Kshanti (Patience)

The conditions in the world now require us to live with great patience. Patience, kshanti, is regarded as one of the paramitas, the practices of enlightened beings, facing conditions with a clear eye, open mind and warm heart. Without patience, our suffering is...

Three Arm Practice

There is so much to how practice unfolds, and so it’s useful to reflect on what is offered by each of the three arms of Buddhadharma practice — meditation, study, and ethics. We practice meditation to unfold and explore natural awareness, usually filled with some sort...

Suffering Habits

Are you willing to stop suffering? This seems like a silly question, but when we ask ourselves this in all sincerity we’ve taken the first step in committing to practice. The Buddha Way is a practice. We practice being aware continually, spotting our habits of mind...

Faith Mind

In Zen practice we talk a lot about “don’t know mind.” Even if it appears that things are as they seem, it ain’t necessarily so. So many of the conditions influencing the moment are invisible. We don’t know when or what the next second will bring. And when it doesn’t...

Ho-Hum Karma

Contemplating one’s karma is a commitment to turn towards an infinite view. What landed you here? Where do you come from? What makes this moment? What cloth of your particular threads has woven this spectacle of the world in time and space, as it registers and defines...