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Roshi Susan Murphy Talks Teachers Words

Sakyadhita Conference Keynote Address

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I am humbled and honoured by the invitation to offer the opening keynote address to such an important and luminous gathering of women!  

Twenty minutes is a very short time in which to address the obvious fact and impact of the silencing and marginalizing of women in the Buddhist tradition for the last several thousand years — and its studied indifference towards the venerable enlightened women who actually managed, against the odds, to break past such formidable barriers to practice, teach and inspire others. 

It is of course impossible to reconcile this act of deep injury to the lives of hundreds of generations of women, with the actual core insights of the Buddhist path itself – which is waking up into direct awareness of the undivided and indivisible nature of mind and reality.  This we find to be the very source of the natural flow of un-self-conscious compassion that cannot help but respond to the cries of the world!

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Koans Roshi Susan Murphy Talks Teachers

‘Yes, we have no bananas’ or ‘Intimate in the dark’

Talk #1 from Spring Sesshin 2018. You can listen to other talks from this sesshin here.

Speaker: Roshi Susan Murphy

Click here to download a printable transcript of this talk [PDF]

zen open circle · Teisho 1: Yes We Have No Bananas (Intimate in the dark)

Roshi Susan:

“As everybody knows who has attended sesshin before, this is the night of not knowing – of not knowing as our most intimate practice-realization. 

     ‘Intimate’ is a way of saying: awake, complete, present, not even a speck of difference, as intimate and close in to unabridged reality as that. And I love the fact that the word intimate also offers the tenderness of being, because that is what awake-ness is. 

     I was tempted to call this talk, “Awake in the dark”, since it is the dark of not knowing in which we awaken and of course at this moment it’s night as well. But I actually think I’ll call it, “Yes, we have no bananas”. I always loved the fact that there’s such a triumphant “Yes!” before the completely sanguine, “We have no bananas”. The idea that no bananas is so joyously proclaimed, recognized, as a welcome matter in some way. 

     What would a no-banana taste like?

     ‘Mu’ is of course this one syllable short of complete silence with which we practice letting go of the mind-road.  The mind-road is not the kind of open, empty road we can easily love, accompanying you with no-birds, no-trees, no-insects, and best of all, no-you.  The mind-road is more like the pressured highway, whizzing with traffic, burdened with noise, shouting at you with signs, and always making the false promise of ‘somewhere to go’.