274 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Five – Precepts: Transcending Self-Attachment (2 of 3)

274 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Five – Precepts: Transcending Self-Attachment (2 of 3)

This episode is the second part of chapter five of my book-in-process, The Ten Fields of Zen: A Primer for Practitioners. In the last episode, I described the central role of Precepts in Zen and covered the Three Refuges, Three Pure Precepts, and two of the Grave Precepts. In this episode, I talk about the Grave (serious, or weighty) Precepts three through eight. In the next episode, I’ll discuss Grave Precepts nine and ten, and talk more about how we work with Precepts.

274 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Five – Precepts: Transcending Self-Attachment (2 of 3)

273 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Five – Precepts: Transcending Self-Attachment (1 of 3)

The fifth Field of Zen Practice is living according to moral Precepts. The Buddhist precepts guide our ethical conduct, ensuring we minimize the harm we do to self and others. Such conduct is a prerequisite for the peace of mind we need for spiritual practice. The precepts also serve as valuable tools for studying the self; when we are tempted to break them, it alerts us to our self-attachment and reveals our persistent delusion of self as a separate and inherently-existing entity. Keeping the precepts familiarizes us with acting as if the self is empty of inherent existence.

274 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Five – Precepts: Transcending Self-Attachment (2 of 3)

271 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Four (2 of 2) – Dharma Study: Wrestling with the Teachings

The Fourth Field of Zen Practice is Dharma Study. In the last episode, Part 1, I talked about the value of Dharma Study and how best to approach it. Then I discussed how to go about deciding what you want to study. In this episode I offer a list of eight fundamental teachings I recommend becoming familiar with, along with suggested texts to begin your investigation of each topic. I’ll end with a discussion of how to engage the teachings you study in a meaningful way. 

274 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Five – Precepts: Transcending Self-Attachment (2 of 3)

270 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Four (1 of 2) – Dharma Study: Wrestling with the Teachings

The fourth Field of Zen practice is Dharma Study, which is becoming familiar with and investigating Buddhist teachings. The texts and teachings in Buddhism include tools we can use for practice and inspirational guidance for our behavior, but the most critical part of Dharma Study is challenging the ideas and views we already hold, not acquiring new ones. The teachings describe Reality-with-a-Capital-R and invite us to investigate and verify the truth for ourselves. We don’t seek to acquire insight into Reality for its own sake, but because it is liberating and transformative.

274 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Five – Precepts: Transcending Self-Attachment (2 of 3)

265 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Two (3 of 3) – Zazen: Our Total Response to Life

This is the third episode of three comprising the “Zazen” chapter of my book, “The Ten Fields of Zen Practice: A Primer for Practitioners.” I start by offering what I should have put at the beginning of my chapter on Zazen: Basic instructions for Zazen. I then discuss how my “Five Efforts in Zazen” suggest Zazen is a neat and linear process, but in actuality Zazen is a messy, organic, real-life experience. Finally, I talk about how to deepen your Zazen without getting caught up in self-centered striving.

274 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Five – Precepts: Transcending Self-Attachment (2 of 3)

263 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Two (1 of 3) – Zazen: Our Total Response to Life

This is the third episode in my Ten Fields of Zen Practice series, beginning my discussion of the second field of practice, Zazen, our “Total Response to Life.” In some ways, this is the most challenging chapter to write because so much can be said about Zazen. By its nature, Zazen is difficult – if not impossible – to describe in a completely satisfying way. It also is profound and has infinitely many aspects, so what do you choose to say about it in one chapter? I hope you will find the approach I have chosen to take useful.

274 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field Five – Precepts: Transcending Self-Attachment (2 of 3)

260 – Ten Fields of Zen, Field One – Bodhicitta: Way-Seeking Mind

This episode on Bodhicitta, or Way-Seeking Mind, is chapter two of my book The Ten Fields of Zen Practice: A Primer for Practitioners.” Bodhicitta is the first Field of practice because without it we never even begin practice, and, if we don’t nurture and sustain it, our practice will wither and die. I discuss the first arising of Bodhicitta, its function, how to cultivate it, and its profound nature.

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