Practical Zen
Meditation and Beyond
by Julian Daizan Skinner
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Pub Date 21 Jun 2017 | Archive Date 20 Jul 2017
Jessica Kingsley Publishers | Singing Dragon
Description
Zen master Julian Daizan Skinner guides the reader through a sequence of meditation techniques that can safely lead even a complete novice through to advanced levels. Based on his own long experience of the Rinzai Zen tradition, as taught by the great seventeenth-century masters, Hakuin and Bankei, Daizan highlights the key points for success and addresses the pitfalls. Structured around a traditional teaching framework called "The two wings of a bird," Daizan clearly lays-out how these methods build and combine to create a transformative and sustaining practice.
The book contains an extremely useful section describing the experiences of western practitioners who have successfully applied this framework within the pressures of modern life. The final section features key source texts in translation, making the book a complete introduction and guide to Zen meditation. The work of a master, the book speaks at a deep level, with utmost simplicity.
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781848193635 |
PRICE | £13.99 (GBP) |
PAGES | 256 |
Featured Reviews
There are some good nuggets of information in this volume for practitioners of meditation. However, the organizational structure didn't really work for me and the illustrative anecdotes given throughout are taken from other sources and are used in many other volumes. Overall, it was not a book I would choose to add to my yoga/meditation collection.
I received an advanced copy of this book from the publisher via netgalley in exchange for an honest review. Thanks!
Great book on meditation. Even though I have been meditating for a few years, I felt this book had a lot to offer.
A helpful, de-mystifying and practical approach
I was delighted to receive this as a digital ARC from Singing Dragon. The fact that this book is published by them, almost guaranteed its excellence for me. Some publishers of books which fall into a loose ‘New Age’ category can be a little goofy, sensationalist and flaky for my tastes. Singing Dragon specialise in good writers in the field, knowledgeable in their various disciplines, excellent communicators
And so it is here.
Julian Daizan Skinner writes clearly about a subject which can be a challenging on for those of us unversed in the traditions and concepts of Zen Buddhism. You don’t need to have spent years on a spiritual path in order to understand what he explains. This author offers guidance for beginners in a meditation practice, without being so full of difficult and detailed instruction that the would-be meditator gets a headache from trying to remember too many bullet points.
The author finds simple language, useful images to explain some complex concepts, and to offer routes by which the meditator may be able to glimmeringly grasp something as a signpost. It does not feel like something simplified and reduced to unlovely bare bones of ‘do this, do that’ either. More like being shown an open door to a room full of boundless fascination. You can stand outside the room, and look in, or you can choose to enter and really explore at depth, and journey onwards. Perhaps through further rooms whose doors are as yet unknown.
This book is inviting, simple, guiding the reader to explore this particular meditation practice in a built on way : an 8 week process of 25 minute sittings per day, plus a 5 minute journal keeping of what arises. There is also plenty of additional support offered, via the zenways website. This includes details of sitting groups, intensive 1 and 3 days meditation retreats, yoga trainings.
Even better, the book gives a password protected entry to the on site material – information and the guided meditations laid out in the text are available as audio downloads, and also a video of one of the meditations which involves specific movements to energise belly and legs linked with the breathing. This is useful for those who might prefer a guided session.
There is also plenty for those who might want to explore the subject more deeply – many cited texts, discourses on the philosophy and history of different approaches to Zen, so though this is, in essence, a practical guide, it offers more.
What really ‘got’ me about this excellent book, even more than its clarity in communication, is the kindness and compassion it radiated
While I didn't read the entire book word-for-word, I did devour the parts that helped me in my own search for how to meditate and find some inner peace. It's a really good read for those doing some soul-searching, looking for ways to take a step back from the modern, chaotic life and have some Me time.