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Composting Our Karma

Turning Confusion into Lessons for Awakening Our Innate Wisdom

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
Engaging teachings on the core Korean Zen practice  of “don’t-know mind” that encourage us to cultivate and apply a clear mind, improve our intuition, feel naturally at ease, and generate compassionate wisdom to face whatever arises.
​​Barbara Rhodes (Zen Master Soeng Hyang) offers the core Korean Zen teaching of don’t-know mind as an antidote to the over-thinking, overly stimulating modern world that is the cause of so much suffering. In this collection of essays, Rhodes shows us that there are ways we can work with, or “compost,” whatever we’ve got in front of us, digest it into energy that can get us through the rough times, and cultivate a satisfying life.
      “Don’t-know mind,” Korean Zen’s foremost teaching, points to our clear enlightened mind before suffering arises based on concepts and judgments of like and dislike. While simple, it is a lifelong exercise, with immediate benefits that get deeper with practice. By applying don’t-know mind to meditation, everyday existence, and life’s challenges, readers will learn to work with their own mind’s reactions to things; trust their intuition; perceive situations clearly; and act with natural courage, compassion, and enthusiasm.
     Rhodes offers fascinating insights from her professional life as a nurse; her commitment to engaged Buddhism; her life experience as a member of the LGBTQ community; her use of psychedelics on her spiritual path; and more. Readers will appreciate her down-to-earth wisdom, compassion, enthusiasm, and faith in the power of this practice.
     This book includes an afterword by Dae Bong Sunim, a guiding teacher at Musangsa Monastery in Korea.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 28, 2024
      Zen teacher Rhodes explains in her openhearted debut how asking “deep questions about life” can foster self-knowledge. She contends that readers can use kong-ans—questions like “What am I?” and “How is it just now?”—to tap into a “mind before thinking” that lacks “prejudgments, opinions, desires, anger, and ignorance,” and makes space for wisdom and compassion to emerge. She then shows how to use this mindset to grapple with such challenges as climate change (readers should “focus on trusting ourselves to walk into this unfolding universe with open eyes, courage, and a sense of how we can help”) and finding one’s vocation. While those seeking a systematic program for Buddhist practice will have to look elsewhere, the author’s refreshingly playful outlook produces many approachable and charming bits of wisdom (“We have everything we need to become completely awake and realized. Then we can be fulfilled selling insurance or being a saint, or being a saint who sells insurance. The only thing that matters is that our direction” is “woven into our existence”). Spiritual seekers looking to refresh their practice will be energized.

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  • English

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