Tuesday 12 November 2013

Monthly ZP Upaya Workshop Begins


This evening we held the first of our new monthly Zen Peacemakers Upaya Workshops, in the beautiful old Bishop Lloyd's Palace building in Chester City Centre.  "Upaya" is a word meaning something like "effective method" or "tool" in the Buddhist tradition.  These evenings will be a way to explore together the variety of practices and tools that are coming to us through the existing Zen Peacemakers tradition, and also to develop new upayas in response to challenges and opportunities arising for us now.

Tonight we opened with a discussion about "what we each think is NOT Zen" - looking at our preconceptions, right or wrong, so we can begin training with and open mind and an awareness of our ideas.  Next we explored shikantaza instructions together, and a little mindfulness practice.  We had another discussion, on the Three Tenets of the Zen Peacemakers - Not Knowing, Bearing Witness, and Loving Action.  We finished with Council Circle training, using a quote from the late Shunryu Suzuki Roshi as a theme for Council:

"Each one of you is perfect the way you are and you can use a little improvement."

The next Upaya Workshop will be Tues 10th December from 7pm-10pm in the same venue.

Sunday 3 November 2013

Street Circle for Jennie


We held a wee Street Zen circle yesterday to welcome back Jennie from her new home in Belfast (she's back for her graduation from Chester Uni this week.)  Here she is sitting in one of the alcoves of the ruined Norman Cathedral, about 6 feet up in the air!  It's good that we have this street practice now as a way of linking in to each other and welcoming someone back.  There's almost a kind of shamanic feel about it, sitting outdoors in all weathers with the energy of the city going on all around us...

Friday 1 November 2013

Rumi Reflection Group back for the Autumn...


Andy (left) from our Zen Peacemaker Circle has offered to start hosting a regular "Rumi Reflection Group" like we offered earlier in the year. He began yesterday evening, meeting in Starbuck's in Chester, and I think it'll be nearly every week. Like before, he'll bring along a poem by the Persian Sufi poet Rumi, and we'll read it together and use it as a starting point for reflecting on our own lives and their value, challenges and inspirations...

He began with a poem "Love is the Master":

Love is the One who masters all things;
I am mastered totally by Love.
By my passion of love for Love
I have ground sweet as sugar.
O furious Wind, I am only a straw before you;
How could I know where I will be blown next?
Whoever claims to have made a pact with Destiny
Reveals himself a liar and a fool;
What is any of us but a straw in a storm?
How could anyone make a pact with a hurricane?
God is working everywhere his massive Resurrection;
How can we pretend to act on our own?
In the hand of Love I am like a cat in a sack;
Sometimes Love hoists me into the air,
Sometimes Love flings me into the air,
Love swings me round and round His head;
I have no peace, in this world or any other.
The lovers of God have fallen in a furious river;
They have surrendered themselves to Love's commands.
Like mill wheels they turn, day and night, day and night,
Constantly turning and turning, and crying out.

Tuesday 29 October 2013

Circle Dharmaholder Ceremony on the Streets of Chester!


Barbara and Roland Wegmueller came over from Switzerland to lead a Zen Peacemakers Circle Dharmaholder Ceremony on the afternoon of Oct 26th.  Barbara and Roland are Zen teachers in the lineage of Bernie Glassman, and the main coordinators for the Zen Peacemaker Circles in Europe.

The role of Circle Dharmaholder is to hold the vision of Zen practice and share it wiith circles of peers training together. Steve Hart and Chris Zang Starbuck were presented with lovely handmade Dharmaholder scarves at the end of a short ceremony of making vows.

The afternoon began with lunch in the Roman Amphitheatre, where we sometimes meet to begin our circles.  Then we went to the ruins of the old Norman cathedral, where Roland led some zazen beneath the open sky.  After the ceremony we walked down by the River Dee and made a pilgrimage to the Roman shrine of Minerva, Goddess of wisdom still carved into a rock.  Barbara led us in the Buddhist Prajnaparamita wisdom chant Gate Gate Paragate Parasmgate Bodhi Svaha.

Ari Pliskin sharing his experience in Chester on 26th Oct


Ari Pliskin visited us on Saturday from the USA.  He runs a project called the Stone Soup Cafe in Greenfield, Massachussets, which he calls a "pay what you can cafe".  It grew out of the ideas of Zen Master Bernie Glassman, with encouragement from the actor Jeff Bridges, as an alternative to soup kitchens.  Ari explained that Zen Peacemakers Street Retreats taught them that soup kitchens may be staffed by very loving people, but there is still a huge division between "us" and "them", the "helper" and the "helped".  Ari's project includes everyone in all aspects - a homeless person might be serving a wealthy professional, or vice versa, and it makes no difference.

Ari explained for us some of the spiritual roots of how he set up the cafe - the link to the Zen Peacemakers' "Three Tenets": Not Knowing, Bearing Witness, and Loving Action, and how he uses the model of the Five Buddha Families in coordinating the business side of it.

Ari is a lovely, gentle man, and it was a plaesure to have him here to speak to us.

Sunday 1 September 2013

Mime Workshop with Damian Dudkiowicz!


This afternoon in our Circle we had Damian Dudkiowicz leading a mime workshop! Damian is a professional performer, and a regular facilitator in the Auschwitz Bearing Witness retreats. His miming was fantastic, so difficult and so fascinating at the same time.  We held the training upstairs in Sally's Secret Garden.

Sunday 4 August 2013

Angel Healing with Lorna


Lorna held her first Angel Healing workshop as part of the Zen Peacemaker Circle today!  It was upstairs in Sally's Secret Garden in Chester.  She explained the principles, including the idea of asking for what you really need and letting go of expectations of what how the results might come, and led a wonderful visualisation meditation....

Saturday 3 August 2013

Persian Drum Workshop with Arian Sadr!



This afternoon we had a fantastic workshop for Persian drumming with Arian Sadr.  It was really nice to receive Arian's expertise and lovely to meet devoted practioners from different spiritual traditions - we had several visiting Mevlevi dervishes from the Threshold Society!  Arian taught the basic rhythms of the daf drum, how to hold it and hit it, and demonstrated his own wonderful playing.  We held the event outdoors on the grass by Chester's medieval walls in the warm summer afternoon.

Monday 22 July 2013

Street Zen Training, 21st July


In our Zen Training circle on Sunday we studied a tool for including all aspects of our life in practice, called the Five Buddha Families. They're sometimes used in the Zen Peacemakers as a way of reflecting on our engagement with life - Spirituality, Study, Livelihood, Social Action, and Integration/Celebration. Originally they developed in Indian and Tibetan Buddhism, where they are used as a very rich model of how our psyche operates moment by moment.

As usual, a fantastic meal was shared together outdoors at the end!

Saturday 20 July 2013

Street Zen Training, 7th July


Here's a photo Eric sent me of the meal laid out in the last Street Zen Training.  By the way, it was a plaesure to be absent and know the circle was going on without me - this was the first time in five years of offering these circles that I've not been present!  I've invited other people to facilitate before, or lead different bits of an event.  But this was my first ever absence while I've been Circle Steward!  So thankyou very much to Eric...

Chris

Thursday 18 July 2013

Lots going on...


We've had several activities in the past few of weeks.  Eric hosted the Street Zen Training last Sunday, and he also led another couple of guided Mindfulness and Metta sessions on the Sundays in between.  He held these outdoors too, in the unexpected but very welcome sunshine we're having right now!  On Tuesday this week we held another Rumi Reflection Group meeting in Sally's Secret Garden, taking a poem by Rumi and using it as a starting point for reflecting on our own lives.  This week was our last one with the translation Love's Ripening by Helminski and Rizwani.  We'll be moving on to Rumi: Bridge to the Soul by Coleman Barks next time.  The plan is to wander through many different Rumi translations, hearing him in different voices, to encourage a variety in the way we reflect on our own life too.

From somewhere beyond myself
grace radiates into my heart.
Somewhere a Candle illumines this whole world.
Who am I? Just the candlestick holder.

Rumi

Tuesday 25 June 2013

Rumi Reflection Group, 25th June


Here we are in this hidden corner, drunk.
O friend!  These companions merged
into a single soul, drunk,

detached from the self and the world,
with mouths closed like pistachios,
breathing lightly
with the secret You gave them.

Rumi

Sunday 23 June 2013

Street Zen Training, 23rd June


We met together on a windy sunday afternoon, and watched the Midsummer Watch parade go by with huge puppets of elephants and dragons and pirate ships and demons!  Then we sat by the big cross in Abbey Square outside the Cathedral and discussed the Norwegian ecological philosopher Arne Naess.  Jennie, who comes from Norway, spoke about how well known he is there, and how creatively crazy.  We explored the idea that humans are not any more important or valuable than other forms of life, only we have more responsibility because of our intelligence and self-awareness.  We spoke about interconnectedness and human action, and also a little about the idea of the Zen Peacemaker Circles themselves in an ecological light - that they are intended to embody the traditional role of a "Zen Teacher" in a more varied way, within the Circle itself rather than authority and wisdom being seen as resting in a single person.

Sunday 16 June 2013

Eric's First Mindfulness Session!


Eric today started fortnightly mindfulness and metta sessions, to be held the weeks in between the street training in Chester.  The venue is the Harvest Moon cafe, opposite the library.  Sunday was the first meeting, and lots of people turned up to be led gently by Eric in the traditional Buddhist meditation practice known as the MIndfulness of Breathing...

Rumi Reflection Group, 12th June


The work of love is to create
a window in the heart,
for the breast is illumined
by the beauty of the beloved

Rumi

Street Training Circle, 9th June



We met at the roman amphitheatre, a wonderfully warm and sunny day.  After meditating for a while we read a story from B Glassman's book .  The story was about the amount of/lack of religious scripture during a meditation retreat.  Opinions were many, varied and shared. I interpreted the story was trying to convey the importance of rejoicing in our differences, rather than searching for our similarities.  For it is our differences that make us unique, and it is our differences that make us common.  The fact that we are different is something we all share.

After discussing what the story meant, we left the amphitheatre and each of us found our place to sit.  Here we witnessed people, nature, and general life in the city.  We all met at the amphitheatre, to discuss what we had we had observed, many of us seemed to have had similar experiences of witnessing people and their relationships.  We were then led in meditation by wonderful young Tasha, followed by a shared meal, kind company and good discussion.

by Jennie

Wednesday 29 May 2013

Rumi Reflection Group, 29th May


She is not that kind of beloved most imagine;
she is a ray of God.
She is not just created,
she is creative.

Rumi

This afternoon we met in the garden at Sally's again and read from Love's Ripening.  We're up to the chapter on 'Feminine and Divine', and we couldn't decide which poem to read... so we read all four of them!  We had a great discussion on the union of opposites, on Hegel's dialectics, on hope and despair.  We also talked about possibilities for future activities - art and study and clowning!

The painting above is by Clara Stella from the Circle, who's leaving this week to go back to Italy...

Sunday 26 May 2013

Street Training, Sun 26th May


We met in the ampitheatre again then walked to the ruins of the Norman cathedral, where we did a little relaxation, checked-in wth each other, and read the chapter on Oneness from Bernie Glassman's book "Bearing Witness".  We had a good discussion about our own barriers that we erect between ourselves and other people, and how they sometimes come down.  Then we headed out for some bearing witness practice on the streets, this week wandering aimlessly (andare a Zonzo as it's called in Italian) and just mingling with the place and the people.

We came back together to discuss the practice, sat in silence for a little while, and then shared a meal together. The squirrel you can maybe just make out in middle of the photo is eating a breadstick from the meal!

Let our heart, our hand, and our table be open to everyone...

Chris

Saturday 18 May 2013

Rumi Reflection Group, Thursday 16th May


The Rumi Refection Group met in the lovely outdoors cafe at the back of Sally's Secret Garden.  Eric brought some homemade crumble, and we read from "Love's Ripening" again.  We had a good discussion also about possible social support projects which could grow out of our Circle...

A laughing pomegranate
brings the whole garden to life.
Keeping the company of the holy
makes you one of them.
Whether you are stone or marble
you will become a jewel
when you reach a human being of heart.

Rumi


Street Zen training, Sun 12th May


On Sunday we met again in the Roman Amphitheatre in Chester, then took shelter from the wind and rain under an arch in the ruins of the Norman Cathedral.  We studied some of Bernie Glassman's book 'Instructions to the Cook', then headed out onto the streets to wander and mingle, bearing witness to the life all around us.  We ended by sharing a meal together in an alcove on Bridge Street Row.

Thursday 2 May 2013

Rumi Reflection Group, 2nd May


We held the second Rumi Reflection Group today, meeting in Sally's Secret Garden again for hot chocolate and tea.

"We are all of one soul struggling along one path,
and all drunk with the same wine."   Rumi

Wednesday 1 May 2013

Street Zen Circle, 28th April

 
On Sunday, we met at a chilly, windy amphitheatre, and enjoyed the sunlight with the tourists.  Seeing some new faces, and a few familiar ones, we gathered in a sheltered spot for an initial meditation, and introductions.  Somewhat appropriate for the unseasonably cold weather, there was a shared reading of a passage, relating the tale of a long term suvivor from Auschwitz, and how it was Love that allowed him to persevere, and to carry on with life afterwards.  How he chose to see the inherent love in people.  That's certainly the message I took from the reading; how we all have the capacity within us for a humungous range of actions, and by choosing love, we truly choose life. 
 
There, then, we went to bear witness to our own little corners of Chester, each of us noticing something, or nothing, and a few having encounters with non-human animals.  Once we had regrouped, we retreated to the ruins of a church, to share our stories and our food.  The warmth of both the conversation, and of the delectable offerings helped immeasurably to ward off the chills I think we all felt that afternoon. 
 
I think I'm not alone in saying that I look forward to seeing as many people as possible at the next training session. 
 
 Sincerely,
 
Eric

Thursday 18 April 2013

Rumi Reflection Group, first meeting



Alongside the fortnightly "Zen On The Streets" circle training we'll be doing, we'll also be offering a regular Rumi Reflection Group as part of the Chester Zen Peacemaker Circle.  Rumi is one of the greatest spiritual poets of all time, born in Balkh, Afghanistan and living in Konya, Turkey.  He died in 1273.  His spiritual vision was born out of a deep friendship with a wandering vagabond, Shams of Tabriz.  It was the disappearance of Shams, possibly his murder, which gave birth to the depth and passion of Rumi's voice!

Each time we'll take a poem by Rumi and reflect on how we respond to it, what it suggests to us, what it means in terms of our own life.  Rumi's vision overlaps strongly with the vision of Zen, yet has its differences and its own perspective.  This Rumi Reflection Group will hopefully help us to broaden our own perspective and see things from different angles.  We'll be meeting in a cafe and drinking tea and coffee as we explore Rumi's beautiful words and spirit...

Anyone is welcome, you can come to either or both groups, as often or as occasionally as you find helpful to you.

You are not a single "you", my friend -
you are the wide sky and the deep sea.
Your awesome "You", which is nine hundredfold,
is where a hundred of your yous will drown.

Rumi

Monday 15 April 2013

First Chester ZPC Meeting, Sunday 14th April 2013, in Chester's Roman Amphitheatre... King Arthur's Round Table (maybe!)


... First meeting done!

All of us are officially a part of the International Zen Peacemakers' Circle, with the blessing (maybe!) of King Arthur's soul itself! What a better image for starting such a new symbolically exciting journey?

Yes, the journey has been started, thanks to a beautiful sun that warmed our bones, while we were sitting in, probably, what was the most blessed part of Chester's Amphitheater: the "corner" of Nemesis, the ancient and beautiful god of justice. We began as usually with a brief conversation in order to know each other and showing why we were enjoying the circle and what we expected from it. Then, we started with readings from the introduction of 'Instructions to the Cook' written by Bernie Glassman, about how the practice of Zen meditation could positively affect not only our brain, our way of thinking and our spiritual balance, but also our daily life's experience, with concrete results, such as the Zen Peacemakers' folks have done in Switzerland and are still working on around the Europe for lots of homeless and people in need. 

Learning from each other seems to be the only master this practice has: everyone is a torch to light, not just a container to be filled. If all of us is a part of the same body, our spiritual development could be started, enriched and improved only with the help of others. Only together it could be possible discover ourselves since there is not differences amid the outside and the inside, as Buddhism teaches us.

I'm still excited by the experiment we did: sitting alone, close to the street, after a brief moment of meditation done together, as usually. The looks of the people hurted my heart not a little: sitting on the ground for few minutes, and looking at the world from a different prospective could be a really penetrating experience..

So... may we all be well and appreciate one another.


Always and always.

yours Clara

Welcome!


Welcome to the Chester Zen Peacemaker Circle!

We are a new circle in the Zen Peacemaker family, connected to the Zen Peacemaker Circles in Europe and the US and social action all over the world.  The Zen Peacemakers are the creation of Zen Master Bernie Glassman, and are summed up in three principles- Not Knowing, Bearing Witness, and Loving Action.  We will study and explore these principles together, with the intention of serving and celebrating the world we live in.  Everyone is welcome - we are an inclusive community consisting of people from many different religions and backgrounds.

My name is Chris Starbuck, sometimes known also in the Buddhist world as Zang.  I'm the Steward of the circle here, and in the first year or two I'll be taking a strong role in guiding and shaping its development.  After that, the Circle will become self-governing, electing a Steward every couple of years to help support it but ideally learning to make decisions collectively.

My own background is in both Buddhism and in Islamic meditation, having practiced for over 20 years.  In the Zen Peacemaker Circles I study with Barbara Wegmueller from Switzerland, herself a senior student of Bernie Glassman.

We'll be keeping this blog as a kind of community history, the story of who we are and where we come from - I'll invite people coming along to write blog entries regularly...

May all beings be happy!

Chris Zang Starbuck