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Koans Roshi Susan Murphy Talks Teachers

‘Fool of grace | Mu’

Teisho #1 from Autumn Sesshin 2021. Click here to listen to other talks from this event.

Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy
17 April 2021

zen open circle · Fool of grace | Mu
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2020 Term 3 Koans Online Zen Group Roshi Susan Murphy Talks Teachers

‘The beautiful heart of peace: Where shall we find it?’

Because there is no me
and because I feel
how much there is no me.

Anna Swir: ‘Double Rapture’

Talk #4 from Term 3 of our Online Zen Group for 2020. Click here for other talks in this series.

Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy
25 October 2020

Click on the recording below to listen to this talk now. We will upload a transcription when it becomes available. ()

zen open circle · The heart of peace: Where shall we look for it?
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2020 Term 1 Covid-19 Koans Online Zen Group Roshi Susan Murphy Talks Teachers

Every day is Good Friday

Talk #3 from Term 1 of our Online Zen Group for 2020.

Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy
Date: 12 April 2020
Dedicated to David Englebrecht (Dharma name: Harbour Star)

Click on the recording below to listen to this talk now. We will upload a transcription when it becomes available. ()

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2019 Term 3 Eco-Dharma Koans Online Zen Group Roshi Susan Murphy Talks Teachers

Don’t Turn Away

Download printable transcript

If you have a Zen practice you’ll already have a pretty strong sense of the value and productivity of difficulty. And especially of sticking with what is difficult. Of not turning away, not denying but actively including even the most messy and difficult matters, feelings, circumstances that arise in awareness.

I want to take up this aspect of things today, following on from where we were last time, talking about deep fears and the forms they can take, including the strong escape attempts that a lot of feelings can inspire.  Such feeling can be as simple and obvious as fear, but fear can also be compounded by shame, anxiety, even envy. Envy in the sense of ‘Why does this have to be happening to me (not that other luckier person)!” And deeper in from that, possibly the fear that wonders, “And why should it not?” 

Let’s look into this matter through a case from the Record of Dongshan, the 8th century figure from whose name and whose practice the Soto School of Zen derives…