Two Arrows Zen

Two Arrows Zen Two Arrows Zen, 21 G Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84103. Please visit our website. https://twoarrowszen.org We are not open for public events during the pandemic.

We are a meditation center in the Zen Buddhist tradition offering daily meditation M-F, classes, retreats, and programs. Two Arrows Zen, Artspace Suite 155, 230 South 500 West, downtown Salt Lake City.

05/22/2026
A Zen student once proudly told his teacher that he had finally understood emptiness.“There is no mind,” he said.“No bod...
05/22/2026

A Zen student once proudly told his teacher that he had finally understood emptiness.

“There is no mind,” he said.
“No body.
No self.
No Buddha.”

The teacher listened quietly.

Then, without warning, he struck the student with his stick.

The student jumped back in pain.

“Ouch!” he cried.

The teacher looked at him and asked:

“If nothing exists—

What hurt?”



Among the many stories preserved in the Zen tradition, few illustrate the subtlety of Buddhist teaching as clearly as this brief exchange between teacher and student. At first glance, the student appears to have arrived at a profound realization. He speaks confidently of emptiness, denying mind, body, self, and even Buddha. Yet the teacher immediately exposes the misunderstanding hidden beneath the student’s certainty.

The student had confused emptiness with negation.

This is a common mistake, not only among beginning practitioners but also among those drawn to Zen through philosophy alone. Emptiness can sound, to the conceptual mind, like a declaration that nothing is real, nothing matters, and suffering itself is merely an illusion to be dismissed. But Zen has never pointed toward indifference or denial.

In Buddhism, emptiness does not mean nonexistence.

Rather, it points to the absence of an independent and permanent essence. Things exist, but they do not exist separately from causes, conditions, and relationships. Everything arises together, changes together, and passes away together.

A wave exists, certainly. Yet it cannot be separated from the ocean that gives rise to it.

Likewise, the self exists in a practical sense, but not as a fixed and isolated entity standing apart from the rest of life. What we call “self” is fluid, relational, and constantly changing.

This understanding does not erase human experience. Pain still hurts. Grief still arrives. Joy still opens the heart. Compassion remains essential.

If anything, the realization of emptiness allows us to meet life more intimately, not less. When we stop clinging to rigid identities and fixed ideas, we become less trapped by the endless divisions of “me” and “mine,” “success” and “failure,” “gain” and “loss.”

The Zen teacher’s stick was not punishment. It was an instruction.

In a single instant, the student was pulled out of abstraction and returned to direct experience. The body recoiled. Pain appeared. Reality announced itself before thought could intervene.

Zen continually returns us to this immediacy.

Not to a world that is solid and permanent, nor to one that is empty in the nihilistic sense, but to a reality that is alive, interdependent, and impossible to fully capture with concepts.

Between the extremes of clinging and denial, Zen practice quietly begins.

Hanshan—the legendary “Cold Mountain” poet of Tang Dynasty China—left behind poems written on rocks, trees, cave walls, ...
05/20/2026

Hanshan—the legendary “Cold Mountain” poet of Tang Dynasty China—left behind poems written on rocks, trees, cave walls, and scraps of discarded paper. More than a thousand years later, they still endure because they speak directly to conditions that have never disappeared: ambition, distraction, loneliness, impermanence, and the restless search for meaning.

One of his best-known poems begins:

“Men ask the way to Cold Mountain
Cold Mountain: there's no through trail.
In summer, ice doesn't melt
The rising sun blurs in swirling fog.
How did I make it?
My heart's not the same as yours.
If your heart was like mine
You'd get it and be right here..”

Cold Mountain is not finally a destination. It is a way of seeing—a life less trapped by striving, status, and the need to be somewhere else.

The trail was never hidden.

It was simply never separate from where you already are.

There is an old Zen story about a man being chased by a tiger. He runs through the forest until he reaches a cliff, grab...
05/17/2026

There is an old Zen story about a man being chased by a tiger. He runs through the forest until he reaches a cliff, grabs a vine, and lowers himself down. Above him, the tiger waits; below, another tiger circles patiently at the bottom.

The man hangs there suspended between the two.

Then he notices something else.

Two mice—one white and one black—have begun slowly chewing through the vine.

Little by little, the only thing holding him above the rocks below is being worn away.

And then, in the middle of all of it, he sees a wild strawberry growing.

Looking up at the tiger above and down at the tiger below, and then watching the mice chew the vine, he reaches out, picks the strawberry, and puts it in his mouth.

To be human is, in some sense, to hang between those two tigers. Caught between what has already happened and what eventually will. Trying to hold on. Aware, at least faintly, that the vine does not last forever.

What makes the story distinctly Zen is that it does not ask the man to transcend the situation.

The cliff remains a cliff.

The tigers remain tigers.

And yet the strawberry is still sweet.

That detail changes everything.

Because the story suggests that presence is possible even in the midst of uncertainty—not after fear disappears, not once life becomes stable, but directly within the fleeting and unstable nature of existence itself.

The strawberry does not solve his condition.

It simply returns him to the immediacy of being alive.

To this breath.

This taste.

This moment.

Today marks the 96th birthday of Gary Snyder—poet, translator, environmental thinker, Zen practitioner, and one of the l...
05/08/2026

Today marks the 96th birthday of Gary Snyder—poet, translator, environmental thinker, Zen practitioner, and one of the last surviving voices of the Beat Generation.

Born in 1930, Snyder helped introduce generations of American readers to Buddhism, Chinese and Japanese poetry, wilderness culture, and the possibility that spiritual practice could exist fully within ordinary life.

He served as the primary inspiration for Japhy Ryder in The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac, helping shape the American imagination around mountains, poetry, wandering, meditation, and Zen. Unlike many associated with the Beat movement, however, Snyder’s engagement with Buddhism extended far beyond literary fascination. He studied and practiced Zen formally in Japan for more than a decade and became one of the clearest bridges between contemplative practice, ecology, labor, and everyday life.

Snyder also played a major role in introducing Western readers to classical Chinese and Japanese poetry, translating and championing poets such as Hanshan (“Cold Mountain”), whose work deeply influenced generations of poets and practitioners alike.

What continues to make Snyder’s work distinctive is the way it resists separation. In his writing, mountains, work, rivers, meditation, language, and community are not treated as different worlds. Practice is not removed from life—it is found directly within it.

At 96, Gary Snyder remains one of the most important living voices in the conversation between Zen, poetry, ecology, and American culture.

Happy birthday to a true Dharma Bum.

May 1st 1394—over six centuries ago, approximately 630 years in the past—a disturbance was reported at Engaku-ji, one of...
05/03/2026

May 1st 1394—over six centuries ago, approximately 630 years in the past—a disturbance was reported at Engaku-ji, one of the principal Rinzai monasteries in Kamakura. Contemporary cultural context is essential: in medieval Japan, badgers (tanuki) were widely understood as liminal figures—shape-shifting tricksters associated with illusion, misperception, and the destabilization of ordinary experience. Accounts suggest that something was troubling the temple and its surroundings—an atmosphere of confusion or unease often described in such traditions as “bewitching” those who passed through the area.

In response, the temple is said to have called upon Ekiho. The record is notably spare. There is no account of ritual implements, incantations, or physical intervention. Instead, Ekiho is described simply as confronting or addressing the disturbance directly. What he said has not been preserved. The narrative concludes with a single outcome: the disturbance ceased.

As with many anecdotal materials preserved in later Zen compilations, the significance of the episode lies less in its descriptive detail than in its structural economy. The event is presented without elaboration, directing attention toward response rather than phenomenon. Within the broader Zen interpretive framework, such accounts often function as demonstrations of unmediated clarity—an encounter in which no additional conceptual overlay is introduced. Whether read within the cosmology of medieval Japan or as a later pedagogical artifact, the story points toward a consistent theme: that certain disturbances—however they are construed—lose coherence when they are met without projection, elaboration, or resistance.

A monk once came across Tanzan sitting by a fire on a cold night.To his surprise, Tanzan was burning a wooden Buddha sta...
04/30/2026

A monk once came across Tanzan sitting by a fire on a cold night.

To his surprise, Tanzan was burning a wooden Buddha statue.

“What are you doing?” the monk exclaimed.
“That’s a Buddha!"

Tanzan stirred the fire and replied, "I’m searching for the sacred relics."

“But it’s just wood!" the monk argued.

Tanzan looked up and said, "Then bring me another Buddha. It’s cold tonight."

The monk saw a sacred object, but Tanzan saw firewood.

This story isn’t about showing disrespect.
It’s about confusion—how easily we mistake the symbol for the real thing.

A statue points.
A teaching points.
A practice points.
But none of these are the actual essence.

If you hold on too tightly—sometimes even what’s meant to set you free can turn into something you cling to.

Two monks, Tanzan and Ekido, were walking down a muddy road when they came encountered a young woman who couldn’t cross....
04/25/2026

Two monks, Tanzan and Ekido, were walking down a muddy road when they came encountered a young woman who couldn’t cross.

Without hesitation, Tanzan lifted her and carried her across the muddied path.

They continued their walk in silence. Hours later, Ekido broke the silence, saying, “We’re monks. We’re not supposed to touch women.”

Tanzan replied simply,
“I left her at the roadside, you're still carrying her”

What makes this story powerful isn’t just what Tanzan did—it’s what Ekido did afterward. Tanzan responded to what was in front of him—helping a person in need—and then let go. Ekido stuck to the rule but kept holding onto the incident. That’s the real difference.

In Zen, this isn’t simply a story about rules; it’s about attachment—how easily the mind turns a simple moment into something we dwell on. We replay it, judge it, and cling to it. The act itself took only seconds, but Ekido carried it for hours.

This becomes personal because most of us don’t carry people across roads, but we carry other things—conversations, mistakes, words we wish we’d said differently, or comments others made to us. We hold onto them long after the moment has passed.

Tanzan isn’t being careless; he’s being present. He responds fully to what’s happening and then releases it. Ekido, like many of us, tries to live by the rules but remains caught up in the story of what happened.

The lesson isn’t about ignoring rules or breaking tradition. It’s deeper. It asks us: can we respond to life as it is and then let go once it’s done?

Because most of the weight we carry isn’t from what happened but from what we continue to hold onto.

And so the story leaves us with a question: What are you still carrying?

There’s a well-known story, often shared in both Taoist and Zen circles, about a farmer and his horse. An old man lived ...
04/19/2026

There’s a well-known story, often shared in both Taoist and Zen circles, about a farmer and his horse. An old man lived in a small village with his son. One day, his horse ran away, and the neighbors came by to offer their sympathies.

“What bad luck,” they said.

The old man simply replied, “Maybe.”

A few days later, the horse returned, bringing with it several wild horses from the hills. The neighbors returned, praising the good fortune.

“What good luck," they said.

Again, the old man responded, "Maybe."

Soon after, the man’s son tried to ride one of the wild horses. He was thrown and broke his leg.

“What bad luck,” the neighbors lamented.

Once more, the old man said, "Maybe.”

Not long after, soldiers came through the village, drafting young men into the army. Seeing his son’s injured leg, they passed him by.

“What good luck," said the neighbors.

And again, the old man only replied, "Maybe.”

The story keeps turning like this, over and over.

What seems fortunate can turn out to be unfortunate. What looks like a loss might reveal something different over time.

Nothing remains fixed or certain.

What stands out isn’t the events themselves but our tendency to rush to judge their meaning too quickly.

Most of the time, our minds jump to conclusions—this is good, this is bad—and then everything else follows from there.

But the story suggests something else: that we don’t see the full picture. Time often shows what the moment cannot. What we label as “good” or “bad” might just be a small piece of something still unfolding.

The old man doesn’t deny what happens. He simply leaves it open.

In Zen, this is sometimes called not knowing—not confusion, but a kind of clarity that isn’t in a rush to judge.

It’s about being willing to meet life as it comes before it hardens into certainty.

The story is straightforward. A horse runs away, then returns. A son falls, then heals. A war comes, then goes.

Nothing extraordinary. And yet—the moment we decide what something means might be the very moment we stop seeing it clearly.

Before he became one of Tibet’s most revered yogis, Milarepa was known for something far darker. He was born in western ...
04/15/2026

Before he became one of Tibet’s most revered yogis, Milarepa was known for something far darker. He was born in western Tibet into a family that, for a time, lived with stability and relative comfort. That stability ended with his father’s death. In its wake, his aunt and uncle seized the family’s property, forcing Milarepa, his mother, and his sister into a life of humiliation and labor. What began as loss gradually hardened into resentment, and resentment into something more dangerous. At his mother’s urging, he left home to learn sorcery—not as a curiosity, but as a means of revenge.

He did not hesitate to use it. Traditional accounts describe him collapsing a house during a wedding, killing many people inside, and later summoning violent hailstorms that destroyed crops across the region. The harm was not symbolic. It was irreversible. Whatever sense of justice or satisfaction he had imagined did not arrive. When it was over, there was no restoration—only absence. The people were still gone. The damage remained. And with it came something that could no longer be directed outward: a sustained and unyielding recognition of what he had done.

That recognition did not free him. It deepened into remorse—not the kind that passes, but the kind that stays and asks a different question. What now? And is there any way to live differently after this? It was this question, more than anything else, that turned him toward the path.

Milarepa eventually sought out the teacher Marpa Lotsawa, who had brought Buddhist teachings from India back to Tibet. Marpa did not greet him with instruction or consolation. Instead, he gave him work. Milarepa was ordered to build a stone tower by hand. When it was finished, Marpa instructed him to dismantle it completely and return each stone to its original place. Then he was told to begin again. Different towers, different locations, the same labor—repeated over years.

To an outside observer, the treatment might appear severe. Within the tradition, it is understood differently. Milarepa had used discipline, focus, and determination to cause harm; now those same qualities were being redirected. The labor offered no refuge in abstraction. Each stone lifted required effort. Each wall raised and undone revealed the limits of will, frustration, and attachment. In time, something shifted—not suddenly, but through endurance. The urgency that had once driven him gave way to the capacity to remain.

Only then did Marpa begin to teach him. And when he did, he sent Milarepa away—not into a monastery, but into solitary retreat in the mountains.

It is in this setting that one of the most enduring stories from his life takes place. Returning to his cave one night, Milarepa found it filled with demons. At first, he responded with the strength he knew. He ran the lesser ones out, and they scattered. Others proved more persistent, and with these he shifted his approach. Instead of resisting, he met them with a kind of openness—offering rather than opposing—and they were gradually banished.

But in the back of the cave, one remained.

This final presence did not react. It did not yield to force, nor to patience, nor even to openness. Everything Milarepa had relied on—his strength, his discipline, even his ability to meet things skillfully—had reached its limit. There was nothing left to apply, no method that made sense.

So he did something else.

He stepped forward, bowed, and—according to the story—placed his head into the demon’s mouth.

There was no resistance, no attempt to control the outcome, no distance left between himself and what he faced.

And the demon dissolved.

The story has been told for generations not as a record of supernatural combat, but as a description of the mind itself—of fear, guilt, memory, and the consequences that remain long after action has passed. Some of these can be pushed aside. Others can be worked with. But some persist, unaffected by either.

For these, there may be no solution in the usual sense.

Only the willingness to face them completely, and to see them clearly for what they are.

By the time Milarepa entered that cave, he had already encountered the weight of his own actions. The final moment was not a sudden breakthrough, but the continuation of a process that had begun much earlier—with loss, with anger, and ultimately with the recognition of what could not be undone.

What followed was not escape, but a different way of meeting what remained. And in that meeting, something changed—not because the problem was defeated, but because it was no longer being resisted.

Tonight at 9pm MTN, Shambhala will debut a new episode of This Very Moment featuring Diane Musho Hamilton.In this conver...
04/14/2026

Tonight at 9pm MTN, Shambhala will debut a new episode of This Very Moment featuring Diane Musho Hamilton.

In this conversation, Diane reflects on the arc of her practice—from early encounters with loss and existential questioning, to her training at Naropa, her work with Genpo Merzel, and her ongoing integration of Zen and Integral perspectives influenced by Ken Wilber.

At the center of the discussion is a simple but profound insight:

That there is something in us—already present—that knows how to be with what is.

Through years of meditation, facilitation, and working with individuals and groups in conflict, Diane points to a shift that many practitioners recognize: not necessarily a change in life’s conditions, but a transformation in how we meet them.

Rather than becoming less reactive by force, we begin to see reactivity as it arises. Rather than escaping difficulty, we develop the capacity to remain present within it.

This is where practice becomes lived.

The conversation also explores the integration of contemplative depth with relational and developmental capacity—what Diane often describes as the convergence of waking up and growing up. In a time of increasing complexity, this integration becomes essential for how we engage one another, navigate difference, and remain grounded in the midst of challenge.

We’re grateful to see this work shared more widely.

The episode premieres tonight at 9pm MTN on YouTube.

Episode 7 of This Very Moment features Zen teacher, meditator, and author Diane Musho Hamilton in a rich conversation about learning to be with life as it is.

Address

21 G Street
Salt Lake City, UT
84103

Opening Hours

Monday 6:45am - 9am
5:15pm - 7pm
Tuesday 6:45am - 9am
5:15pm - 7pm
Wednesday 6:45am - 9am
5:15pm - 7pm
Thursday 6:45am - 9am
5:15pm - 8:15pm
Friday 6:45am - 9am
5:15pm - 7pm
Sunday 9:30am - 11:30am

Telephone

+18015324975

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