All,
One of the questions in my mind lately is about how to bring the best practices from monastic life into lay life (people with families, those not living in monasteries). Wanted to share what I'm thinking and get your thoughts
I see the below valuable things in monastic life that can be imported into our daily life
- A regular schedule that doesn't give much free time (to the ego to run around). As Jakusho Kwong roshi says, "The ego is the grist and the schedule is the active grinding stone that wears us down and uncovers our buddhanature"
- Noble silence (even working in silence)
- Sitting in a good posture (back straight) most of the time (eating, study, service, zazen etc)
- Being with like minded people (sangha) and an environment that helps practice rather than being pulled away by the distractions of world
- More zazen
- Being in a community and dealing with the problems of living together (cooking, cleaning, doing the work, dealing with difficult people) and practicing living by vow
How to bring these into lay life
- Create a schedule (leaving little free time) and follow that.
- Noble silence is hard in regular world but practice not allowing "getting lost in thought" and just doing the thing at hand (as per schedule)
- Sit in the proper posture as much as possible (eating, working, study etc) instead of slouching
- Completely avoid distractions like TV/Youtube/Netflix, Surfing net, Social media etc. Use free time for dharma study instead
- Do more zazen if life permits
- Take on more selfless work that doesn't get you anything but can be more like an offering; helping family at home (cooking, cleaning, playing with kids etc), taking more common work at office that nobody wants to do or gets credit
Gassho,
Sam
ST
One of the questions in my mind lately is about how to bring the best practices from monastic life into lay life (people with families, those not living in monasteries). Wanted to share what I'm thinking and get your thoughts
I see the below valuable things in monastic life that can be imported into our daily life
- A regular schedule that doesn't give much free time (to the ego to run around). As Jakusho Kwong roshi says, "The ego is the grist and the schedule is the active grinding stone that wears us down and uncovers our buddhanature"
- Noble silence (even working in silence)
- Sitting in a good posture (back straight) most of the time (eating, study, service, zazen etc)
- Being with like minded people (sangha) and an environment that helps practice rather than being pulled away by the distractions of world
- More zazen
- Being in a community and dealing with the problems of living together (cooking, cleaning, doing the work, dealing with difficult people) and practicing living by vow
How to bring these into lay life
- Create a schedule (leaving little free time) and follow that.
- Noble silence is hard in regular world but practice not allowing "getting lost in thought" and just doing the thing at hand (as per schedule)
- Sit in the proper posture as much as possible (eating, working, study etc) instead of slouching
- Completely avoid distractions like TV/Youtube/Netflix, Surfing net, Social media etc. Use free time for dharma study instead
- Do more zazen if life permits
- Take on more selfless work that doesn't get you anything but can be more like an offering; helping family at home (cooking, cleaning, playing with kids etc), taking more common work at office that nobody wants to do or gets credit
Gassho,
Sam
ST
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