Dear All,
We begin reflection on this wonderful and practical collection of essays by Soto Priests, all who happen to be women, on living in "challenging times." The advice is useful, wise, compassionate, timeless, down-to-earth and (even though things change rapidly, and much has happened since its publication in 2018) fits our world today.
About half and more of the authors have said that they will come here for live talks with us when their chapter is up for discussion. I am hoping to tempt more (a couple, sadly, are not in the best of health right now, so we will devote our reading, and offer Metta to them, for their health and comfort.)
I plan to take it real, real slow, however, so it will take about a whole year to read all the chapters, with between one and three weeks devoted to each essay (we Zen folks need not rush.) Feel free to read ahead, but we will not be hurrying, and I hope you join in again at our snail's pace. Also, note that we likely will take some chapters out of order so that we may fit in with the busy schedules of some of these busy busy Zen teachers.
Our first reading is the Introduction, focusing on the life of Dogen as an example of survival in challenging times. The author is the Rev. Dai-En Bennage, a great friend of Treeleaf, someone who trained in Japan for many years, and has been a wonderful mentor to many in the west. Unfortunately, Dai-En is not in the best of health, has needed to curtail most of her priestly activities because of her age and physical condition, and thus is not able to visit us. However, I am sending word to her that we are reading her essay, and I hope that perhaps we can get some message from her.
In reading this essay, do you think that Master Dogen can be an example for us, 800 years later? His world was very different from our own, and in many ways even harder than our modern lives with relative comforts, medicine and technologies. On the other hand, we face challenges and problems that Dogen could never have imagined. In such light, does Dogen's story truly remain relevant? What do you think?
I particularly appreciated one paragraph of the essay, the one that begins "There can be suffering from not having certain things." It almost makes it sound as if we need down to have up. Do we need some suffering in our life to truly have a life worth living?
Unfortunately, the book is only available in paper cover. If there is someone unable to access the book due to location or funding, please let me know. I will try to arrange something for you.
Gassho, Jundo
satTodayLAH
tsuku.jpg
We begin reflection on this wonderful and practical collection of essays by Soto Priests, all who happen to be women, on living in "challenging times." The advice is useful, wise, compassionate, timeless, down-to-earth and (even though things change rapidly, and much has happened since its publication in 2018) fits our world today.
About half and more of the authors have said that they will come here for live talks with us when their chapter is up for discussion. I am hoping to tempt more (a couple, sadly, are not in the best of health right now, so we will devote our reading, and offer Metta to them, for their health and comfort.)
I plan to take it real, real slow, however, so it will take about a whole year to read all the chapters, with between one and three weeks devoted to each essay (we Zen folks need not rush.) Feel free to read ahead, but we will not be hurrying, and I hope you join in again at our snail's pace. Also, note that we likely will take some chapters out of order so that we may fit in with the busy schedules of some of these busy busy Zen teachers.
Our first reading is the Introduction, focusing on the life of Dogen as an example of survival in challenging times. The author is the Rev. Dai-En Bennage, a great friend of Treeleaf, someone who trained in Japan for many years, and has been a wonderful mentor to many in the west. Unfortunately, Dai-En is not in the best of health, has needed to curtail most of her priestly activities because of her age and physical condition, and thus is not able to visit us. However, I am sending word to her that we are reading her essay, and I hope that perhaps we can get some message from her.
In reading this essay, do you think that Master Dogen can be an example for us, 800 years later? His world was very different from our own, and in many ways even harder than our modern lives with relative comforts, medicine and technologies. On the other hand, we face challenges and problems that Dogen could never have imagined. In such light, does Dogen's story truly remain relevant? What do you think?
I particularly appreciated one paragraph of the essay, the one that begins "There can be suffering from not having certain things." It almost makes it sound as if we need down to have up. Do we need some suffering in our life to truly have a life worth living?
Unfortunately, the book is only available in paper cover. If there is someone unable to access the book due to location or funding, please let me know. I will try to arrange something for you.
Gassho, Jundo
satTodayLAH
tsuku.jpg
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