Dharma Tea on Tuesday for October 18, 2022 – Oryoki Practice 2:00-2:45pm Eastern
Myōshin Carlos Moura will offer information and share photographs on the topic of Oryoki. All Beings Zen Sangha Sesshin (meditation retreats) often a formal proscribed manor of serving food, eating the food and cleaning up after the eating is finished. Come and join the discussion and share your experience and knowledge about this important part of our practice. All are welcome. Please use this link to join. If asked for a password use 995606
A wabi-sabi Oryoki set of bowls, clothes and utensils
The All Beings Zen Sangha welcomes and affirms all who come here to seek the Way, and who will work toward respectful acceptance of others across our many differences, harmonizing the one and the many.
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Paula Chiplis and Shinren Mark Stone represented the sangha at the march on Washington organized by the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival on June 18. Thousands of people from all over the country and every walk of life joined together on a lovely sunny day in support of new policies and legal priorities to address systemic injustices in our country. The highlights for Paula and Shinren were the Yelling Trees paintings and meeting Jodie Evans, the founder of Code Pink (“Make Out Not War”) organization for grassroots & social justice.
Tuesday: Dharma Tea at Two pm for June 21, 2022 . Use this link to join. If asked for a password use 003827
Inryū Sensei will talk about the seventh Ox Herding Picture. The Zen (Chan) Ox Herding School originated in China. The lessons were designed as a series of short poems and accompanying drawings to describe the stages of a practitioner’s progress toward enlightenment, and their return to society to enact wisdom and compassion. We begin with five minutes of silent tea drinking. Please have a piece of paper and a writing implement in hand as Inryū Sensei will offer a guided reflection/meditation and ask the participants to write and draw on paper as part of the tea.
Long delayed due to Covid, an Abbot’s Funeral for Hakuryu Sojun Mel Weitsman Roshi, former San Francisco Zen Center and Berkeley Zen Center Abbot, will take place on Sunday, June 19 at 3:00 pm. The ceremony will be livestreamed and all are invited to participate online.
Sojun’s Teachings Remembered in this tribute by some of his students here.
Tuesday: Dharma Tea at Two pm for June 14, 2022 . Use this link to join. If asked for a password use 003827
Inryū Sensei will talk about the sixth Ox Herding Picture. The Zen (Chan) Ox Herding School originated in China. The lessons were designed as a series of short poems and accompanying drawings to describe the stages of a practitioner’s progress toward enlightenment, and their return to society to enact wisdom and compassion. We begin with five minutes of silent tea drinking. Please have a piece of paper and a writing implement in hand as Inryū Sensei will offer a guided reflection/meditation and ask the participants to write and draw on paper as part of the tea.
Tuesday: Dharma Tea at Two pm for June 7, 2022 . Use this link to join. If asked for a password use 003827
Inryū Sensei will talk about the fifth Ox Herding Picture. The Zen (Chan) Ox Herding School originated in China. The lessons were designed as a series of short poems and accompanying drawings to describe the stages of a practitioner’s progress toward enlightenment, and their return to society to enact wisdom and compassion. We begin with five minutes of silent tea drinking. Please have a piece of paper and a writing implement in hand as Inryū Sensei will offer a guided reflection/meditation and ask the participants to write and draw on paper as part of the tea.
The Branching Streams Conference is a gathering that happens about every two years. Branching Streams is a network of Suzuki Roshi lineage sanghas of which All Beings Zen is a part. Our Guiding Dharma Teacher and Senior Priest, Inryu Ponce-Barger, and Koryu Naomi had the privilege of attending the recent Branching Streams conference in-person on April 25-28 in Austin, TX. There were approximately 40 practitioners from the Suzuki Roshi lineage from Vancouver, BC, Germany, and many places in between. The conference was held at the Ancient Yoga Center, a retreat center situated on a 230-acre Hindu temple and ashram.
We practiced zazen in the mornings and evenings, with brief accompanying ceremonies, attended workshops, and connected with new and long-time friends in the larger sangha. In addition to new friendships we learned practical sangha administration ideas from each other, for example how other sanghas are approaching hybrid zendos and conducting outreach with young sangha members. We also did some spontaneous hiking!
Here’s a brief overview of the workshops from this year’s Branching Streams conference:
Healing Circles: During the first morning of the conference, we did a 2-hour small group activity called Healing Circles, a deep-listening practice based on compassionately bearing witness and experiencing our interconnectedness. It uses the basic-yet-powerful human tools of social support, sharing time, and humbly being present together creating a spirit of acceptance to explore suffering, uncertainty, and finding meaning to promote healing and a sense of community.
Poetry Workshop with Naomi Shihab Nye: Naomi Shihab Nye, a prolific awarded American poet, creative writing educator, and bright shining light of a human being, led us in a poetry workshop. She said, “We live in a poem,” and then read aloud some text (instructions for using the retreat center bathroom) that transformed our perspective of the ordinary as extraordinary. She presented many simple but powerful poetry compositions and guided us through scribbled poetry drafts. To learn more about Naomi Shibah Nye, this interview from On Being conveys her warmth, kindness, and her message that poetry loves us.
Work that Reconnects: Based on the life’s work of Joanna Macy, Stephanie Kaza, Environmental Studies Professor Emerita of the University of Vermont and Lay Entrusted teacher, led us through the four steps that were aligned with Buddhist practice which were: Coming From Gratitude, Honoring our Pain for the World, Seeing with New/Ancient Eyes, and Going Forth.
There’s so much more to share, but to sum it up: the Branching Streams conference conveyed the power of good spiritual friends, that spiritual friends are the whole of our practice, here in our sangha, and reaching across the globe. And we cannot do this bodhisattva work without each other and the friendships that sustain us.
L to R: David Zimmerman SFZC Abbot, Tova Green Branching Streams Liaison and Sosan Diego Miglioli SFZC PresidentKoryū Naomi Knoble and Inryū Bobbi Poncé-Barger atop the hill at the Conference Host Site in Austin TX
Tuesday: Dharma Tea at Two pm for May 31, 2022 . Use this link to join.
Inryū Sensei will talk about the fourth Ox Herding Picture. The Zen (Chan) Ox Herding School originated in China. The lessons were designed as a series of short poems and accompanying drawings to describe the stages of a practitioner’s progress toward enlightenment, and their return to society to enact wisdom and compassion. We begin with five minutes of silent tea drinking. Please have a piece of paper and a writing implement in hand as Inryū Sensei will offer a guided reflection/meditation and ask the participants to write and draw on paper as part of the tea.
Catching the Ox by Max Gimblett
Use this link to join. If asked for a password use 003827
Tuesday: Dharma Tea at Two pm for May 17, 2022 . Use this link to join.
Inryū Sensei will talk about the third Ox Herding Picture. The Zen (Chan) Ox Herding School originated in China. The lessons were designed as a series of short poems and accompanying drawings to describe the stages of a practitioner’s progress toward enlightenment, and their return to society to enact wisdom and compassion. We begin with five minutes of silent tea drinking. Please have a piece of paper and a writing implement in hand as Inryū Sensei will offer a guided reflection/meditation and ask the participants to write and draw on paper as part of the tea.
Glimpse of the Ox by Max Gimblatt
Use this link to join. If asked for a password use 003827
Tuesday Dharma Tea at Two pm for May 10, 2022. Use this link to join. 2-2:45 pm Eastern.
Inryū Sensei will offering teaching on the second of the 10 Oxherding drawings on May 10, 2022. The Zen (Chan) Ox Herding School originated in China. The lessons were designed as a series of short poems and accompanying drawings to describe the stages of a practitioner’s progress toward enlightenment, and their return to society to enact wisdom and compassion.
brush painting by Max Gimblatt
Use this link to join. If asked use this password 003827