan challenges our ideas about awakening, time, causation, and the nature of self.

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316 – Buddhist Communities and Public Political Stands: A Moral Quandary show art 316 – Buddhist Communities and Public Political Stands: A Moral Quandary

The Zen Studies Podcast

When should Buddhist communities take public stands on issues that could be seen as political? If politics is about how we make decisions in groups (local communities, towns, cities, states, nations), are Sanghas really be free from politics when they are embedded in these larger groups? Silence can function as tacit approval, so is maintaining neutrality in keeping with our Buddhist values? On the other hand, there are many good reasons for Sanghas to avoid bringing discussions of politics in their places of practice, and I discuss them.

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315 - Bad Zazen: Not Just an Oxymoron show art 315 - Bad Zazen: Not Just an Oxymoron

The Zen Studies Podcast

The form of meditation we do in Zen, unless we’re working on a koan, is called shikantaza – nothing but sitting – or silent illumination. It’s been called a “method of no method,” in which we let go of any striving whatsoever – even to control our meditative experience. So can we do “bad zazen?” Theoretically, there’s no such thing, and yet it sure feels like there is! What is this about?

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314 – Q&A: Comfort in the Precepts, Anger at Injustice, and Accidental Kensho show art 314 – Q&A: Comfort in the Precepts, Anger at Injustice, and Accidental Kensho

The Zen Studies Podcast

How do you find comfort in the precepts? What is the relationship between anger, forgiveness and justice? What about anxiety due to abrupt insight into emptiness? This is one of my unscripted Q&A episodes, where I answer questions submitted by listeners.

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Chances are, whether you're aware of it or not, you have a certain way of framing your Dharma practice. That is, you function using a conceptual framework that defines your relationship to your practice, the intent of that practice, and what is supposedly being transformed by that practice. When you're centered in the moment, you can practice without framing, but most of the time you'll be framing things whether you mean to or not. It's good to be conscious of your framing and choose a framing that's helpful.