Portland Public Library

The path of aliveness, a contemporary Zen approach to awakening body and mind, Christian Dillo

Label
The path of aliveness, a contemporary Zen approach to awakening body and mind, Christian Dillo
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 293-306) and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The path of aliveness
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1259296892
Responsibility statement
Christian Dillo
Sub title
a contemporary Zen approach to awakening body and mind
Summary
"The experiential practice of Zen Buddhism can be truly transformative at this very moment here and now. Zen Body, Zen Mind presents a Buddhist path requiring neither belief in something transcendent (the usual requirement of religion) nor postponement of transformation until one is a better person (the basic stance of psychotherapy). The book dives deeply into an exploration of the human body-mind based on traditional Buddhist teachings such as the Four Noble Truths, the Five Skandhas, the Eight Vijnanas, the Two Truths, the Five Dharmas, and the Bodhisattva Ideal and Bodhisattva Precepts. Zenki Dillo's transformative yet secular approach to Buddhism does not advocate for the abolishment of Zen rituals or forms of practice that have a religious appearance. To the contrary, he reconstructs rituals as forms of embodiment training that are essential for transformation. This contemporary reconstruction of the teachings is always in the service of helping the reader make experiential distinctions in their own body-mind. Based on these distinctions, Buddhist practices appear as intentional cultivations of the body-mind, moving us toward experiences of personal and transpersonal freedom, wisdom, and compassion"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Introduction: Being fully alive -- Transformation. Ingredients of transformation ; The physical posture of seated meditation ; Mental postures of transformation ; Mindfulness and bodyfulness ; The four gates of mindfulness ; Interlude: transformative phenomenology -- Liberation. What is liberation from suffering? ; The four enactments ; Intimacy with the field of mind ; Bodyfulness, kindness, presence ; Emotional freedom ; Habits and karma ; The path of nourishment ; Interlude: Buddhism and psychotherapy -- Wisdom. What is wisdom? ; Reality is withdrawn ; The two truths ; The relinquishing of all views ; Consciousness and self ; Undivided activity ; Wisdom as expression ; Interlude: felt sense -- Compassion. What is compassion? ; The role of ritual ; Unlimiting mind ; Independence and connection ; Ethics as investigating aliveness ; Ecological compassion -- Epilogue
Content
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