Seizing Our Opportunity to Live | Koshin Paley Ellison

Cultivating the Seeds of Zen: A 90-Day Commit-to-Sit Practice Period

When

Wednesday, June 1, 2022 7:30PM EDT to

Monday, August 29, 2022 7:30PM EDT

Where

Online

Event Details

C2S-Summer-Shundo-Title

Cultivating the Seeds of Zen:

A 90-Day Commit To Sit Practice Period

Led by New York Zen Center’s Guiding Teacher: Koshin Paley Ellison

with Jan Chozen Bays, Chodo Robert Campbell, Ben Connelly, Dai En Friedman, Issho Fujita, Konjin Gaelyn Godwin, Gesshin Claire Greenwood, Ryushin Paul Haller, Diane Musho Hamilton, Genyu Kojima, Shinzan Palma, Ilia Shinko Perez, Diane Eshin Rizzetto, Ryoki Sato, and Yuko Wakayama Yamada.

Wednesday, June 1st - Monday, August 29th, 2022

Join Zen teachers from across the United States and Japan for an in-depth, 90-day exploration of Zen practice and study guided by our study text, Zen Seeds: Reflections of a Female Priest, Shundo Aoyama Rōshi’s (b.1933) collection of short personal reflections, Zen parables, Buddhist scripture, and spellbinding poetry.

One of the foremost contemporary Japanese Zen teachers and the highest-ranking nun in Sōtō Zen history, Aoyama Rōshi’s incisively clear and simple contemplations explore and illuminate a variety of aspects of daily experience, whether as a monastic or lay practitioner. Her writing acts as a guide, not only on Zen practice, but on effort, happiness, and gratitude through the vicissitudes of life.

It is an auspicious time for us to be investigating this book as this year, Aoyama Rōshi has been appointed to the position of Seido (retired chief priest) at the temple of Sojiji in Japan. She is the first woman to hold this position since the temple's founding 850 years ago!

Through weekly online dharma talks, daily practice emails, group discussions, and meditation, we will allow our practice to take root within us and flower the essential aspects of compassion and wisdom.

This unique practice period includes:

  • Opening dharma talk Wednesday, June 1st at 7:30 pm ET; Closing dharma talk Monday, August 29th at 7:30 pm ET
  • Weekly dharma talks and Q+A, live-streamed Sunday (and some Thursday) evenings at 7:30 pm ET. Access to recordings will also be made available.
  • Daily email reflections selected from the study text to support our learning.
  • Daily opportunities to sit zazen in our Online Zendo with participants from around the world, with two additional dharma talks each week.
  • Access to an online forum for discussion and reflection with other Commit to Sit practitioners.
  • Additional resources to support you in deepening your practice.

Each Commit to Sit registration supports the direct care, Zen practice, and educational work of the New York Zen Center.

No one will be turned away for lack of funds. Please click here for further information.

Bios for Commit to Sit Teachers:


Chozen BaysJan Chozen Bays is an ordained Zen teacher and a pediatrician who specialized for thirty years in the evaluation of children for abuse and neglect. She has trained in Zen for forty five years, with Roshis Taizan Maezumi and Shodo Harada Roshi. With her husband, Hogen Bays, she serves as co-abbot of Great Vow Zen Monastery, a residential center for intensive Zen training in Clatskanie, Oregon. She has published articles in the medical literature, and articles about Zen in Tricycle and Buddhadharma magazines. She is the author of six books published by Shambhala.

ChodoChodo Campbell, is a co-founder of the New York Zen Center for Contemplative Care and is part of the core faculty for the Buddhist Track in the Master in Pastoral Care and Counseling at Zen Center’s education partner, New York Theological Seminary. His passion lies in bereavement counseling and advocating for change in the way our healthcare institutions work with the dying.

Ben ConnellyBen Connelly is a Soto Zen priest. He also teaches mindfulness in secular contexts including police training and addiction recovery groups, and works with multifaith groups focused on intersectional liberation and climate justice. Ben serves the Minnesota Zen Meditation Center and travels to teach across the United States. He is also the author for Wisdom Publications of Inside the Grass Hut, Inside Vasubandhu’s Yogacara, and the forthcoming Vasubandhu's "Three Natures." He lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Dai EnDai En Friedman's teachers include Roshi Peter Muryo Matthiessen, Joseph Goldstein, Matt Flickstein, and Maureen Stuart Roshi. Dai-en received Dharma Transmission from Roshi Peter Muryo Mattheissen as a Soto Zen Teacher. She is now a Sensei at Ocean Zendo, located on Eastern Long Island.

IsshoIssho Fujita is currently based at the Chizanso Retreat in Hayama, Kanagawa Prefecture in Japan where he conducts research and offers instruction in zazen. He is the second head director of the Soto Zen Buddhism International Center in San Francisco. He wrote “Modern Lectures on Zazen: The Path to Shikantaza” and is the co-author of “Buddhism 3.0: An Update.” He has also translated numerous works into Japanese including Stephen Batchelor’s “Buddhism Without Beliefs,” David Brazier’s “The Feeling Buddha,” and Thich Nhat Hanh’s “Zen Keys.”

Konjin GodwinSetsuan Konjin Gaelyn Godwin is the Abbot of the Houston Zen Center and serves as the Director of the International Division of Soto Zen, North America (a department of Soto Zen Headquarters based in Japan). She received ordination as a Zen Priest in 1991, from Tenshin Reb Anderson, Senior Dharma Teacher at San Francisco Zen Center. She received Dharma Transmission, also from Tenshin Reb Anderson, in 2003, and was appointed Kaikyoshi (formal recognition from Japan) in 2005. Her Zen lineage is Soto Zen, through Dōgen Zenji, and through Suzuki Shunryu Daiosho, founder of San Francisco Zen Center.

Gesshin GreenwoodGesshin Claire Greenwood is an ordained Soto Zen priest and holds a master's degree in Counseling Psychology from California Institute of Integral Studies, having spent 10 years providing spiritual care and working in community mental health settings. She completed a Shusso hossenshiki (head monk) ceremony at Aichi Nisodo with Aoyama Roshi in 2014 and received dharma transmission from Seido Suzuki Roshi in 2015. She is the author of Bow First, Ask Questions Later: Ordination, Love, and Monastic Zen in Japan and Just Enough: Vegan Recipes and Stories from Japan's Buddhist Temples.

Paul HallerRyushin Paul Haller has lived and practiced at San Francisco Zen Center since the 1970s and held many positions at Tassajara and City Center. He received Dharma Transmission from Sojun Mel Weitsman and has been teaching for over 30 years. He served as Abiding Abbot at City Center from 2003 to 2012, and is currently the Urban Temple Dharma Teacher at City Center. Originally from Belfast, Northern Ireland, he teaches throughout the US and Europe and has led mindfulness programs to assist with depression and recovery.

Diane MushoDiane Musho Hamilton is a Zen teacher, author, professional mediator, and facilitator. Diane began her studies at Naropa University in 1983 with Choygam Trungpa Rinpoche, and became a Zen student of Genpo Dennis Merzel Roshi in 1997. In 2003, she received ordination as a Zen monk and received dharma transmission in 2006. Diane facilitates Big Mind Big Heart, a process developed by Genpo Roshi to help elicit the insights of Zen in Western audiences. She has worked with Ken Wilber and the Integral Institute since 2004. She is the first Director of the Office of Alternative Dispute Resolution for the Utah Judiciary and the Executive Director of Two Arrows Zen, a center for Zen study and practice, established in 2008 with her husband Michael Mugaku Zimmerman. Her most recent book, coauthored with Gabriel Wilson and Kimberly Loh, is Compassionate Conversations: How to Speak and Listen from the Heart, (Shambhala Publications, 2020.)

Genyu KojimaGenyu Kojima Born in 1984, in Chokokuji Temple in Gifu, Japan. Genyu Kojima is now the 20th Abbot of Chokokuji Temple, where he offers memorial ceremonies and Zen practice and dharma talks. He graduated from Ritsumeikan University in Kyoto, with a BA in International Relations. After graduation, he worked as a steel trader at Metal One Corporation in Tokyo and Singapore for 6 years. At the age of 30, he went to one of Soto Zen’s Head Temples, Daihonzan Eiheiji, in Fukui prefecture, practicing Zen for 18 months. After his training at Eiheiji, Genyu-san, relocated to Bukkokusan Zuioji Temple, in Ehime prefecture, for 18 months of training and practice. In February, 2016, he returned to his home temple where he is now currently serving as a Chief Priest/Abbot of the temple since March, 2020.

KoshinKoshin Paley Ellison co-founded the New York Zen Center for Contemplative Care, the first Zen-based organization to offer fully accredited ACPE clinical chaplaincy training in America. Koshin is the co-editor of Awake at the Bedside: Contemplative Teachings on Palliative and End of Life Care (Wisdom Publications, 2016) and author of Wholehearted: Slow Down, Help Out, Wake Up.

Shinzan PalmaJose Shinzan Palma was born in Veracruz, Mexico. He is a Zen priest and Dharma Successor of Roshi Joan Halifax. He has been practicing Zen since 1996. Shinzan co-teaches a teenagers retreat for the Inward Bound Mindfulness Education, and weekends retreats in several parts of the country. Currently, he lives in San Diego and teaches at the Carlsbad Zen Community and Sweetwater Zen Center.

ShinkoIlia Shinko Perez, Roshi, MA received transmission in the Zen White Plum lineage from Gerry Shishin Wick, Roshi in 2000 and in 2015 she received empowerment as a Roshi (Inka) from Roshi Egyoku Nakao, Abbot of the Zen Center of Los Angeles. She is the co-spiritual leader of the Great Mountain Zen Center and Abbess of Maitreya Abbey in Berthoud, Colorado. She completed formal Zen studies while simultaneously raising two children and running her family import business. Roshi Shinko has an M.A. Degree in Archeology from Universidad Autonoma, Madrid and has taught in the Caribbean, the US and Spain. She is author of The Zen Priestess and the Snake and co-author of The Great Heart Way. Currently she is leading retreats on Zen of the Sacred Feminine as a means to help with the eco-crisis.

EshinDiane Eshin Rizzetto is a Dharma heir to Charlotte Joko Beck and a founding member of the Ordinary Mind Zen School. She has taught widely in Europe and the US and is Abbess Emeritus of the Bay Zen Center in Oakland, CA. Her books include: Waking Up to What you Do: A Zen Practice for Meeting Every Situation with Intelligence and Compassion and Deep Hope: Zen Guidance for Staying Steadfast when the World Seems Hopeless.

Sato RyokiRyoki Sato is a Soto Zen Togenji 28th chief priest / founder of the Millennium Art Forest Project. Born in 1972, Sato Ryoki trained at Eiheiji and Hokyoji temples. He became a priest of a Zen temple founded 550 years ago in Ichinoseki City, Iwate Prefecture, where he was born and raised. As a Buddhist priest, he works with hospice volunteers on mental health while developing communities and projects with his temple as hubs. In 2011, he encountered a tsunami during the Great East Japan Earthquake and nearly died on the roof of a truck. Since then, led by the question, "What is really to live?", he practices and studies Buddhism, while lecturing and engaging dialogue on his experience in Japan and abroad.

yukoYuko Wakayama Yamada is the vice abbess of Shogakuji in Tokyo. She currently teaches at the International department of Eiheiji. She is the first nun to teach at Eiheiji, the head monastery of Soto Zen founded by Dogen Zenji. She trained at Aichi Senmon Niso-do, a training temple for female Soto Zen priests, where she also currently teaches. She was ordained in 1999 by the highly respected Rev. Shundo Aoyama-roshi. She was sent to Mt. Equity Zendo in United States for 2.5 years and has also practiced in Germany, Switzerland, France, Spain and Italy. After returning from Europe and finishing 2 more years at the Niso-do she studied at the graduate school of Komazawa University specializing in Chinese Zen History. Prior becoming a Zen Buddhist nun, Yuko Yamada was a catholic nun in a convent for 3 years.

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Event Registration: The standard cost of this program is $54. Supporter and Benefactor Level pricing is available for those who wish to increase their support of NYZC and our work to make the dharma accessible to all.

Ticket Type Price
Standard Price (Actual Cost)
$54.00
Supporter
$108.00
Benefactor
$216.00
  • We are sorry but this event has reached capacity. If you have any questions about Commit to Sit please email the NYZC office at commit@zencare.org.