Fall 2016 Events

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Greetings –

Just wanted to let everyone know that we have some events coming up this fall, all worth your time.  I’ve listed them out here but they’ll remain under Fall 2016 Events on the site as well.  If you have any questions, please send Shinren Mark Stone an e-mail.  Many thanks, hope to see you soon, and have a cup of tea.

Sam

These are on a Thursday evening at 7 pm at the All Beings Zendo, unless otherwise noted:

  • September 15th —Rev. Inryu talk on “The Bodhisattvas All Around Us”
  • October 6th — Way Seeking Mind Talk, Shinren Mark
  • October 27th —Way Seeking Mind Talk, Jirin Colleen
  • October 30th —Sunday morning 8am book discussion tea—“One Bird, One Stone”
  • November 5th — One Day Meditation Retreat at Woodburn Hill Farm
  • November 17th —Dharma talk, R. Liam Ōshin Jennings
  • November 20th—Sunday morning 8am—Dharma talk, Konin Melissa Cardenas
  • December 8th — Practice Discussion: “Reflections on a Week at Tassajara” Eric  Jonas

May All Beings Be Happy!

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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Checks can be mailed to:

All Beings Zen Sangha
27290 Woodburn Hill Road
Mechanicsville, MD 20659

or to:

All Beings Zen Sangha
C/O  Rev. Inryū Ponce-Barger,
2801 Adams Mill Road NW 402
Washington DC 20009

Category: Uncategorized

  • Dharma Book Discussion “Being Time”

    Saturday, October 30, 2021: Book group discussion of Being-Time, 9:30am-11am, please read first half the of the book. Use this link to join. If asked for a password use 669414

    Being-Time cover page
  • Thursday Evening Practice for October 28, 2021 7pm Eastern

    Please use this link to join.  If asked use this password 118879 .

    Thursday, October 28: Dharma talk “Ask the Stone Lantern” about how Dharma pervades all things by Rev. Konin Cardenas, Sensei,  in the lineage of Shunryu Suzuki Roshi.    Konin Sensei is also known as Ayya Dhammadīpā, as she became a fully ordained bhikkhuni in the Theravada tradition in recent years.      She writes that “Her shift to the Theravada tradition is a natural extension of her longtime metta practice and study of the Pali suttas”.  . In addition to English, Ayya teaches in Spanish, an expression of her Latin heritage. She is a trained interfaith chaplain, and has provided spiritual care in both hospital and hospice settings. Ayya Dhammadīpā is mother to a lovely adult daughter, and enjoys watercolor painting and sewing.

    The Thursday practice will begin with 30 minutes of zazen, followed by Rev. Konin’s Dharma Talk.  We will conclude with chanting the refuges in Pali and have a brief check in for those schedules allow them to remain after the service

    Please use this link to join.  If asked use this password 118879 .

  • Dharma Tea at Two pm for October 26,2021 – Grace McClain “Communicating with the eyes”

    Grace

    Dharma Tea at 2pm – 2:45pm Eastern time  offered by Grace McClain on “Communicating with the eyes”.

    Use this link to join.  If asked for a password use   897614.

    The first five minutes are silent tea drinking.  We conclude the gathering at 2:45pm.

  • Dharma Study – Grieving: A reflection of grief, loss and living

    Saturday, October 23, 2021  : “Grieving Here: A reflection on grief, loss and living with the wholeness of life” Talk and discussion led by JiShin Susan Salek 2pm.  Use this link to join 

    Jishin (Compassion Heart) Susan Salek has been a longtime and engaged member of the Insight Meditation Community of Washington DC (IMCW)’s LGBTQIA+ sangha, and she currently serves on the IMCW Board of Directors. She is committed to holding space and creating opportunities for the queer and trans community on this Buddhist path. Jishin is a graduate of the Mindfulness Meditation Teacher program taught by Tara Brach and Jack Kornfield. Her lived experience and bearing witness to this wild, difficult and beautiful life as a human being has motivated her to teach mindfulness meditation in particular as a support to women and the queer and transgender communities.

    She is a student of grief from her own experience of companioning friends, family and other beings thru illness, dying and death as well as a volunteer with Capital Caring Hospice. She recently taught a half-day workshop on Grief and Gratitude for the LGBTQIA+ community through IMCW. She expects to graduate from the Buddhist Chaplaincy program at Upaya Zen Center in March 2022. Jishin currently works as a Business Director for 3M and shares a home with her two cats in Maryland.

  • Dharma Tea at Two pm October 19, 2021

     

    Tuesday, October 19: Dharma Tea at 2pm offered by former shusō Seidō David Sarpal, “Something about the moment: Reflections on photography and Zen”  Use this link to join.

  • Morning Practice for October 15, 2021 6:30am Way Seeking Mind Talk

    Koryu Naomi at Cannon BeachFriday, October 15th, at 6:30am Eastern Time Kōryū (Bright Dragon) Naomi will offer a Way Seeking Mind talk.  We will have 10 minutes of zazen and then Koryu will offer her talk..  Please use this link to join. If you are asked for a password use 947537

  • Morning Practice for October 13, 2021 6:30am Eastern Time

    Here is the link to join us via Zoom at 6:30am for morning zazen practice.

    If you are asked for a password use this 656470

    Please put your zoom in gallery mode, and keep your video link on while muting your mic until the end of the service – Feel welcome to face away from your device camera while keeping your presence visible in the frame for others in attendance to see and know you are there. Please refrain from moving your device around while others are sitting zazen with you.

    Order of Service

    Robe Chant before zazen.

    Forty minute period of zazen

    After zazen: Four Great Vows

    Hymn to the Perfection of Wisdom

    Heart Sutra in English

    Shosaimyo Kichijo Dharani (Dharani for avoiding calamity) chanted 3 times

    If your schedule allows please stay on the zoom call to do a brief check-in after the service is concluded.

    ROBE CHANT

    DAI SAI GE DA PU KU

    MUSO FUKU DEN E

    HI BU NYORAI KYO

    KO DO SHOSHU JO

    Great robe of liberation

    Field far beyond form and emptiness

    Wearing the Tathagata’s teaching

    Saving all beings.

    After Zazen

    The Four Great Vows

    Beings are numberless; I vow to save them.

    Delusions are inexhaustible; I vow to end them.

    Dharma Gates are boundless; I vow to enter them.

    Buddha’s way is unsurpassable; I vow to become it.

    After Koan reading

    Dharana for avoiding calamity

    Hymn to the Perfection of Wisdom

    Homage to the Perfection of Wisdom, the lovely, the holy.

    The Perfection of Wisdom gives light. Unstained, the entire

    world cannot stain her. She is the source of light, and from

    everyone in the triple world she removes darkness.

    Most excellent are her works. She brings light so that all

    fear and distress may be forsaken, and disperses the gloom

    and darkness of delusion. She herself is an organ of vision.

    She has a clear knowledge of the own-being of all dharmas,

    for she does not stray away from it. The Perfection of Wisdom

    of the Buddhas sets in motion the Wheel of Dharma.

    Heart of Great Perfect Wisdom Sutra

    Avalokiteshvara Bodhisattva,

    when deeply practicing prajña paramita,⨀

    clearly saw that all five aggregates are empty

    and thus relieved all suffering.

    Shariputra,

    form does not differ from emptiness,

    emptiness does not differ from form.

    Form itself is emptiness,

    emptiness itself form.

    Sensations, perceptions, formations,

    and consciousness are also like this.

    Shariputra,

    all dharmas are marked by emptiness;

    they neither arise nor cease,

    are neither defiled nor pure,

    neither increase nor decrease.

    Therefore, given emptiness, there is

    no form, no sensation, no perception,

    no formation no consciousness;

    no eyes, no ears, no nose, no tongue,

    no body, no mind;

    no sight, no sound, no smell, no taste,

    no touch, no object of mind;

    no realm of sight… no realm of mind consciousness

    There is neither ignorance nor extinction of ignorance…

    neither old age and death,

    nor extinction of old age and death;

    no suffering, no cause, no cessation, no path;

    no knowledge and no attainment.

    With nothing to attain,

    a bodhisattva relies on prajña paramita,⨀

    and thus the mind is without hindrance.

    Without hindrance, there is no fear.

    Far beyond all inverted views, one realizes nirvana.

    All buddhas of past, present, and future

    rely on prajña paramita ⨀ and thereby attain

    unsurpassed, complete, perfect enlightenment.

    Therefore, know the prajña paramita ⨀ as

    the great miraculous mantra,

    the great bright mantra,

    the supreme mantra,

    the incomparable mantra,

    which removes all suffering

    and is true, not false.

    Therefore we proclaim the prajña paramita ⨀ mantra,

    the mantra that says:

    “Gate Gate ⨀ Paragate ⨀ Parasamgate Bodhi Svaha.” ∅

    Shosaimyo Kichijo Dharani

    (Auspicious Dharani or Spell For Averting Calamity)

    NO MO SAN MAN DA

    MOTO NAN

    OHA RA CHI KOTO SHA

    SONO NAN TO JI TO

    EN GYA GYA

    GYA KI GYA KI

    UN NUN SHIFU RA SHIFU RA

    HARA SHIFU RA HARA SHIFU RA

    CHISHU SA CHISHU SA

    CHISHU RI CHISHU RI

    SOHA JA SOHA JA

    SEN CHI GYA

    SHIRI EI SO MO KO

    All Buddhas

    All Buddhas, ten directions,

    Three times

    All Honored Ones, Bodhisattvas-Mahasattvas

    Wisdom beyond wisdom

    Maha Prajna Paramita

  • Tuesday Dharma Tea at Two pm

    Tuesday Tea at 2pm, October 12:     Todays discussion will be lead by Shinren Careful Practice Mark Stone.   Shinren will discuss the teachings of Shunryu Suzuki, the founder of the San Francisco Zen Center, who emphasized the importance of self- kindness, breath by breath, and how how self-kindness can help us take care of our practice.    We begin with 5 minutes of silent tea drinking before the discussion starts and conclude by 2:45pm.  Please use this link to join.  If asked for a password use 200009.

  • Evening Practice for Thursday September 30th, 2021 7pm

    Thursday, September 30th, 2021:  In person visit and talk by Rev. Setsuan Konjin (Snow Hermitage, Builds Love) Gaelyn Godwin, Abbot of the Houston Zen Center and Director of the Soto Zen International Center, and Rev. Taiga Ito, Soto Zen International Secretary, at 7pm Eastern Time. Their talk will focus on environmental dharma and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.  Please join us for the event in our cloud zendo by using this link.  If asked for a password use 118879


  • Fall Ango Announcement: Being-Time – Practicing with the myriad things as they are

    Wonderful sangha,

    We are delighted to announce that our annual Fall Ango (安居, “dwelling in peace”) will begin Monday, October 11th and conclude on the winter solstice, December 21st. An ango period is a time of intensified practice to set our intentions, focus on our bodhisattva vows, and be fully present for our unfolding lives and the myriad things as they are. Inryū Sensei is our Practice Period Leader  for the Ango and Kōryū Naomi will serve as her Benji (弁事, administrative assistant).

    Our theme for this fall ango will be Being Time: Practicing with the myriad things as they are. Being-time, or uji (有時), is a term created by Dōgen, Sōtō Zen’s founder in Japan. Being time can be thought of as being real, authentic, and showing up for ourselves and each other as we face the challenges of everyday life. We are all managing great uncertainty due to the ongoing COVID pandemic.  We share and hold and process the grief around the loss of so many people and our former ways of being. Embracing being-time is an invitation to be fully present for the impermanence and freedom of our lives right now.

    We will begin the Ango on Indigenous Peoples Day with a half day retreat in our urban zendo and invite people to join us via zoom as well.   The following weekend Inryū Sensei will be offering a memorial service for our departed Dharma Sister Francy Stilwell.   And on October 23 at 2pm we are happy to have Jishin Susan Salek help us with a class entitled “Grieving Here.  A reflection on grief, loss and living with the wholeness of life” offered in our cloud zendo.  On Sunday, October 31st, we will have an outdoor Sejiki-e Ceremony to honor our heart felt practice over the past year and to offer peace for deceased loved ones, to everyone who is suffering, and to the “hungry ghosts” (beings in perpetual states of wanting).

    We will do a deep Dharma dive into Dōgen’s work by reading Shinshu Robert’s Being-Time: A Practitioner’s Guide to Dogen’s Shobogenzo Uji. We will meet as a sangha to discuss the book on Saturday, October 30th at 9:30-11am, and will have a discussion with the author, Shinshu Roberts, who will join us by Zoom Saturday, 2-3pm on November 13th .

    We are scheduling Way Seeking Mind talks for sangha members to share their own reflections on their path of practice and to deepen our connections to each other.   And we will continue our tradition of cloud zendo Tuesday Teas at 2pm (Eastern Time), for fun, formal and informal zen practice topics to widen the fields of knowledge and connect amongst us.  Please contact Kōryū Naomi if you would like to offer a Way Seeking Mind talk or lead a tea, contact details can be found in the email announcement.

    Inryū Sensei will be available for Dokusan, an opportunity to just be yourself and discuss your life and practice. And our former shusos (head students) from past angos will also be available to meet you for tea and practice discussions.  Please contact Kōryū Naomi for dokusan and shuso tea scheduling.

    You are warmly invited and encouraged to join us for any or all of the events below. We will send out email updates weekly as new items are added. Please refer to the All Beings Zen Sangha events page on our website.

    Fall Ango Events October 11 to December 21

    All events in Eastern Time

    October
    Monday, October 11: Ango begins with a Half Day Zazenkai in-person and online, 6:30-11:30 am EDT
    Saturday, October 16: Francy Stilwell Memorial Service – contact Inryū if you would like to attend online or via zoom
    Sunday, October 17: Work practice to freshen the urban zendo and guest space 9-11am
    Thursday, October 21: Full moon ceremony
    Saturday, October 23: “Grieving Here: A reflection on grief, loss and living with the wholeness of life” discussion led by JiShin Susan Salek 2pm.

    Jishin (Compassion Heart) Susan Salek has been a longtime and engaged member of the Insight Meditation Community of Washington DC (IMCW)’s LGBTQIA+ sangha, and she currently serves on the IMCW Board of Directors. She is committed to holding space and creating opportunities for the queer and trans community on this Buddhist path. Jishin is a graduate of the Mindfulness Meditation Teacher program taught by Tara Brach and Jack Kornfield. Her lived experience and bearing witness to this wild, difficult and beautiful life as a human being has motivated her to teach mindfulness meditation in particular as a support to women and the queer and transgender communities.

    She is a student of grief from her own experience of companioning friends, family and other beings thru illness, dying and death as well as a volunteer with Capital Caring Hospice. She recently taught a half-day workshop on Grief and Gratitude for the LGBTQIA+ community through IMCW. She expects to graduate from the Buddhist Chaplaincy program at Upaya Zen Center in March 2022. Jishin currently works as a Business Director for 3M and shares a home with her two cats in Maryland.
    Thursday, October 28: Dharma talk “Ask the Stone Lantern” about how Dharma pervades all things by Rev. Konin Cardenas 7pm    Konin, aka Ayya Dhammadīpā, is a fully ordained bhikkhuni in the Theravada tradition and a Dharma Heir in the Suzuki Roshi lineage of Soto Zen,   Her shift to the Theravada tradition is a natural extension of her longtime metta practice and study of the Pali suttas. In addition to English, Ayya teaches in Spanish, an expression of her Latin heritage. She is a trained interfaith chaplain, and has provided spiritual care in both hospital and hospice settings. Ayya Dhammadīpā is mother to a lovely adult daughter, and enjoys watercolor painting and sewing.
    Saturday, October 30: Book group discussion of Being-Time, 9:30am-11am, please read first half the of the book
    Sunday, October 31: Sejiki-e Ceremony. Sejiki-e is a Japanese word meaning “The Feeding and Nourishing of Hungry Ghosts.” Location: Outdoors at Still Spring Zendo, Bethesda MD, 3-4:30pm

    Three ceramic turtles in the grass
    Silly turtles @ urban zendo

    November
    Friday, November 5: Movie night [film and time TBD]
    Saturday, November 13: Rev. Shinshu Roberts author Being-Time will join the sangha via zoom, 2 – 3:00pm.  Rev. Shinshu Roberts is co-founder and teacher, with Rev. Daijaku Kinst, of Ocean Gate Zen Center in Capitola, CA. She is a Dharma heir of Sojun Weitsman Roshi, in the Soto Zen lineage of Shunryu Suzuki. Shinshu holds the appointment of International Dharma Teacher in the Japanese Soto Zen School and is the author Being-Time: A Practitioner’s Guide to Dōgen’s Shōbōgenzō Uji, as well as articles appearing in BuddhaDharma and Lion’s Roar.
    Thursday, November 18: Full moon ceremony 7pm
    Saturday, November 20: All-day zazenkai urban zendo and via cloud zendo 6:30am- 4:30pm
    Thursday, November 25: Zendo closed
    Sunday, November 28: Jukai ceremony (Time TBA)

    5 people processing for Jukai
    Jukai procession @ Woodburn Hill Farm

    December
    Rohatsu Sesshin begins the night of Sunday November 28 – Saturday, December 4: This Sesshin/Intensive Retreat is held annually to celebrate Buddha’s enlightenment
    Saturday, December 18: Work practice to mail 2022 calendars, 9am – 11am Urban zendo and guest space
    Tuesday, December 21: End of fall ango and Benji poem / Winter Solstice ceremony with 108 Enmei Jikku Kannongyo and bows, 7pm, Recitation of names of the ancestors

    9 people wearing robes and/or rakusus with joyful expressions
    End of Rohatsu sesshin, 2019