Resources from Genzo-e
/You can find readings from the Genzo-e here
Read MoreSoto Zen Practice in Vancouver, BC
Soji is a period of mindful work, often following zazen: sweeping the walkway, raking leaves, shaking out zendo cushions. In Soji, you enter a task for a set period of time, attending to it as fully as possible.
“When you study Buddhism, you should have a general house-cleaning of your mind. You must take everything out of your room and clean it thoroughly. If it is necessary, you may bring everything back in again. You may want many things, so one by one you can bring them back. But if they are not necessary, there is no need to keep them.”
The framework of soji can allow us to enter a task that might feel otherwise difficult, wth a refreshed sense of engagement and curiosity.
On December 22, we will have an O-Soji - a big clean-up of the Wall Street zendo, to wipe the karmic slate clean before New Year’s Day, as is the tradition in Japan. We hope to offer the opportunity to participate in soji practice on a monthly basis, transforming what we might normally consider as mundane tasks into ceremony.
“ ...cleaning is not drudgery, some pain in the ass job you have to get done. Rather, it’s a very rich sensory experience. It’s a meditation. And just as cleaning is meditation, so everything can be meditation. This is part of what Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche called ‘meditation in action’.”
This tree that graces the MRZC Endowment Fund support materials. What does it symbolize?
Read MoreMRZC's Soto Zen practice emphasizes being fully awake to our own moment-to-moment experience, from our meditation cushion to every aspect of our everyday life. Join us!
Mountain Rain Zen Community's Wall street Zendo and Koryuji temple are situated on the unceded, traditional and ancestral territory of the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh speaking peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations.
Hari-Kuyō is a traditional Japanese ceremony to express gratitude for old and broken sewing needles by giving them a proper send-off.
Mountain Rain Zen Community
Creative Commons Canada License
Banner: Blue Mountains Walking by Bruce Shotoku Nielsen (2013)