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Thin Places July 28, 2010

Posted by Philip Ryan in : Buddhism, Zen , trackback

Today’s Daily Dharma:

There is a term in the Celtic tradition that I find resonates with something fundamental about Zen practice. The Celts spoke of “thin places,” places like caves or wells or other special sites where the boundary between the mundane and magical was permeable. To me, Zen practice offers a kind of thin place, a “place” where we can discover that there is fundamentally no separation between ourselves and others, that what we seek is always so close, always right here.

Roshi Pat Enkyo O’Hara, An Introduction to Zen (Spring 2009)

Read the full article:
An Introduction to Zen

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1. Twitter Trackbacks for Tricycle » Thin Places [tricycle.com] on Topsy.com - July 28, 2010

[...] Tricycle » Thin Places tricycle.com/blog/?p=2109 – view page – cached There is a term in the Celtic tradition that I find resonates with something fundamental about Zen practice. The Celts spoke of “thin places,” places like caves or wells or other special sites where the boundary between the mundane and magical was permeable. To me, Zen practice offers a kind of thin place, a “place” where we can discover that there is fundamentally no separation… Read moreThere is a term in the Celtic tradition that I find resonates with something fundamental about Zen practice. The Celts spoke of “thin places,” places like caves or wells or other special sites where the boundary between the mundane and magical was permeable. To me, Zen practice offers a kind of thin place, a “place” where we can discover that there is fundamentally no separation between ourselves and others, that what we seek is always so close, always right here. View page Tweets about this link [...]

2. Vajrakilaya - July 29, 2010

like a fontanelle