Zen beyond Mindfulness: Using Buddhist and Modern Psychology for Transformational Practice

Zen beyond Mindfulness: Using Buddhist and Modern Psychology for Transformational Practice

Zen beyond Mindfulness: Using Buddhist and Modern Psychology for Transformational Practice

Zen beyond Mindfulness: Using Buddhist and Modern Psychology for Transformational Practice

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Overview

An effective new approach to Buddhist practice that combines the rigor of traditional meditation and study with the psychological support necessary for practice in modern life.

Zen teacher Jules Shuzen Harris argues that contemporary American Buddhists face two primary challenges: (1) “spiritual bypassing,” which means avoiding or repressing psychological problems in favor of “pretend Enlightenment,” and (2) settling for secularized forms of Buddhism or mindfulness that have lost touch with the deeper philosophical and ethical underpinnings of the religion.

Drawing on his decades of experience as a Zen practitioner, teacher, and psychotherapist, Harris writes that both of these challenges can be met through the combination of a committed meditation practice, a deep study of Buddhist psychological models, and tools from a psychotherapeutic method known as “Mind-Body Bridging.” Using this unique approach, students can do the real work of awakening without either denying their embodied emotional life or missing out on the rich array of insights offered by Buddhist psychology and the Zen practice tradition.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780834842151
Publisher: Shambhala
Publication date: 03/26/2019
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 176
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Jules Shuzen Harris is a psychotherapist and Zen teacher, founder, and abbot of Soji Zen Center in Lansdowne, Pennsylvania. Based on his decades of experience working with Zen students and psychotherapy clients, he has created a powerful method that combines the rigor of Zen practice, psychological insights of early Buddhism, and tools from a contemporary psychotherapeutic method known as "Mind-Body Bridging." He is a dharma heir of Pat Enkyo O'Hara and has practiced with many other Zen teachers, including John Daido Loori and Dennis Genpo Merzel. Born in a working-class town outside of Philadelphia, Harris is the first African-American to have received transmission in the Soto Zen tradition. He has a black belt in the Japanese martial arts of Iaido and Kendo and has published a number of articles in TricycleBuddhadharma, and Lion's Roar magazines.

Table of Contents

Foreword Roshi Pat Enkyo O'Hara vii

Preface: My Path ix

Acknowledgments xv

Introduction: Zen, Abhidharma, and the I-System 1

1 The Skandhas 23

2 The Omnipresent Factors 35

3 The Twelve Links of Dependent Origination 46

4 The Six Realms 61

5 The I-System 75

6 Internal Maps and the Skandhas 83

7 External Maps, Omnipresent Factors, and Dependent Origination 95

8 Mind Maps and Realms 107

9 Maps for Zen 122

10 The Sutras and Mind Maps 134

11 Commitment 148

Appendix A Some Guidance on Zazen 155

Appendix B I-System Terminology 161

Notes 164

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