Maintaining practice when away from home?

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  • Chikyou
    Member
    • May 2022
    • 732

    Maintaining practice when away from home?

    I am going on a business trip soon (the date hasn’t been scheduled yet but in the coming months) and while I will only be gone for a couple of days, I want to continue my practice in some fashion. I know the easy answer is to just sit. But for those who travel and who like to maintain a practice with a few extra trappings, what do you do? Obviously incense is out of the question in a hotel room and while I have a folding bench I intend to pack, I’m not going to bring my home altar with me.

    I usually think about this before going somewhere and what happens is I just stop practicing until I get back home; I am determined not to do that this time!

    Gassho,
    SatLah,
    Chikyō
    Chikyō 知鏡
    (Wisdom Mirror)
    They/Them
  • Jundo
    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
    • Apr 2006
    • 41373

    #2
    Originally posted by Chikyou
    I am going on a business trip soon (the date hasn’t been scheduled yet but in the coming months) and while I will only be gone for a couple of days, I want to continue my practice in some fashion. I know the easy answer is to just sit. But for those who travel and who like to maintain a practice with a few extra trappings, what do you do? Obviously incense is out of the question in a hotel room and while I have a folding bench I intend to pack, I’m not going to bring my home altar with me.

    I usually think about this before going somewhere and what happens is I just stop practicing until I get back home; I am determined not to do that this time!

    Gassho,
    SatLah,
    Chikyō
    Kotei has his cool film of making a Zafu from a blanket and belt ...
    .


    Otherwise, I would remind that everywhere is it, and anything is a Buddha statue. I just wrote a little essay about that, in fact ...

    (filedata/fetch?id=544722&d=1743223728) (filedata/fetch?id=544723&d=1743223822) As a young man, in search of "true Zen," Master Dogen made the dangerous journey to China, experiencing great sea storms and illness along the way. Even after arriving and visiting many Zen teachers here and there, he still


    I once packed a really really tiny Buddha statue, about the size of a postage stamp, when I traveled, and also a print of a Buddha about the size of a business card. In truth, "big and little" are human judgements. A big Buddha and a small Buddha is still a Buddha. In fact, everything in the room is Buddha. What is not?

    Have a good trip.

    Gassho, J
    stlah
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

    Comment

    • Tairin
      Member
      • Feb 2016
      • 3005

      #3
      I used to travel a lot for work. My advice is don’t over think this. I used to use a towel spread on the floor and fold one of the bed pillows as a Zafu. It was comfortable enough for me to be able to sit Burmese for 30 minutes. In some rare cases I just sat on the office chair that is inevitably in the room.

      You don’t need a lot of stuff. Zazen is very portable.


      Tairin
      sat today and lah
      泰林 - Tai Rin - Peaceful Woods

      Comment

      • Hokai
        Member
        • Aug 2024
        • 137

        #4
        I’m away from home a lot.
        I just sit down somewhere, anywhere really and that works.
        kind of brutal minimalism.
        Gassho
        Hōkai
        satlah
        “How can we ever lose interest in life? Spring has come again
        And cherry trees bloom in the mountains.”
        ― Ryokan​

        Comment

        • Shinshi
          Senior Priest-in-Training
          • Jul 2010
          • 3848

          #5
          I have a Altoids tin (smalls) and I made a little alter out of match sticks for an incredibly small Buddha statue, and I have a medallion of Avelokiteshvara that I found in a thrift shop on the other side. But, as Tairin said, you don't need much. Just sitting is the whole world - nothing more is needed.

          Gassho, Shinshi

          SaT-LaH



          空道 心志 Kudo Shinshi

          For Zen students a weed is a treasure. With this attitude, whatever you do, life becomes an art.
          ​— Shunryu Suzuki

          E84I - JAJ

          Comment

          • Bion
            Senior Priest-in-Training
            • Aug 2020
            • 5203

            #6
            I always take my practice with me, as long as I can carry myself. Nothing changes whether I am home or somewhere else. My hands can hold the gassho the same, my breath is there, so is my voice and painful back. I chant the verse of refuge every day, my morning starts always with a bit of metta as I make the bed and wash my face, I chant the vows and verse of atonement. Zazen needs no special setup and a prostration is just as appropriate whether facing a plastic Buddha, a wood Buddha or an air Buddha.
            Meditation is also readily available for any moment when one is idle and the mind starts to navigate towards not helpful things. That’s about it. Each moment can be a whole ceremony if one approaches it like that.

            Gassho
            sat lah
            "Stepping back with open hands, is thoroughly comprehending life and death. Immediately you can sparkle and respond to the world." - Hongzhi

            Comment

            • Hosui
              Member
              • Sep 2024
              • 70

              #7
              The only trappings I took on a recent trip to the USA, Chikyou, was Jundo's book (The Zen Master's Dance) and a decent data roaming package for my phone so I could join the sits with Onki, Shokai and our EST timezone friends: a few early sits in the hotel lobby and one in the airport. That's the beauty of Treeleaf - you're never alone when you want to sit.

              Gassho
              sat/lah today

              Comment

              • Hokai
                Member
                • Aug 2024
                • 137

                #8
                4.50 sitting on a train
                and the camerawork throughout is fabulous



                Sometimes I take my portable altar in this little box
                IMG_2926.jpg
                Gassho
                Hōkai
                satlah
                “How can we ever lose interest in life? Spring has come again
                And cherry trees bloom in the mountains.”
                ― Ryokan​

                Comment

                • Junsho
                  Member
                  • Mar 2024
                  • 222

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Hokai
                  4.50 sitting on a train
                  and the camerawork throughout is fabulous



                  Sometimes I take my portable altar in this little box
                  IMG_2926.jpg
                  Gassho
                  Hōkai
                  satlah
                  Portable altar

                  Gassho!
                  SatLah
                  Junshō 純聲 - Pure Voice, Genuine Speech
                  ​​​​​​
                  If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him.” - Linji Yixuan​​

                  Comment

                  • Seiryu
                    Member
                    • Sep 2010
                    • 649

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Chikyou
                    I want to continue my practice in some fashion.
                    Where could your practice possibly go?
                    Is it something you pick up and put down, like a suitcase? Something that exists only in one place but not another?
                    On your trip, sit when you sit and walk when you walk, no need to "continue" anything for it has never ceased.

                    Gassho
                    Sat/Lah
                    Humbly,
                    清竜 Seiryu

                    Comment

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