EXPRESSING CREATIVITY: your zazen practice space

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  • Cooperix
    Member
    • Nov 2013
    • 502

    EXPRESSING CREATIVITY: your zazen practice space

    An interview with Ven. Tenzin Yignyen (Tibetan Buddhist) by Gail Birnbaum Shambala Publications..

    Why have an altar?
    A proper altar holds images or representations of the Buddha’s enlightened body, speech and mind which serve as reminders of the goal of Buddhist practice—to develop these qualities in oneself so as to be able to fully benefit all sentient beings.


    Hello everyone.

    We all have a special place to sit. And we want it to be a safe and a pleasing sanctuary. Not everyone can have a dedicated room/building for this personal ‘zendo’. But we each have a corner, tiny or spacious for our practice.

    I am most fortunate. I have a nice sized room in my studio that doubles as a zendo and a gallery. I use the gallery to hang my own work to view but also… as a real gallery (called the ACOG- Anne Cooper Occasional Gallery) where we have exhibits 2-3 times a year of work from artists in the community. The exhibits are one evening, called pop-up shows, 2 hours only with refreshments, conversation and lots of celebration of creativity. Fun events. Of course, those are on hold until we have a vaccine. http://annecooperstudio.com/ACOG.html

    But mostly the room serves as a zendo for my morning and afternoon sits.

    Candles, incense, statuary, bells, flowers (I know now that there are remarkable gardens out there to bring into your personal mediation space)? How and where do you carve out your sacred space for sitting? Do you have an altar? What finds its way onto your altar? Any why? Is there an accompanying ritual when you enter the space to help set your mind free to be present for the sit? How do you care for it? Let us know how you realize your special and sacred space.

    And now from Meitou.

    Hello everyone and welcome to the second in our series about expressing creativity. When I first thought about a prompt for this subject, I had it in mind to keep it very simple and ask you to show where you sit, what kind of altar you have ( if any) , how you maintain it. Please feel free to do that. I thought to post some photos of various altars, from various Buddhist traditions, and other religions, ranging from the big elaborate public altars to small simple home spaces, and I will do so in my next post. But as I was researching altars, I came across some items that inspired me to make this into a practical project, for those of you who wish to join in.

    I like making things out of found objects and using material which is readily accessible. Something else that I like is the world of miniatures – one of my big loves as a child was my dolls tea service and my dolls house. So when I found a picture of an altar made out of a shoebox, I was hooked immediately. I was fascinated to find that shoebox altars are a thing, as are altars in tins, and matchbox altars. I'm posting some examples for you to see, and you'll notice that some of the most delightful examples are dedicated to The Day of the Dead, with their bright hot colours and vibrant home made decorations. Some of these are designed to be displayed as they are, some are made to be used when a practitioner is travelling and wants to create a sacred space in a hotel room etc. The thing they all have in common is that they are portable.

    So your mission, if you choose to accept it, is to make a portable altar, preferably using accessible household items -no need to go out and buy a fancy shmancy little butsudan if you have a cereal box, or a shoe box or an old tin with a lid etc. You can of course just post a pic of your own altar, but do consider having a play around with making a boxed Buddha – and of course, have fun!



    Gassho
    Anne and Meitou

    we both sat today
    Last edited by Cooperix; 06-19-2020, 05:40 PM.
  • Jundo
    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
    • Apr 2006
    • 40719

    #2
    I will remind everyone, however, that Shikantaza Zazen --is not-- "meditation." We should not call it so.

    Would you mind to change the heading of the thread?

    It is a small matter of a word, but I want folks to be clear on this.

    Gassho, Jundo

    SatTodayLAH
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

    Comment

    • Onka
      Member
      • May 2019
      • 1576

      #3
      My Shikantaza space varies. Yesterday for example it was sitting next to our ute on The Game Changer, my wheelie walker in a multi-level car park while my partner shopped. Wherever I am doing Shikantaza at home though, inside or out there's always this tiny Buddha and the heart shaped stone my partner found. This photo is my 'alter' from my most recent stay in hospital.
      Gassho
      Onka
      Sat today

      Sent from my SM-A205YN using Tapatalk
      穏 On (Calm)
      火 Ka (Fires)
      They/She.

      Comment

      • Cooperix
        Member
        • Nov 2013
        • 502

        #4
        Very nice Onka, portable altar. I don't think we 'need' any 'thing' to sit, but the touch of the familiar is welcome.

        Bows
        Anne

        ~st~

        Comment

        • Meitou
          Member
          • Feb 2017
          • 1656

          #5
          Just a few of the hundreds of examples of every type of altar that can be found on the internet. For those of you interested in making a portable shrine, just google shoebox/matchbox/ altoid tin shrines - there are so many amazing little works of art. At the other end of the scale it's interesting to compare these home made shrines with the hugely elaborate temple shrines, but also some of the shrines in Asian homes.

          Shoebox shrines
          shoebox.jpg

          Ann Riley altar.jpg

          day of the dead 1.jpg

          Tin box shrines

          tin box altar zen.jpg

          altoid tin shrine.jpg

          Gassho
          Meitou
          sattoday lah
          命 Mei - life
          島 Tou - island

          Comment

          • Meitou
            Member
            • Feb 2017
            • 1656

            #6
            And some more...

            Matchbox shrines

            matchbox shrines.jpg

            firestarter shrine.jpg

            our lady of guadalupe.jpg

            Various Portable shrines

            portable shrine 2.jpg

            firestarter buddha.jpg

            Meitou
            sattodah lah
            命 Mei - life
            島 Tou - island

            Comment

            • Meitou
              Member
              • Feb 2017
              • 1656

              #7
              And a few more...


              Beautiful, modern, simple

              ATTACH=CONFIG]6543[/ATTACH]

              small simple.jpg

              Home and Temple

              large home altar.jpg

              large ornate.jpg

              There are so many different styles and sizes, such a vast variety of materials used, way too many to post here, so please do have a look on the internet for inspiration. There have also been threads here about Treeleafers home spaces, do feel free to post your own.
              Of course there are many people who don't have any kind of altar, and people who find them off putting because they are redolent of theistic religion etc. So just a reminder that this project is about opening up to our creative imagination, and should be liberating, enjoyable and light hearted. Have fun.
              Gassho
              Meitou
              sattoday lah
              Attached Files
              命 Mei - life
              島 Tou - island

              Comment

              • Cooperix
                Member
                • Nov 2013
                • 502

                #8
                Meitou,
                I love these! And I am working on putting together a tiny altar. I too enjoy miniature, so I have lots of Zuni pueblo animal fetishes, tiny baskets, pots etc.
                Will post as soon as I get something together.

                bows
                Anne

                ~lahst~

                Comment

                • Seikan
                  Member
                  • Apr 2020
                  • 710

                  #9
                  What and inspiring thread. Thank you Meitou.

                  I've always found that having a dedicated space helps add a touch of formality/structure to my practice, but I don't go overboard with it.

                  I have carved out a small corner of a finished basement space for Zazen practice, and I'm putting a few finishing touches on it over the next few days. I'll post a pic as soon as it's "done".

                  On a related note, I would like to share a photo of the sign my son made for me. As my sitting space is right next to the stairs, it's less disruptive if folks don't come downstairs while I'm sitting. Therefore, I hang this sign on the doorknob at the top of the stairs to remind my family that Zazen is "happening".



                  I love his play on words.

                  Additionally, I love the idea of a portable shrine/altar. Thanks for the inspiring examples. I'm working on one now as well. Pics to come!

                  Gassho,

                  Rob
                  SatToday


                  Sent from my Pixel 2 XL using Tapatalk
                  聖簡 Seikan (Sacred Simplicity)

                  Comment

                  • Onka
                    Member
                    • May 2019
                    • 1576

                    #10
                    Cool sign there Rob.
                    One of my friends has a coffee cup that says ZEN AS F***. I'll leave it to your imagination to fill in the blanks lol.
                    Gassho
                    Onka
                    ST

                    Sent from my SM-A205YN using Tapatalk
                    穏 On (Calm)
                    火 Ka (Fires)
                    They/She.

                    Comment

                    • Doshin
                      Member
                      • May 2015
                      • 2640

                      #11
                      CD4FE538-E9EA-4DF4-B143-C6913F5EB33C.jpeg

                      The story that I heard goes that Buddha was born outside, became enlightened outside and died outside. That resonates well with whomI think I am. I often sit here with the sounds of insects and birds and the feel of wind. It seems right for me.

                      Doshin
                      St

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                      • Onka
                        Member
                        • May 2019
                        • 1576

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Doshin
                        [ATTACH=CONFIG]6549[/ATTACH]

                        The story that I heard goes that Buddha was born outside, became enlightened outside and died outside. That resonates well with whomI think I am. I often sit here with the sounds of insects and birds and the feel of wind. It seems right for me.

                        Doshin
                        St
                        Yes! Same here. I spend as much time as I can outside. It used to be down by the dam at the back of the property where we live but now I'm currently less mobile it's under bamboo looking over native grasses and weeds we let grow to seed.
                        Gassho Onka
                        ST

                        Sent from my SM-A205YN using Tapatalk
                        穏 On (Calm)
                        火 Ka (Fires)
                        They/She.

                        Comment

                        • Jundo
                          Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                          • Apr 2006
                          • 40719

                          #13
                          Hi,

                          I would like to invite everyone to join in our special BYOB (Bring Your Own Buddha) Zazenkai this week, in which I ask everyone to place in their sitting room at home something ... an image or thing that is ugly to the eye, harsh and human-made, something most mundane and ordinary like a rusty tin can ... even an image which is harsh, violent, scary and painful in this world or in your personal life making it hard to see "Buddha" in all the pain.

                          ATTENTION: This is a BYOB (Brink Your Own Buddha) Zazenkai, and I ask everyone to place in their sitting room at home today something ... an image or thing that is ugly to the eye, harsh and human-made, something most mundane and ordinary like a rusty tin can ... even an image which is harsh, violent, scary and painful in this


                          I explain more about it here:

                          ... I sometimes try to remind folks that ... because everything and all spaces, full or empty, beautiful or where the beauty is not so apparent to the human eye, are special and sacred spaces ... are "Buddha," thus a "Buddha Statue" or Altar can be about anything.

                          ... That is why I have sometimes replaced the "Buddha Statue" on our Altar in Tsukuba with a coke bottle, flower, empty space or a bag of dirty diapers. I sometimes put difficult peoples' pictures or "ugly" objects to remind folks to see beyond surface opinions and our personal preferences. After 911, I put up images of Osama Bin Laden and George Bush, side by side, on the Altar. That was harder for people to see at the time, but I asked people to see beyond the divided surface appearances of violence and war that such images represent in human terms.

                          All contain, below the surface, beautiful, sacred, manifestations of Buddha when the heart is open, and one can find "Buddha" beyond the ugliness, the greed, anger, violence, war, jealousy, discrimination among peoples and divided thinking.

                          So, please "Bring Your Own Buddha" today ... something that does not look like a Buddha, and which you would not usually consider a "Buddha," and perhaps even something ugly or an image of someone hard to see either in this world or in your own life. We will offer our Bows and a recitation of the Heart Sutra's reminders of Emptiness, peace and healing, beyond appearances and form.
                          For Buddhist folks, the Beautiful sometimes looks beautiful but, alas, sometimes anything but beautiful.

                          Gassho, Jundo

                          SatTodayLentAHand
                          Last edited by Jundo; 06-25-2020, 03:15 AM.
                          ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

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                          • Shonin Risa Bear
                            Member
                            • Apr 2019
                            • 923

                            #14
                            Altar at the hut:

                            DSCN3184.jpg

                            It goes through a lot of changes.

                            Altar at the hut/shop/garden shed that is at Daughter's house:

                            1-IMG_0907.jpg

                            This is on the wall out of the way of swinging timbers, rakes and such. The three dollar thrift-shop Kannon was missing a few fingers, and so is appointed cautionary shop steward; however it is still true that "all over the body is hands and eyes." _()_

                            gassho
                            shonin sat and lah today
                            Visiting priest: use salt

                            Comment

                            • Seikan
                              Member
                              • Apr 2020
                              • 710

                              #15
                              Lovely altars Shonin! And I like how you mention that the one in your hut is always changing. Such is life, right?

                              Gassho,
                              Rob

                              SatToday

                              Sent from my Pixel 2 XL using Tapatalk
                              聖簡 Seikan (Sacred Simplicity)

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