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.

April 6 marks the birth of Ram Dass (born Richard Alpert, 1931–2019), one of the most influential spiritual teachers of ...
04/07/2026

April 6 marks the birth of Ram Dass (born Richard Alpert, 1931–2019), one of the most influential spiritual teachers of the twentieth century and a key figure in the transmission of Eastern contemplative traditions to the West.

He was born in Boston, into a well-established American family, and educated at institutions including Tufts, Wesleyan, and ultimately Harvard University, where he later taught psychology. In the early 1960s, alongside colleague Timothy Leary, Alpert became involved in pioneering research into psychedelics, particularly L*D, as a means of exploring consciousness.

While these experiences revealed profound alterations in perception and identity, Alpert came to recognize their limitations. The insights they offered were temporary; they did not provide a stable or enduring transformation of being. This realization led him to seek a more sustained path.

In 1967, he traveled to India, where he met Neem Karoli Baba, a meeting that would decisively shape his life. Under his teacher’s guidance, Alpert was given the name Ram Dass, meaning “servant of God,” and began a disciplined path of spiritual practice rooted in devotion, meditation, and self-inquiry.

His 1971 book, Be Here Now, became a seminal work in American spiritual literature. It articulated, in accessible language, the possibility that awakening is not separate from ordinary life, but available within it—through attention, presence, and the gradual softening of self-centered identity.

Ram Dass’s contribution extended beyond writing and teaching. He was a co-founder of the Seva Foundation, an organization dedicated to alleviating suffering through service, particularly by supporting sight-restoring medical care in underserved regions. He also helped establish the Love Serve Remember Foundation, which continues to preserve and share his teachings. The foundation’s name reflects a concise expression of his path: to love others, to serve selflessly, and to remember one’s deeper nature.

Throughout his life, Ram Dass emphasized the integration of insight into relationship. His often-quoted remark—“If you think you’re enlightened, go spend time with your family”—points to a central theme in his teaching: realization is not measured in isolation, but in how one meets the ordinary conditions of life.

He also offered a corrective to idealized notions of spiritual experience, observing that what one seeks as “God” or truth often appears in unexpected and challenging forms—what he described, at times, as “God in drag.” In this way, he redirected attention away from abstraction and toward the immediacy of lived experience.

In 1997, a stroke left him partially paralyzed, an event he later described as a continuation of his practice. Rather than diminishing his teaching, this period deepened its emphasis on acceptance, humility, and presence.

Ram Dass’s enduring legacy lies not in the establishment of a system or doctrine, but in the articulation of a path that integrates contemplative insight with everyday life. His teaching remains grounded in a simple but demanding invitation:

to be here now.

April 5 marks the anniversary of the death of Allen Ginsberg (1926–1997), a poet whose work helped reshape how conscious...
04/05/2026

April 5 marks the anniversary of the death of Allen Ginsberg (1926–1997), a poet whose work helped reshape how consciousness itself was understood in the modern West.

Ginsberg is often introduced through Howl, the long, breath-driven poem that gave voice to a generation disillusioned with conformity, war, and repression. But what Howl revealed was not only cultural critique—it was attention. A mind exposed in real time. A refusal to filter experience into something more acceptable.

That quality—raw, immediate, unedited—became the bridge between Ginsberg’s poetry and Buddhist practice.

His early contact with Zen came through Jack Kerouac and the Beat circle, where Eastern philosophy circulated as both inspiration and provocation. For Ginsberg, this was not literary curiosity. It was a response to a more intimate question: how to live inside the mind without being overtaken by it.

That question found direction when he met Chögyam Trungpa in the 1970s. Their meeting was unplanned. In New York, Ginsberg stepped into a taxi that Trungpa was already riding in. An ordinary moment became decisive. From that encounter, a relationship formed that would shape the direction of his life and practice. Under Trungpa’s guidance, Ginsberg entered into formal practice. Meditation became discipline. Attention became method. What followed was not a departure from poetry, but a deepening of it.

In 1974, he co-founded the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at Naropa Institute. The project was not built around technique alone, but around the possibility that writing could arise directly from awareness—that poetry could function as a record of mind rather than a performance for approval.

This may be one of Ginsberg’s most enduring contributions. He helped dissolve the boundary between artistic expression and contemplative practice.

His work did not attempt to explain Zen, nor did it adopt its language directly. Instead, it moved in parallel. The long lines of his poetry followed the rhythm of breath. His attention to passing thought mirrored the observational quality of meditation. His subject matter—impermanence, identity, desire, suffering—aligned with the central concerns of Buddhist inquiry.

At the same time, Ginsberg resisted idealization. He did not present awakening as purity or escape. His life and work remained entangled with the full range of human experience—sexuality, politics, grief, joy, contradiction. In this, he reflects a deeper current found in Zen: that realization does not remove complexity, but allows it to be seen more clearly.

What Ginsberg helped introduce into American culture was not simply Buddhism, but the legitimacy of looking directly at the mind. Today, meditation and mindfulness are widely accessible, but in his time these practices lived at the margins. Through poetry, teaching, and public presence, he helped bring the exploration of consciousness into the cultural foreground—not as theory, but as lived experience.

He did not leave behind a system or a doctrine. What he left was a method of attention.

A willingness to see without turning away.
A recognition that experience does not need to be edited before it is worthy of awareness.
A demonstration that consciousness itself can be both the subject and the path.

In a time marked by distraction, anxiety, and fragmentation, that orientation remains relevant. The question he lived into persists: how do we meet the mind as it is—not after it improves, but in the midst of its movement?

His work does not resolve that question. It keeps it open.

And in doing so, it continues to function in the way Zen teachings often do—not as answers, but as invitations.

To look.
To listen.
To become aware of what is already happening.

That remains his legacy.



The world is holy! The soul is holy!
The skin is holy! The nose is holy!
The tongue and c**k and hand and as***le holy!
Everything is holy! everybody’s holy! everywhere is holy! everyday is in eternity!
Every man’s an angel!

excerpt from
“Footnote to Howl”
by Allen Ginsberg.

From time to time, Zen offers a statement that sounds less like philosophy and more like a disruption: you were never bo...
04/05/2026

From time to time, Zen offers a statement that sounds less like philosophy and more like a disruption: you were never born, and you will never die. At first hearing, it can feel abstract, even dismissive of ordinary human experience. We mark beginnings. We mourn endings. A life appears to start and stop. Zen does not deny this. It asks a more precise question: what, exactly, is it that begins and ends?

What we call a person does not arrive as a fixed entity. It is assembled through conditions—body, history, language, memory, and relationship. From this convergence, a center forms. We begin by saying “I,” and from there a narrative takes shape. Yet nothing within that process remains stable. The body is in constant change. The mind does not repeat itself. Even identity shifts depending on circumstance. What appears to be a solid life is, on closer inspection, movement. Not a thing, but an event.

From this perspective, birth is not the absolute arrival of something separate, and death is not its final disappearance. They are transitions within a process that never steps outside itself. Forms appear and disappear, but nothing stands apart long enough to be born in the way we imagine—or to die in the way we fear.

This way of seeing offers an unexpected point of contact with the Easter story. Resurrection is often understood as a return—life restored, something lost brought back again. But it can also be heard as a revelation. Not a reversal of death, but a challenge to the assumption that life was ever contained in a single form to begin with. What if what appears to vanish was never fully confined to what we saw?

Zen approaches this from the opposite direction. It does not begin with belief or doctrine, but with observation. Breath comes and goes. Thoughts arise and pass. The sense of self appears, shifts, and dissolves. Everything is coming and going. And yet, nothing falls outside of life. What we call continuity does not depend on something fixed remaining the same. It is expressed through change itself.

Much of human effort is organized around stabilizing what cannot be stabilized. We try to become someone, to fix an identity, to carry a version of ourselves forward. But the more closely we look, the harder it is to find anything that holds. This can be unsettling. If nothing is fixed, what are we? Zen does not replace one identity with another. It removes the need to anchor experience in a permanent self. What remains is not a solid center, but participation—life expressing itself as this moment, without requiring ownership.

Birth and death, then, are not illusions. They are real and consequential events within human experience. But they do not describe something separate, entering and leaving existence. They describe changes in form. What we are is not limited to the form we currently experience, and when that form changes—moment to moment, or finally—it is not life that disappears, but a particular arrangement.

When Zen says nothing is born and nothing dies, it is not offering a belief to adopt. It is pointing to something already taking place. Everything is coming and going. And here, in the midst of that movement, nothing is missing—not because anything endures unchanged, but because nothing ever stood apart long enough to be lost.

On April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee. His death marked a profound loss in Ame...
04/04/2026

On April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee. His death marked a profound loss in American history, but his life continues to shape how we understand justice, courage, and the possibility of meeting violence without becoming it.

Dr. King’s work was grounded in the Black Baptist tradition, where faith is not only professed, but lived—through community, through struggle, and through a commitment to love in the face of hatred. Nonviolence, for King, was not passive. It was an active, disciplined force—a way of confronting injustice without abandoning humanity.

In the later years of his life, King formed a meaningful friendship with Thich Nhat Hanh. He was deeply moved by Thich Nhat Hanh’s teachings on peace and compassion, and in 1967, nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize. What King recognized was not something foreign, but something familiar—a shared understanding that the roots of violence are not only social or political, but human.

Though they came from different traditions—Baptist Christianity and Zen Buddhism—both pointed toward a similar truth: that transformation begins within, and that how we meet the world matters.

In one tradition, this may be expressed as love of neighbor, even love of enemy. In another, it appears as compassion, non-attachment, and the careful examination of how the mind creates separation. The language differs. The forms differ. But the orientation is strikingly close.

Both traditions ask something difficult of us.

To refrain from hardening in the face of conflict.
To remain present when it would be easier to turn away.
To respond with clarity rather than reactivity.

This is not abstract. It is lived, moment by moment.

Dr. King’s life stands as a powerful example of this kind of practice in action. Not perfect, not without struggle—but rooted in a deep commitment to meeting the conditions of his time without losing sight of something larger.

Buddhism and the Baptist tradition are not the same. Their histories, teachings, and forms are distinct. And yet, at times, they can feel like different expressions of a shared human effort—to understand suffering, and to respond to it in a way that does not perpetuate harm.

Different fingers, as the saying goes, pointing at the same moon.

Remembering Dr. King today is not only about looking back. It is also about recognizing the depth of the path he walked—and the ways that path continues to echo across traditions, cultures, and time.

April 4 marks the anniversary of the death of Chögyam Trungpa (1939–1987), a central and controversial figure in the eme...
04/04/2026

April 4 marks the anniversary of the death of Chögyam Trungpa (1939–1987), a central and controversial figure in the emergence of Buddhism in the West.

Trungpa Rinpoche arrived in the West at a time when Buddhism was still largely an intellectual curiosity. Trained in Tibet as a tulku in the Kagyu lineage, he carried with him a complete system of practice—ritual, meditation, philosophy—and something more difficult to translate: presence.

After fleeing Tibet and studying at Oxford, he began teaching in Europe and eventually in the United States, where his influence took root. In 1974, he founded Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colorado—one of the first attempts to integrate contemplative practice with higher education in the West. Around it grew a network of students, practitioners, and communities that would shape generations of Western Buddhists.

He spoke directly to Western minds.

His teaching on “spiritual materialism”—the subtle habit of using spiritual practice to strengthen the very self it is meant to loosen—cut through idealism and aspiration alike. It remains one of the clearest warnings in modern Dharma: that the path can be co-opted by the ego at every step.

And yet, his life refuses to settle into a clean narrative.

Trungpa drank heavily. He had sexual relationships with students. He rejected the image of the restrained, ascetic teacher and instead embodied something far less comfortable. Some of his students understood this as a form of “crazy wisdom,” a deliberate refusal to let the teachings become fixed or idealized. Others experienced harm, confusion, and disillusionment.

That tension has not faded with time. If anything, it has become more visible.

So what are we to do with a figure like this?

To dismiss him outright is to overlook the depth of his contribution. To ignore the controversy is to overlook the real consequences of power within spiritual communities.

Trungpa’s life leaves a question rather than an answer:

What does it mean for awakening to appear in a human life?

Not in theory. Not in scripture. But in a body, in relationships, in choices.

Zen has long held that realization does not make a person immune to conditioning. At the same time, it insists that realization must express itself in conduct. The tension between those two truths is not a problem to solve—it is the field of practice itself.

Trungpa did not resolve that tension. He exposed it.

And in doing so, he helped shape the form that Buddhism would take in the West: direct, accessible, psychologically aware—and inevitably entangled with the culture it entered.

Remembering him today is not about agreement or rejection.

It is about seeing clearly what has been handed down—and taking responsibility for how it continues.

By now, many people are aware of the fire that destroyed the main meditation hall at Tassajara Zen Mountain Center. Fewe...
04/04/2026

By now, many people are aware of the fire that destroyed the main meditation hall at Tassajara Zen Mountain Center. Fewer may understand the historical and cultural significance of the site itself.

Located deep within the Los Padres National Forest, Tassajara is widely recognized as the first Zen Buddhist monastery established outside of Asia. Founded in 1967 by Shunryu Suzuki and the San Francisco Zen Center, the center marked a turning point in the development of Buddhism in the United States, transitioning Zen from a largely academic or urban practice into a fully embodied monastic tradition on Western soil.

Accessible only by a long, unpaved mountain road, Tassajara was intentionally designed as a place of intensive training. For much of the year, it functions as a residential monastery, where practitioners follow a rigorous schedule of meditation, work, and study. During winter practice periods, the center often becomes physically isolated, reinforcing its role as a site of sustained and uninterrupted practice.

The monastery’s establishment created a model that would influence the growth of Zen centers across North America. It provided a setting in which Western practitioners could engage directly with traditional forms of Zen training, rather than encountering them solely through books or short-term instruction.

In addition to its role in religious practice, Tassajara also became known for its contributions to American food culture through the Tassajara Bread Book and its emphasis on natural foods, which influenced early movements in vegetarian cooking and whole-grain baking.

The fire on March 26 destroyed the zendo, or main meditation hall, a central structure used for daily practice and ceremonial activity. According to fire officials, residents of the center initiated early firefighting efforts, helping contain the blaze before emergency crews arrived. No injuries were reported, and only one structure was lost.

While the physical damage is significant, Tassajara’s importance has historically extended beyond its buildings. As one of the foundational institutions of Zen practice in the West, its influence has been carried through generations of practitioners, teachers, and affiliated centers.

The loss of the meditation hall marks a notable moment in the center’s history. At the same time, Tassajara’s role in shaping the development of Zen Buddhism outside of Asia remains intact, grounded not only in its structures, but in the continuity of practice it has supported for nearly six decades.

For more information on SFZC and on how to help please follow the link : https://giving.sfzc.org/campaign/783955/donate

April 3 marks the annual commemoration of Hojo Tokimune (1251–1284), held at Engakuji Temple, the great Rinzai Zen monas...
04/03/2026

April 3 marks the annual commemoration of Hojo Tokimune (1251–1284), held at Engakuji Temple, the great Rinzai Zen monastery he founded in the final years of his life. The observance, which continues into April 4, reflects a long-standing Buddhist tradition of honoring the death anniversaries of influential figures—not simply as acts of remembrance, but as a continuation of relationship across time.

Hōjō Tokimune was not a monk, but the regent of Japan during the Kamakura period, effectively the most powerful political figure in the country. His life unfolded at a moment of profound instability. In 1274 and again in 1281, Japan faced large-scale invasion attempts by Mongol forces. These events placed Tokimune in a position where questions of leadership were inseparable from questions of mortality. It was in this context that his engagement with Zen took shape.

Tokimune’s introduction to Zen came through his relationship with the Chinese master Mugaku Sogen (Bukko Kokushi), a Rinzai teacher who had fled the Mongol advances on the Asian mainland and later became a central figure in Japanese Zen. Under Mugaku’s guidance, Tokimune did not pursue Zen as a philosophical system, but as a direct means of confronting fear—particularly the fear of death that accompanies both warfare and responsibility.

A well-known exchange between them illustrates the nature of this training. Facing the threat of invasion, Tokimune asked how to meet the overwhelming pressure of the moment. Mugaku’s response was not strategic, but existential: to cut through hesitation entirely, to act without being divided by doubt or self-preservation. The instruction was not about aggression, but about clarity—about meeting reality without the interference of conceptual fear.

Tokimune’s support of Zen extended beyond personal practice. In 1282, he commissioned the construction of Engakuji, both as a memorial for those who had died in the conflicts and as a center for Zen training in Japan. The temple became one of the principal institutions of Rinzai Zen, helping to establish a lasting connection between Zen practice and the samurai class. Through this relationship, Zen entered not only the religious sphere, but the cultural and political life of the country.

His legacy, however, is not without complexity. Tokimune represents a convergence of spiritual discipline and political power, raising enduring questions about how contemplative practice functions within structures of authority and conflict. Zen, in his life, was not removed from the realities of governance or war. It was embedded within them.

Today, the commemoration of Tokimune at Engakuji is not simply an acknowledgment of a historical figure, but a reflection on the conditions under which practice takes place. His life suggests that Zen is not confined to monasteries or ideal circumstances. It emerges wherever individuals are required to meet uncertainty without retreat.

For contemporary practitioners, Tokimune’s example can feel both distant and immediate. Few face the scale of decisions that defined his life, yet the underlying question remains familiar: how to respond when conditions are unstable, when outcomes are uncertain, and when the stakes—however defined—feel personal and immediate.

His engagement with Zen did not resolve these conditions. It did not remove conflict or guarantee outcomes. What it offered was a way of standing within them without collapse. That orientation, rather than any specific historical achievement, may be the most enduring aspect of his legacy.

On April 3, as commemorations continue at Engakuji, the significance of Hōjō Tokimune lies not only in what he did, but in how he met the conditions of his time—directly, without turning away.

— Two Arrows Zen

Keeping our friends at the San Francisco Zen Center close in our thoughts and hearts as we hear this news.
03/27/2026

Keeping our friends at the San Francisco Zen Center close in our thoughts and hearts as we hear this news.

At around 11:30 pm last night, the Tassajara zendo caught fire. No one was hurt, but the zendo burned down completely. Some of the library was also destroyed. Our gratitude to everyone who worked tirelessly to contain the flames, including local firefighters who were on the scene.

We will share more information as it comes in.

March 27 marks the birth of Charlotte Joko Beck (1917–2011), a Zen teacher whose work helped reshape the way practice ca...
03/26/2026

March 27 marks the birth of Charlotte Joko Beck (1917–2011), a Zen teacher whose work helped reshape the way practice came to be understood in the West, not by expanding its philosophy, but by narrowing its focus to the immediacy of everyday life.

Beck did not enter Zen through traditional monastic training or early religious vocation. She came to practice later, after years of living within the ordinary structures of American life—marriage, family, and the accumulated tensions that often accompany them. Her search was not abstract. It emerged from the direct experience of dissatisfaction and the need to understand it. This orientation remained central to her teaching.

Her formal training took place under Taizan Maezumi, one of the most influential figures in the transmission of Zen to the United States. Within that context, she engaged in rigorous practice, including the study of kōans. Over time, however, her own teaching began to move away from a structured kōan curriculum and toward a more immediate and psychologically grounded approach.

This shift was not a rejection of tradition, but a reorientation of emphasis. Beck observed that many students were not primarily struggling with philosophical questions or formal practice structures, but with the ongoing patterns of thought and emotion that shaped their daily lives. Her teaching addressed this directly.

Rather than directing attention toward insight experiences or advancement through stages, she consistently pointed students back to what was already present: irritation, anxiety, expectation, and the internal narratives that give rise to them. These were not seen as obstacles to practice, but as its primary field.

Her approach helped articulate a form of Zen that resonated with Western practitioners, particularly those navigating the psychological complexity of modern life. In her widely read book Everyday Zen, she framed practice not as a means of transcendence, but as a disciplined attention to the ways in which suffering is created and maintained through habitual patterns of mind.

Beck’s influence can be seen in the broader development of American Zen, where there has been an increasing integration of contemplative practice with psychological insight. Her work contributed to a shift away from an emphasis on attainment or special states, and toward a sustained engagement with ordinary experience.

Her legacy does not rest on innovation in doctrine, but on clarity of application. She did not attempt to make Zen more appealing or more accessible in a superficial sense. Instead, she made it more difficult to avoid. By removing the distance between practice and daily life, she left little room for abstraction.

On her birthday, her teaching continues to point in a direction that remains both simple and demanding: that practice is not something separate from the conditions of one’s life, but is found precisely in the willingness to observe those conditions without turning away.

— Two Arrows Zen

03/24/2026

Carl Soloman and Lawrence Ferlinghetti at One University Place Bar, New York, 1981- photograph by Raymond Foye Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti – Photograph courtesy the City Lights Archives Lawrence Ferlinghetti (1919-2021) – photograph by Chris Felver It’s Lawrence Ferlighetti‘s bi...

There’s a strange idea at the center of Zen: there is nothing to attain. Nothing to become. Nothing to arrive at. Nothin...
03/24/2026

There’s a strange idea at the center of Zen: there is nothing to attain. Nothing to become. Nothing to arrive at. Nothing waiting for you at the end of the path. And yet—people sit, people practice, people dedicate their lives to this.

Bodhidharma was asked what he realized after years of practice. He said, “Nothing holy.”

Huineng said, “Originally there is not a single thing.”

The Heart Sutra says, “no attainment… and nothing to attain.”

So what are we doing?

Maybe the problem isn’t that there’s nothing to find. Maybe the problem is the assumption that something is missing.

We spend most of our lives moving toward a version of ourselves that doesn’t yet exist. I’ll be better when… I’ll arrive when… I’ll understand when… But every time you get there, there’s another step. Another version. Another halfway.

Zen cuts through that—not by giving you something better to chase, but by removing the need to chase at all.

What if this is it? Not as a conclusion. Not as a belief. But as a direct experience.

No final step. No finish line. No arrival.

And nothing missing.

— Two Arrows Zen

tada ( just/simply )

Zeno of Elea, a Greek philosopher of the 5th century BCE, occupies a curious place in the history of thought. He did not...
03/24/2026

Zeno of Elea, a Greek philosopher of the 5th century BCE, occupies a curious place in the history of thought. He did not establish a school, nor did he leave behind a comprehensive system. Instead, he is remembered for a series of paradoxes—arguments that seem simple on the surface but, when examined closely, destabilize some of our most basic assumptions about reality. His work was intended to defend the teachings of his teacher, Parmenides, who argued that reality is unified and unchanging. Zeno’s method was indirect: rather than asserting this claim outright, he exposed the contradictions embedded in ordinary ways of thinking about motion, space, and time.

Among his most well-known arguments is the so-called “dichotomy paradox.” To traverse any distance, one must first cover half of it. From there, half of the remaining distance, and so on. Because this process of division can continue indefinitely, the number of steps required becomes infinite. If movement requires the completion of infinitely many steps, it would seem that motion cannot, in fact, be completed.

Zeno did not deny that people walk across rooms or travel from one place to another. The force of the paradox lies elsewhere. It reveals a tension between conceptual reasoning and lived experience. When movement is analyzed through the lens of infinite divisibility, it becomes unintelligible. Yet in experience, movement is immediate and unproblematic. The paradox does not negate motion; it calls into question the adequacy of the concepts we use to describe it.

This tension finds an unexpected resonance in the development of Zen. Although there is no historical connection—Zen emerging in China nearly a millennium later—the functional similarity is striking. Zen, particularly in its use of kōans, employs a method that also disrupts conceptual certainty. A kōan does not offer a solution in the usual sense; it undermines the framework within which solutions are sought. In this respect, Zeno’s paradoxes and Zen practice share a common gesture: both bring thought to a point where it can no longer sustain itself.

It is useful, then, to consider which figures within the Zen tradition perform a role analogous to Zeno’s. The Indian philosopher Nagarjuna is perhaps the closest parallel. Writing in the early centuries of the Common Era, Nāgārjuna developed a rigorous critique of all fixed philosophical positions, demonstrating that any attempt to assert inherent existence leads to contradiction. His concept of emptiness (śūnyatā) does not deny the world but reveals the lack of independent, stable essence in all phenomena. Like Zeno, he employs reasoning not to establish certainty, but to dissolve it.

Within the Zen tradition itself, figures such as Zhaozhou and Dogen extend this destabilizing function into lived practice. Zhaozhou’s responses often cut off inquiry at its root, refusing to satisfy the demand for explanation. Dōgen, writing in 13th-century Japan, approaches similar questions through language that bends and reconfigures ordinary categories. His treatment of time, for example, resists linear progression, suggesting that each moment is complete in itself rather than part of a sequence moving toward an endpoint.

The relevance of these ideas becomes clearer when considered in relation to human experience. Zeno’s paradox is not only about spatial distance; it also implicates time. If every interval can be divided endlessly, then the notion of completion—whether of a journey or a life—becomes difficult to locate. This has a direct parallel in how individuals often conceive of their own lives: as movement toward a future state of resolution, fulfillment, or understanding. Yet such states, like the successive halves in Zeno’s argument, remain perpetually deferred.

Zen practice addresses this not by resolving the paradox, but by reframing the question. If there is no final point at which everything is complete, then the meaning of activity cannot depend on arrival. The act itself—walking, breathing, attending—ceases to be a means to an end and becomes, instead, the full expression of the moment.

In this light, a teaching such as the one attributed to Mugaku Roshi—that practice is like walking halfway across the room and never arriving—can be understood not as a statement of incompletion, but as a critique of the assumption that completion lies elsewhere. The paradox remains, but its implications shift. Rather than obstructing movement, it reveals the unnecessary burden placed upon it by the expectation of a final destination.

Zeno’s contribution, then, may be seen as an early articulation of a problem that Zen later addresses in a different register. Both point to the limits of conceptual thought when it attempts to grasp the nature of reality. Zeno does so by pushing reasoning to its breaking point; Zen does so by inviting direct engagement with experience beyond that point.

In both cases, what emerges is not a solution in the conventional sense, but a reorientation. The question is no longer how to arrive, but what it means to move at all.

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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