1. We Won’t Last Forever | An Excerpt from Let the Whole Thundering World Come Home

    We Won’t Last Forever | An Excerpt from Let the Whole Thundering World Come Home
    Death A Long Distance Call On a Wednesday morning, sitting in my old blue Volvo in a parking lot after just getting a facial—my cheeks redolent with cream, all pores clean—I called the Cancer Center in Santa Fe, persuaded an oncologist to look up my chart. The oncologist I was assigned to was on vacation, [...]
  2. Art in a Time of Global Crisis | An Excerpt from Painting Peace

    Art in a Time of Global Crisis | An Excerpt from Painting Peace
    The Power of Art This short essay was written in 1987, when no one had any idea whether the Cold War would ever come to an end. We are still in a global crisis, but in another form. The Necessity of Political Art Art in a period of widely-perceived global crisis can never be the [...]
  3. Buddhist Poetry - A Reader Guide

    Buddhist Poetry - A Reader Guide
    Buddhist Poetry: A Reader Guide Read More Shambhala Publications publishes numerous books of Buddhist poetry, and we’ve gathered some of our favorites here. Jump to sections on this page: Recent Releases | Chan and Zen Poetry | Indian Poetry | Tibetan Poetry | Southeast Asian Poetry | Contemporary Buddhist Poetry Related Books and Articles Recent [...]
  4. Being Human | An Excerpt from Zen in the Age of Anxiety

    Being Human | An Excerpt from Zen in the Age of Anxiety
    Wisdom for Navigating Our Modern Lives I can’t get no satisfaction ’Cause I try and I try and I try and I try I can’t get no, I can’t get no Satisfaction (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction The Rolling Stones’s first big hit in the United States was “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” and is [...]
  5. The Approach and Intent of Zen | An Excerpt from The Rinzai Zen Way

    The Approach and Intent of Zen | An Excerpt from The Rinzai Zen Way
    Understanding the Rinzai Zen Way Studying Zen, one rides all vehicles of Buddhism; practicing Zen, one attains awakening in a single lifetime. —Eisai   [From a teisho given in February 2012] In speaking with many beginning Zen students, it seems apparent that although they may be familiar with some of the methods of Zen practice, [...]
  6. The View | An Excerpt from The Sound of Cherry Blossoms

    The View | An Excerpt from The Sound of Cherry Blossoms
    Clarify Your Definitions We have all been in gardens—even very costly ones—that we find oddly uninspiring. There are the landscapes around mansions where money has been lavished on moving trees, building pools, patios, and fire pits, and planting lush lawns, yet we don’t much enjoy being in those spaces and may even find them stale [...]
  7. Book Club Discussion | Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind

    Book Club Discussion | Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind
    Each month, the Shambhala employees gather to discuss a new book as part of our Shambhala Publications Book Club. After each meeting, we will be sharing the notes from our discussion with you to spark your own thoughts and conversations. Our October pick was Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind: Informal Talks on Zen Meditation and Practice by [...]
  8. Talking with Jan Chozen Bays About Mindful Eating

    Talking with Jan Chozen Bays About Mindful Eating
    Food: A Way to Contentedness and Connection An interview on the publication of the expanded edition of her book Mindful Eating: A Guide to Rediscovering a Healthy and Joyful Relationship with Food By Dave O'Neal Shambhala:  What, in a nutshell, is “mindful eating”? Jan Chozen Bays: Mindful eating is deliberately paying full attention to what you are eating [...]
  9. A Walk with Dogen into Our Time

    A Walk with Dogen into Our Time

    In 1954 poet Allen Ginsberg wrote a poem called “Song” that acknowledges the weight of our human circumstance and suf­fering in a particular and somewhat unusual way. I believe it may also provide a gateway to the following writings by Zen master Eihei Dogen, who addressed the nature of reality as he came to understand the world of people and things through his lifetime practice of Zen.

  10. Samurai and Japanese Culture Reader’s Guide: The Works of Master Translator and Author William Scott Wilson

    Samurai and Japanese Culture Reader’s Guide: The Works of Master Translator and Author William Scott Wilson
    One of the greatest joys for me as an editor at Shambhala Publications is when I work on books by people I have long admired. This was most definitely the case when Shambhala had the good fortune to become William Scott Wilson’s publisher several years ago. I first encountered his work when I was a [...]

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