[HealthDharma] Zen Practice with Serious Health Issues

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  • Kojitsu
    Novice Priest-in-Training
    • Mar 2024
    • 315

    [HealthDharma] Zen Practice with Serious Health Issues

    To live with serious illness such as dialysis-dependent kidney failure, heart disease, and pulmonary embolism (blood clots in the lungs) is not simply to endure physical suffering. It is to walk daily along the edge of impermanence. Yet from the perspective of Zen practice, this path is not tragic. It is an opportunity to meet life exactly as it is, moment by moment, with clarity, dignity, and compassion.

    In Zen practice, we do not look away from suffering. We meet it directly. The Buddha’s First Noble Truth states that life includes dukkha (unease, discontent, and suffering.) Chronic illness does not make this more true, it only makes it harder to ignore. Each dialysis session, needles in the arm, the steady hum of the machine, the annoyance of your blood pressure being taken every 30 minutes, the fatigue after, is a dharma gate. So too are the moments when breathing becomes difficult, when the chest tightens and fear arises, or when the heart goes into atrial fibrillation and you start to panic. These experiences are not interruptions to our spiritual life. They are our spiritual life. In Zen, we do not seek to escape or transcend something. We seek intimacy with all things. That includes the fatigue, the pain, and even the bureaucracies of medical field. Nothing is left out. Dogen taught that practice is not separate from daily life. Whether stirring a pot of soup or sitting on a cushion, each activity is the entirety of the Buddha Way. In illness, the scope of action may be limited, but not the possibility for practice.

    When walking becomes labored, we bring attention to each step. When our breath catches in the lungs, we rest in the breath we can take, rather than grasp for the one we cannot. This is not passivity, it is profound engagement. To say “just this” is not resignation but a vow to live fully, exactly where we are. Sitting zazen with a body in decline may be difficult, but the essence of zazen is not physical posture. Whether in a chair or a hospital bed, we can embody shikantaza, just sitting. In Zen, this means sitting with no gaining idea, no goal. Not even health or recovery. Zazen is the enactment of our inherent Buddha-nature, even when we are hooked to machines, even when our organs are failing. Dogen reminds us that “practice and enlightenment are one.” We do not wait until conditions are ideal. We do not wait until the body is strong. We do not wait.

    Illness often isolates. Others may not understand our condition, or may even see our lives as diminished or burdensome. But from the perspective of Zen, every being is a manifestation of the dharma. No one is outside the circle of compassion. To live with serious illness is to become intimately aware of the suffering of others... those with tubes, scars, pills, and fears. In this way, we wear the okesa not just over our shoulder, but across the shared ground of human vulnerability. Our practice, though silent, becomes a vessel of compassion for all beings.

    Facing mortality each day, when each clot could be the last, when the heart’s rhythm wavers, when the back pain is so intense you can't possibly sit still, is not merely frightening, it is intimate. It strips away illusions of control and certainty. Zen does not offer answers, but it does offer intimacy. Not knowing becomes our ally. We try to open to each moment not with fear, but with wonder. What is this? In the face of death, we do not reach for beliefs or promises. We return to this breath, this step, this bowl of rice. We let go again and again, not just of hope or fear, but of our very selves. This is the liberation Zen speaks of, not beyond suffering, but through it.

    Living with dialysis, heart disease, and pulmonary embolism is not easy. But it is not in conflict with the Buddha Way. In fact, it may offer the rarest gift of all, the chance to live every moment with full awareness of its fragility. Zen does not promise that we will live longer. It offers something far more profound... that we might live fully, and die fully, without clinging, without regret, and with an open, awakened heart.

    As Dogen Zenji wrote:
    “When you find your place where you are, practice occurs, actualizing the fundamental point.”

    This body, this moment, this breath... this is our place. And we practice endlessly.

    gassho
    kojitsu
  • Jundo
    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
    • Apr 2006
    • 42343

    #2
    Yes.
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

    Comment

    • Kojitsu
      Novice Priest-in-Training
      • Mar 2024
      • 315

      #3
      Originally posted by Jundo
      Yes.


      kojitsu

      Comment

      • Bion
        Senior Priest-in-Training
        • Aug 2020
        • 5607

        #4
        Thank you for sharing these thoughts and for expressing so eloquently something related tho practice that can only be the result of lived experience. As someone who only has to deal with minor physical issues, I value the chance to learn from significant experiences like yours, so that maybe, I can be better prepared for when my turn comes...

        Gassho
        sat lah
        "A person should train right here & now.
        Whatever you know as discordant in the world,
        don't, for its sake, act discordantly,
        for that life, the enlightened say, is short." - The Buddha

        Comment

        • Kojitsu
          Novice Priest-in-Training
          • Mar 2024
          • 315

          #5
          Originally posted by Bion
          Thank you for sharing these thoughts and for expressing so eloquently something related tho practice that can only be the result of lived experience. As someone who only has to deal with minor physical issues, I value the chance to learn from significant experiences like yours, so that maybe, I can be better prepared for when my turn comes...

          Gassho
          sat lah
          Thank you so much for your kind words. If anyone knows about the struggles I go through on the daily, it’s you. Thank you for always being there to guide me my friend.



          kojitsu

          Comment

          • Seikan
            Member
            • Apr 2020
            • 731

            #6
            Thank you for sharing this lived wisdom Kojitsu. I'll simply echo what Bion said as he already said it much better than I would have.



            Gassho,
            Seikan

            stlah
            聖簡 Seikan (Sacred Simplicity)

            Comment

            • IanSmith
              Member
              • Dec 2012
              • 101

              #7
              Thankyou



              Gassho
              Ian
              SatLah
              If a person does their best, what else is there?
              George S. Patton

              Comment

              • Roo
                Member
                • Dec 2024
                • 23

                #8
                I read this earlier, but seeing it again I feel compelled to speak.

                As someone with chronic pain, albeit not nearly as bad as yours, or some other people in here, this is really nice to read. Often we sufferers in pain are dukkha-ing it up by shooting arrows at ourselves all over the place. Like it's a party of pain for ourselves. With our metaphorical arrows, we may miss the mark. Life is our practice, our temple is all things. Practice contains everything, and the pain is a part of that.

                I was thinking about this earlier, as I'm going through some emotional turmoil right now. My girlfriend broke up with me recently - so instead of causing myself more pain than is necessary, I attempt to just let it be and let it go. And that showed me that practice is life.



                Gassho, Roo
                satlah

                Comment

                • Vic
                  Member
                  • Jun 2025
                  • 13

                  #9
                  Thank you for all of this, Kojitsu.

                  Gassho,
                  Vic
                  Sat/LAH Today

                  Comment

                  • Jundo
                    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                    • Apr 2006
                    • 42343

                    #10
                    Folks, this is truly a "once a century" teaching. We cannot let this be read and forgotten, but must carve it into the bones (as old Zen folks would say.)

                    I do not recall a clearer statement of our Shikantaza way since I opened the doors on this Treeleaf place.

                    Nine Bows, KJ.

                    Gassho, Jundo
                    stlah
                    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

                    Comment

                    • Kojitsu
                      Novice Priest-in-Training
                      • Mar 2024
                      • 315

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Roo
                      I read this earlier, but seeing it again I feel compelled to speak.

                      As someone with chronic pain, albeit not nearly as bad as yours, or some other people in here, this is really nice to read. Often we sufferers in pain are dukkha-ing it up by shooting arrows at ourselves all over the place. Like it's a party of pain for ourselves. With our metaphorical arrows, we may miss the mark. Life is our practice, our temple is all things. Practice contains everything, and the pain is a part of that.

                      I was thinking about this earlier, as I'm going through some emotional turmoil right now. My girlfriend broke up with me recently - so instead of causing myself more pain than is necessary, I attempt to just let it be and let it go. And that showed me that practice is life.



                      Gassho, Roo
                      satlah
                      Thank you for your kind words Roo, if what I wrote helps someone in any way, I’m so happy.



                      kojitsu

                      Comment

                      • Kojitsu
                        Novice Priest-in-Training
                        • Mar 2024
                        • 315

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Vic
                        Thank you for all of this, Kojitsu.

                        Gassho,
                        Vic
                        Sat/LAH Today


                        st/lah
                        kojitsu

                        Comment

                        • Kojitsu
                          Novice Priest-in-Training
                          • Mar 2024
                          • 315

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Vic
                          Thank you for all of this, Kojitsu.

                          Gassho,
                          Vic
                          Sat/LAH Today


                          st/lah
                          kojitsu

                          Comment

                          • Kojitsu
                            Novice Priest-in-Training
                            • Mar 2024
                            • 315

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Jundo
                            Folks, this is truly a "once a century" teaching. We cannot let this be read and forgotten, but must carve it into the bones (as old Zen folks would say.)

                            I do not recall a clearer statement of our Shikantaza way since I opened the doors on this Treeleaf place.

                            Nine Bows, KJ.

                            Gassho, Jundo
                            stlah
                            Wow, I’m truly humbled by your words. Thank you so much for being my teacher and making so clear what our practice is.



                            st/lah

                            kojitsu

                            Comment

                            • Myo-jin
                              Member
                              • Dec 2024
                              • 39

                              #15
                              Thanks for the reality check.

                              gassho
                              sattlah

                              Myojin
                              "My religion is not deceiving myself": Milarepa.

                              Comment

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