John Daido Loori

How Samadhi Can Arise With Zazen Practice

By John Daido Loori

Whether we work on the breath, with a koan, or shikantaza, zazen eventually leads to samadhi.  The first indication is usually an off-sensation of the body.  This happens most frequently during sesshin because of the long periods of sitting.  When you sit for a while without moving the body, it stops receiving information about its edges through the senses, such as the friction of your clothing, or an itch on your leg.  So, although you know the body is there, you don’t feel it.  Some people get frightened at this point and involuntarily their body twitches and defines its edges.  Then they slowly move to that place again, and gradually they learn to trust it and they begin to go a little further each time.  Next comes the off-sensation of the mind.  The mind is dependent on thoughts, but when the thoughts disappear, the mind disappears, the self disappears.  That constant reflex action that says, “I’m here, I’m here, I’m here” is the ego manifesting itself.  This is when we realize that we are constantly re-creating ourselves.

From The Art of Just Sitting. John Daido Loori (1931-2009) was the Abbott of Zen Mountain Monastery in Mount Tremper, New York. He received Dharma Transmission from Taizan Maezumi Roshi. He also received Dharma Transmission in the Harada-Yasutani and Inzan lineages of Rinzai Zen as well.

Nonthinking: John Daido Loori

By: John Daido Loori

When you’re doing shikantaza you don’t try to focus on anything specifically, or to make thoughts go away. You simply allow everything to be just the way it is. Thoughts come, thoughts go, and you simply watch them; you keep your awareness on them. It takes a lot of energy and persistence to sit shikantaza, to not get caught up in daydreaming. But little by little, thoughts begin to slow down, and finally they cease to arise. When the thought disappears, the thinker disappears. This is the samadhi of falling away of body and mind.

Note: John Daido Loori (1931-2009) was the founder of Zen Mountain Monastery in Mount Tremper, New York and was a dharma heir of Taizan Maezumi Roshi. This quote is taken from an article in Lion’s Roar which can be found here.