
UnMind: Zen Moments With Great Cloud
by Silent Thunder Order
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Recent episodes
185: Metta Sutra / Loving Kindness Sutra
Apr 1, 2026
Unknown duration
184: Surangama Sutra
Mar 4, 2026
Unknown duration
183: Four Immeasurables part 4 -- Equanimity
Feb 4, 2026
Unknown duration
182: Four Immeasurables part 3 -- Empathy
Jan 7, 2026
Unknown duration
181: Four Immeasurables part 2 -- Compassion
Dec 3, 2025
Unknown duration
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4/1/26 | 185: Metta Sutra / Loving Kindness Sutra | What is Accomplished? “What is accomplished” is not a question in Zen — It is a statement. | — | ||||||
| 3/4/26 | 184: Surangama Sutra | Where is the Mind? Inside the body? Outside it, or in-between? Or anywhere else? | — | ||||||
| 2/4/26 | 183: Four Immeasurables part 4 -- Equanimity | Equilibrium — Maybe even equipoise — It’s in the balance | — | ||||||
| 1/7/26 | 182: Four Immeasurables part 3 -- Empathy | Not bringing us down, like gravity, empathy is lifting us up. | — | ||||||
| 12/3/25 | 181: Four Immeasurables part 2 -- Compassion | Compassion What is compassion? It’s not what you think it is — our kind Universe | — | ||||||
| 11/5/25 | 180: Four Immeasurables part 1 -- Loving Kindness | Loving Kindness A loving kindness would be to fully embrace “things just as it is” | — | ||||||
| 10/1/25 | 179: Connecting the Dots Part 6 | Zen's Singularity Orbiting black holes — passing event horizons — falling into IT! | — | ||||||
| 9/3/25 | 178: Connecting the Dots Part 5 | One Voice Where Buddha differed is in his direct approach to reality | — | ||||||
| 8/6/25 | 177: Connecting the Dots Part 4 | BURNOUT All life is burning burning with desire in time we will all burn out | — | ||||||
| 7/2/25 | 176: Connecting the Dots Part 3 | Zen in Our Time Time is running out thus the sense of urgency — all there is — is time. | — | ||||||
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| 6/4/25 | 175: Connecting the Dots | Zen in Our Time My time is not yours your time is not mine either — is there time, really? | — | ||||||
| 5/7/25 | 174: Zen in Our Time | Zen in Our Time Zen in our own time is the only time we have to reinvent Zen | — | ||||||
| 4/2/25 | 173: Connecting the Dots | ZEN IN OUR TIME“Connecting the Dots”Some of you A few may have undergone formal training, in Zen or other meditative traditions, or you may be a relative newcomer to Zen. The objective of this essay is Whatever your experience level, this course should help you sort the wheat from the chaff, to clarify for yourself which teachings of Buddhism are relevant to you, to provide some background on Zen Buddhism, how to integrate Zen practice into your daily life, and the importance of Zen’s unique style of meditation, and finally some approaches to integrating Zen practice into your daily life.. My approach to Zen may seem a bit different from others you may be familiar with. The reason for this is NOTE: Applying my professional training in design thinking, which influences how I see the world. To augment more traditional text-based presentations of Zen and buddha-dharma, my training in graphic design, I have charted the basic teachings as 3D structures flattened into 2D charts, available upon request. This illustrates their interrelatedness, providing visual aids and mnemonics to help you visualize and remember them. The graphic models allow further analysis of overlapping and interconnected implications of what otherwise typically appear as linear constructs and literary outlines in the verbal formword. We are literally going to connect the dots to the degree possible.Basics of BuddhismZen NOTE: Applying my training in graphic design, I have charted the basic teachings of Zen as semantic models, 3D structures flattened into 2D charts, for the sake of illustrating their interrelatedness, as well as providing visual aids and mnemonics for you to visualize and remember them. These will also allow you to do further analysis of the overlapping and interconnected implications of what otherwise appear as linear constructs in the written word. Buddhism is both very simple and complex at the same time. As we say in design circles, "simple in concept; difficult in execution." The amount of material available on Buddhism appears virtually endless. I am not a scholar, nor a historian, but it may be helpful to provide some background from the perspective of Zen practice, on the subject as I understand itThe Four Noble TruthsBuddha re-discovered these truths in his meditation and articulatedmeditation them in his "First Sermon.” He unfolds a model of "Four Noble Truths." This quartet constitutes a kind of take-it-or-leave-it description of reality, the causes and conditions of sentient existence, including the Eightfold Path, a thoroughgoing prescription for practice, covering the eight dimensions of leading a Zen life based on meditation. All of the teachings may be seen as corrective descriptions of enlightened realty and prescriptions for taking action based on the enlightened worldview. Buddhism’s Four Noble Truths are traditionally translated as the existence of suffering, its origin in craving, the potential of cessation, and the path to follow in daily life, leading to cessation. This begs the question — WhatWhat, exactly, makes them so noble, after all? They can beare ennobling, but only if we embrace them. If we do, : they can enable us to live a life of compassion in the context of inexorable change, or "suffering." The Noble Truths do not change with circumstance. They do not interact with, nor react to, changes in circumstance. The first of the four truths is that this existence — indeed any physical existence — is of the nature of suffering (Skt. dukkha). There is no existence without change, the universal dynamic. Galaxies colliding, the Big Bang — all is dukkha. As human beings, we are caught up in this change, and we tend to take it personally. We suffer not only physically, but also emotionally, mentally, and even socially. The second truth is that most of our suffering is finds its origin in our own attachment and aversion,, craving, or thirst: clinging to the pleasant, and avoiding the unpleasant. Suffering is both natural —, as in aging, sickness and death —, and unnatural or intentional —, as in self-inflicted and mutually-inflicted suffering between human beings, and imposed upon other beings, sentient and insentient. On a personal level, Buddhism embraces suffering, rather than trying to avoid it. The third of the truths offers hopeis that suffering can cease, but only through our embrace of it. The natural processes of aging, sickness and death cannot be avoided no matter how hard we try. They are built into existence itself. UnnecessaryIntentional and unintended suffering can come to an end, however, through relinquishing cessation, or at least lowering,the extent ofof our craving, modifying our craven behavior.The Noble Eightfold PathThe fourth of the quartet posits that there is a way of living daily life as a path to cessation. Theusual interpretation of its eight points begins with worldview, or intention. In time our view evolves toward conformance to that taught by Buddha, through examining our thought, or understanding., "Right" view and thoughtwhich together comprise right wisdom.; Engaging in loving speech, kind action and a compassionate livelihood, add up toor right conduct. E; and engaging effort, mindfulness and meditation, we developas right discipline. The only real discipline in Zen is self-discipline, which applies to lay practice as well as monasticism.Wisdom, conduct and discipline constitute our tripartite path. Fortunately, Zen offers a workaround. The primary focus of Zen is the practice of its highly focused method of meditation (J. zazen), integrating posture, breath and meditationattention, called “zazen” in Japanese. Zazen is like a magnifying glass, an indispensable and instrumental method for focusing attention awareness in an extremely tight awareness on our own direct experience. Which is where the origins of Buddhism arose, from the meditation of Buddha, Shakyamuni. Visualizing the Eightfold Path as a 3-dimenional model of a cube illustrates that these eight components of the three primary divisions — the outer person, or conduct;, the inner person,or discipline;, and the fruit of the practice, the evolution of true wisdom — are all interconnected in complex ways. For example, the intersection of right speech and right action: “You talk the talk, but you do not walk the walk.” Your words do not match your actions. Each pairing of any two of the eight dimensions can be analyzed in such a manner. But the important thing is to be aware of them, and observinge how they affect our lives, and how our manner of living affects them. The Six ParamitasWhen we think of perfecting our practice of any activity, such as playing the piano, or high-performance athletics, naturally we form some sort of goal or expectation that we hope to realize. But the notion of perfection in Zen is not like that. There is an ancient Sanskrit term,from Sanskrit, “paramita,” that is sometimes translated as “perfection.” There are six such, (sometimes expanded to ten,) such in traditional models. — The basic six-pack usually translatessometimes condensed as: generosity or giving;, precepts or (ethics);, energy or or effort;, patience or or forbearance;, meditation, contemplation or concentration;, and wisdom. But in Zen, we instead look to discover their true meaning and application in our meditation. The founder of Soto Zen in 13th Century Japan, Master Eihei Dogen, was said to have commented, paraphrasing: asking In zazen, wwhat Precept (morality) is not fulfilled? In Zen, the perfection of desirable personality traits, and the full comprehension of them, becomes possible only through diligent pursuit of wholehearted meditation practice. My Zen teacher, “sensei” in Japanperese, Soyu Matsuoka-roshi, would often say that we should always aim at the perfect posture in seated meditation, never imagining that we have achieved it. This amounts to “posture paramita.” We engage in a process of perfecting, in lieu of setting goals of perfection. Eventually, with repetition, any endeavor such as practicing the piano, dance moves, sports, or martial arts forms, will reach a turning point, where it becomes truly musical, transcendent, and transformative. Your practice of meditation will likewise naturally go through several turning points in its evolution. Eventually, it will become what my teacher referred to as “the real zazen.” This is when posture, breath and attention all come together in a unified way. Not-two.Zazen: Sitting Still Just Sitting; Still Enough, Straight Enough, For Long EnoughThe focus of Zen is on the present moment, but the activity that is occurring moment by moment is ceaseless, relentless in its changing dynamic. We sit still in order to recover our original mind, in which stillness is not separate from motion. This is one meaning of an ancient Sino-Japanese term, “mokurai”: stillness in motion, motion in stillness. Silence in Zen, to take another example of mokurai,, is not the absence of sound. The silence is in the sound. And vice-versa. Same for stillness and motion. Nonetheless, we emphasize the stillness partsays. It is difficult to slow down, let alone come to a full stop, in today’s world. When we do — sitting still enough for long enough — a whole new dimension of reality opens up for us. We enter the original frontier of the mind, discovered by Buddha two-and-a-half millennia ago, and passed on to us by the ancestors of Zen.Concluding the InconclusiveLike most things in life, Zen has to be experienced to be understood, from personal experience. This is one instance of how the highly specialized training in Zen has a halo effect on daily life. If you have become accustomed to the extreme clarity of mind engendered in quiet meditation in the zendo, you will be better equipped to face the chaos in daily life Two aspects of Zen that I have mentionedindicated remain foremost in my mind —- its irreducible simplicity of method, and the importance of finding the right teacher for you. I highly recommend you pursue both with diligence, as if your hair were on fire, as per Master Dogen. | — | ||||||
| 3/5/25 | 172: Zen Ps & Qs | Mind your Ps and Qs It's not semantic though it may seem pedantic — words mooning the moon | — | ||||||
| 2/5/25 | 171: Natural Meditation | Natural Zen It is just sitting but not limited to that it is everything | — | ||||||
| 1/1/25 | 170: Happy New Moment | Happy New Year It is just a thing we made up when we were young there is no "new year" | — | ||||||
| 12/18/24 | 169: The Least Important Thing | The Least Important Thing Not playing games here — it’s not what you think it is — "in truth, IT is you." | — | ||||||
| 12/4/24 | 168: Election Year Zen part 10 | What I Gonna Do Now? Don’t know what to do? Take a break from politics — double down on Zen. | — | ||||||
| 11/20/24 | 167: The Most Important Thing | The Most Important Thing It’s not obvious though it’s in front of your face — trust Dogen on this | — | ||||||
| 11/6/24 | 166: Election Year Zen part 9 | V.O.T.E. Vote for Buddha’s truth — for compassion and wisdom; vote for the future. | — | ||||||
| 10/16/24 | 165: Zen in Daily Life | Zen in Daily Life Twenty-four seven Life creeps on in petty pace — But not forever | — | ||||||
| 10/2/24 | 162: Election Year Zen part 8 | Bodhisattva Vow To save all beings — Save us from what, exactly? From our ignorance. | — | ||||||
| 9/18/24 | 163: Heart Sutra Paraphrase | Paraphrasing the Dharma Dharma, paraphrased: translation into two realms — language and culture. | — | ||||||
| 9/2/24 | 162: Election Year Zen part 7 | The Most Important Thing What is important – Politics or daily life? Are they separate? | — | ||||||
| 7/3/24 | 161: Election Year Zen part 6 | Swords into Plowshares Sword of Manjusri – Cutting through all delusive ideology | — | ||||||
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