Buddhadharma: The Practitioner's Quarterly

BOOK BRIEFS

Shozan Jack Haubner’s (Shambhala 2017) is self-deprecating, blunt, humorous, and profoundly troubling. Haubner was a close disciple of the Zen teacher Joshu Sasaki, whose reputation crumbled when his long history of sexually abusing female students made headlines. He begins with a set of autobiographical vignettes before offering a sustained reflection both on the sex scandal that consumed his community and on his teacher’s last days. His introductory notes on death are powerful—“A nurse once told me that patients always die exactly as they lived”—while a story about him waking up and stepping in a bucket of his own urine before kicking it through his paper shoji screen is hilarious and worthy of a sitcomto- be. Yet Haubner’s

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Buddhadharma: The Practitioner's Quarterly

Buddhadharma: The Practitioner's Quarterly5 min read
Buddhadharma ON BOOKS
THE CHÖD TRADITION developed by the female Tibetan adept Machik Labdrön in the eleventh and twelfth centuries is a practice aimed at cutting (chod) one’s attachment to the idea of a self through ritualized meditative practices that involve specific m
Buddhadharma: The Practitioner's Quarterly9 min read
The Practice of Fierce Inner Heat
ONE OF THE MOST renowned yogis in Tibetan history, Milarepa (1040–1113), transformed his negative karma through deep practice on retreat, in time becoming a great inspiration for practitioners, who still sing his many “songs of realization” describin
Buddhadharma: The Practitioner's Quarterly4 min read
Journey Into A Timeless Land…
UTTAR PRADESH in India—the land where Lord Buddha grew up and discarded His worldly treasures to go in search of enlightenment, where He delivered His first sermon and performed great miracles, where He preached the philosophy of the eightfold path a

Related Books & Audiobooks