Two Arrows Zen

Two Arrows Zen Two Arrows Zen, Artspace Suite 155, 230 South 500 West, downtown Salt Lake City. We are not open for public events during the pandemic.

Jakush*tsu Genkō was born in 1290—seven centuries ago—into an aristocratic family in what is now Okayama Prefecture. His...
11/21/2025

Jakush*tsu Genkō was born in 1290—seven centuries ago—into an aristocratic family in what is now Okayama Prefecture. His childhood details are sparse, as is common with medieval Zen figures, but the temple records of Eigen-ji and the Five Mountains literary tradition agree on the broad strokes: he was a bright, serious young man who turned toward Zen remarkably early. By his early teens he was already training at major temples in Kyoto, and by fifteen or sixteen he had taken vows and entered the orbit of Yakuō Tokken, a respected Rinzai master active in Kamakura and Kyoto. It was with Yakuō, according to later biographical tradition, that Jakush*tsu first tasted awakening—an intimate, private moment that would shape the rest of his life.

He belonged to the second great wave of Japanese Buddhist travelers to China, coming a full generation after Dōgen. When Dōgen sailed for Song-dynasty China, Zen had barely taken root in Japan. By the time Jakush*tsu was born, several decades later, Zen temples in Kyoto and Kamakura were flourishing, and a stream of ambitious Japanese monks was making the difficult journey across the sea to study Chan at its source. Jakush*tsu joined that stream around 1320, landing in the China of the late Yuan dynasty, when the classical Chan monasteries were still active but increasingly threatened by political upheaval.

He spent several years moving through these monasteries, studying the Linji (Rinzai) lineage and absorbing the Chinese monastic culture that was then at its height. One of the figures most strongly associated with him is the Chan master Zhongfeng Mingben—a towering late-Yuan teacher whose circle drew many Japanese disciples. Jakush*tsu’s understanding of Zen took on the texture of this environment: direct, uncompromising, rooted in meditation, and expressed as much through silence and poetry as through formal teaching.

When he returned to Japan, he did not immediately take up public teaching or accept an important post. Instead he withdrew into long periods of hermitage, living in mountain huts, wandering between temples, and practicing zazen in near solitude. This long period of withdrawal—something like a decades-long retreat—became the wellspring of his poetic voice. His poems, written in classical Chinese, belong to what later scholars called the Five Mountains literary tradition: terse, crystalline, nature-rooted, and free of ornament. The images are simple—wind, moon, rice fields, village paths—but the mind behind them is sharply distilled. Jakush*tsu wrote like someone who had pared life down to its bare essentials.

His reputation grew slowly, not through institutional advancement but through the quiet authority of his presence and verse. Eventually, around 1361, the provincial governor of Ōmi invited him to become the founding abbot of a new temple. Jakush*tsu agreed reluctantly, but the result was Eigen-ji, still one of the important Rinzai temples in Japan. The temple embodied his spirit: mountain-based, austere, stripped down to the essentials. Even as abbot, he lived simply, uninterested in status. After his death in 1367 the temple passed into village hands for a time, but it survived, and its archives became the primary home of his poems and records.

We know Jakush*tsu today not only through temple documents but through a small handful of dedicated scholars and translators who recognized the purity of his voice. Arthur Braverman’s A Quiet Room remains the only English collection devoted entirely to Jakush*tsu’s poems, offering a vivid and faithful rendition of his kanshi. Marian Ury’s translations in Poems of the Five Mountains place him among the great Zen poets of the medieval period. Other respected translators—Lucien Stryk, Takashi Ikemoto, Thomas Cleary, Yoel Hoffmann, and J. P. Seaton—have included his poems in broader Zen anthologies, ensuring that his voice continues to circulate beyond academic circles.

Although Jakush*tsu died almost thirty years before Ikkyū Sōjun was born, the kinship between them is unmistakable. Both were formed in the Ōtōkan line of Rinzai Zen. Both drew heavily on Chinese poetic tradition. Both rejected institutional comfort in favor of authenticity. Jakush*tsu is the quieter of the two, the hermit whose poems feel like mountain air. Ikkyū is the firebrand, the streetwise monk who used eroticism, humor, and transgression as teaching tools. Yet without Jakush*tsu’s example—his blend of fierce discipline, poetic refinement, and independence—the terrain Ikkyū later exploded into his own radical form would have looked different. Jakush*tsu sets the tone; Ikkyū amplifies it.

Today, some Zen communities commemorate Jakush*tsu on November 23. The date is modern rather than historically attested, but the gesture is fitting: late autumn for a master whose poems often read like the season itself—clear, spare, windswept, true. More than 700 years after his birth, Jakush*tsu Genkō remains one of the most quietly influential figures in Rinzai history: a bridge between Japan and China, between mountain solitude and temple life, and, most of all, between the wordless heart of Zen and the poems that somehow still manage to point toward it.

Looking for the Way,
I wore out sandals on many roads.
Stopping at last,
I found it everywhere.

Jakush*tsu Genko

This Sunday we come together for a quiet morning of meditation — settling the body, softening the breath, and giving the...
11/20/2025

This Sunday we come together for a quiet morning of meditation — settling the body, softening the breath, and giving the mind room to open. Whether you’re new to practice or returning after many years, you’re welcome.
Chairs and cushions, beginners and long-timers — everyone belongs in the stillness we create together.

Registration and details at twoarrowszen.org.

At this time of year, many Zen communities pause to remember Bodhidharma, the figure traditionally said to have brought ...
11/19/2025

At this time of year, many Zen communities pause to remember Bodhidharma, the figure traditionally said to have brought the heart of meditation practice from India into China. For those new to Zen, Bodhidharma represents the beginning of our lineage. For those who have practiced for years, he embodies the spirit that keeps the tradition alive: direct experience, honest effort, and a return to what is essential.

Very little about his life can be verified, and that is part of the teaching. Zen does not depend on perfect historical detail. It depends on sincerity. Bodhidharma’s stories endure because they describe the qualities of practice we still rely on today. One story emphasizes perseverance. Another points to the importance of supporting the body so the mind can settle. Another shows how fixed ideas about who we are fall away when we look closely at experience.

What matters is not whether these stories happened exactly as told, but what they invite us to see. Bodhidharma stands for the shift from thinking about practice to actually practicing. He asks us to sit down, breathe, and meet our own mind without embellishment. This is the same invitation offered in every lineage, whether through the voices of Musho Roshi, Mugaku Roshi, or the many teachers who came before them.

As we move toward Rohatsu, remembering Bodhidharma helps us reconnect with the foundation of Zen. Beginners can take encouragement from the simplicity of his message. Long-time meditators are reminded that depth grows from returning again and again to the basics: upright posture, steady breath, open attention.

The thread that runs from Bodhidharma to the present moment is not belief. It is practice. Each of us continues that lineage every time we sit down and allow this moment to reveal itself just as it is

11/18/2025

Today marks the anniversary of the founding of Soka Gakkai, established in Japan on November 18, 1930. Rooted in the 13th-century teachings of Nichiren Daishonin, Soka Gakkai is a lay Buddhist movement centered on the practice of chanting Nam-myoho-renge-kyo. Its purpose is to help individuals awaken their inherent wisdom and courage, transform suffering at its roots, and contribute to a more compassionate and peaceful society. Over the past century, Soka Gakkai has grown into an international Buddhist community engaged in education, cultural dialogue, and the work of peace.

To honor this day, we’re sharing a video about a moment that quietly shaped the direction of modern jazz. During a performance of Herbie Hancock’s composition “Toys,” bassist Buster Williams—a longtime Soka Gakkai practitioner—played a solo so original, alive, and awake that Herbie later said he felt the entire band shift with it. When Herbie asked where this new current of creativity was coming from, Buster pointed him toward his Buddhist practice.

That conversation would open the door to Herbie’s own practice, which later influenced his close collaborator Wayne Shorter, whose spiritual life became inseparable from his musical vision. Through these relationships, Soka Gakkai quietly shaped the inner lives and creative pathways of some of the most visionary musicians of the era.

We offer this post in recognition of Soka Gakkai’s founding and its contribution to the diverse expressions of Buddhism in the modern world.

Today marks the 75th anniversary of a remarkable moment in Buddhist history: on November 17, 1950, Tenzin Gyatso—the 14t...
11/17/2025

Today marks the 75th anniversary of a remarkable moment in Buddhist history: on November 17, 1950, Tenzin Gyatso—the 14th Dalai Lama—assumed his full duties as the temporal and spiritual leader of Tibet at just fifteen years old.

This transition occurred during a time of enormous upheaval. The People’s Liberation Army had entered Tibet earlier that year, and the Tibetan government accelerated the Dalai Lama’s assumption of leadership far earlier than tradition required. What should have been a ceremonial milestone instead became an urgent passing of responsibility to a teenager suddenly asked to guide a nation in crisis.

Despite the impossible circumstances, the Dalai Lama did what few leaders in any tradition have managed: he met history with steadiness, clarity, and a lifelong commitment to nonviolence. Over the decades that followed—through occupation, exile, and the struggle to preserve Tibetan culture—he became one of the world’s most widely recognized voices for compassion, humility, and interreligious understanding.

For many Western practitioners, including those in Zen lineages, the Dalai Lama’s teachings offered an early doorway into Buddhist thought: accessible, ethical, and deeply human. His example helped shape the broader landscape into which Zen teachers like Suzuki Roshi and Maezumi Roshi would later teach. His presence in the global conversation on mindfulness, ethics, and peace continues to influence practitioners of every tradition.

Seventy-five years later, his assumption of leadership at fifteen remains a striking reminder of the weight a single life can carry, and the extraordinary capacity for compassion that can emerge even under the greatest pressure.

Each December, Zen communities around the world gather for Rohatsu, the traditional sesshin honoring the Buddha’s awaken...
11/16/2025

Each December, Zen communities around the world gather for Rohatsu, the traditional sesshin honoring the Buddha’s awakening. At Two Arrows Zen, Rohatsu is held in the quiet desert landscape of Torrey, Utah—an environment uniquely suited to sustained meditation, reflection, and deep settling.

Diane Musho Hamilton Roshi will lead this year’s retreat. A fully transmitted Zen teacher in the White Plum lineage of Taizan Maezumi Roshi, Musho Roshi trained for decades under Genpo Merzel Roshi and has guided students in meditation and contemplative practice for more than thirty years.

In addition to her Zen teaching, she is widely respected as a master facilitator, mediator, and Integral practitioner, having collaborated closely with Ken Wilber and contributed significantly to the development of contemporary Integral practice. Her work applies the insights of Zen, developmental psychology, and conflict resolution to modern personal and collective challenges.

Musho Roshi is also the author of three influential books on communication, conflict, and human development—
Everything Is Workable, The Zen of You and Me, and Compassionate Conversations (with Gabe Wilson & Kimberly Loh).
Her teaching is known for its clarity, depth, accessibility, and its ability to integrate profound meditation with the everyday realities of human relationship and emotional maturation.

Rohatsu Sesshin in Torrey follows a traditional rhythm: early morning zazen, alternating periods of sitting and walking meditation, chanting, dharma talks, work practice, and silence. Residential and hybrid participation options allow practitioners from many locations to join.

This retreat is open to both experienced practitioners and those attending their first sesshin. Rohatsu in Torrey offers a rigorous yet welcoming container for deep practice, supported by lineage, community, and the spaciousness of the desert environment.

Details and registration:
TWOARROWSZEN.ORG

Each December, Zen communities across the world gather for Rohatsu—the traditional retreat honoring the Buddha’s awakeni...
11/16/2025

Each December, Zen communities across the world gather for Rohatsu—the traditional retreat honoring the Buddha’s awakening beneath the Bodhi Tree. At Two Arrows Zen, Rohatsu is an invitation to enter a steady rhythm of sitting, walking meditation, silence, and teaching alongside a committed community of practitioners.

This year, Mugaku Roshi will lead Rohatsu at our historic G Street zendo in Salt Lake City.
For many students, City Rohatsu offers a rare balance: the depth and rigor of a traditional sesshin, held in a way that allows people to practice intensively without leaving their homes, families, and responsibilities.

About Mugaku Roshi :
Michael Mugaku Zimmerman Roshi is a fully transmitted Zen teacher in the White Plum lineage descending from Taizan Maezumi Roshi. Before devoting himself to teaching full-time, he had a distinguished legal career, serving first as a Justice and then as Chief Justice of the Utah Supreme Court. He later returned to private practice and remains active in matters of public interest, ethics, and service.

The retreat is open to both new and experienced practitioners. Many people who join us are attending their first sesshin; many others return year after year to anchor their December practice.

If you are curious about what sustained meditation can open in your life—or if Rohatsu is already part of your annual rhythm—you are warmly invited.

Registration and details at
www.twoarrowszen.org

Today marks the hundredth anniversary of Sōtō Zen’s established presence in North America, a moment that invites us to l...
11/15/2025

Today marks the hundredth anniversary of Sōtō Zen’s established presence in North America, a moment that invites us to look back across a century of unexpected beginnings, quiet perseverance, and profound cultural meeting. The first chapter of this history began not on the mainland but in Hawai‘i, where large Japanese immigrant communities were forming as early as the 1890s. Plantation workers requested Buddhist clergy from Japan to help maintain funerals, holidays, and family religious life. In response, Sōtō-shū began sending priests across the Pacific, establishing the earliest Sōtō Zen temples outside Japan. These priests did not come to spread Zen meditation; they came because Japanese families needed Buddhist ritual life in a new and difficult place.

In November 1924, Sōtō-shū formally established Zenshuji Soto Mission in Los Angeles, the first Sōtō Zen temple on the mainland, followed soon after by Sokoji in San Francisco. These temples served immigrant communities by offering memorial rites, chanting services, cultural education, and holiday observances. Zen practice as we think of it today was not yet part of American consciousness. Meditation groups were rare, though figures like Nyogen Senzaki were quietly gathering small circles in borrowed rooms, creating what he called his “floating zendo.” Several Sōtō and Rinzai priests were also active up and down the West Coast and in Hawai‘i long before Zen gained wider attention. Their work formed the earliest strand of Zen in American soil, though it remained largely unknown outside Japanese communities.

World War II nearly severed this strand. After Pearl Harbor, Buddhist priests were among the first people arrested. Japanese-American families were sent to government camps across the country, including Manzanar, Tule Lake, Poston, Gila River, Minidoka, Amache, Topaz, Heart Mountain, Rohwer, and Jerome, along with high-security Department of Justice facilities such as Missoula, Santa Fe, Bismarck, Fort Sill, and Crystal City. Inside these camps, Buddhist practice continued under difficult, often hostile conditions. Clergy held services in mess halls and recreation buildings, youth groups met when permitted, funerals were conducted, chanting persisted, and in some places small groups of Zen-trained practitioners sat quietly together. Heart Mountain is the best documented because Senzaki was imprisoned there, but Buddhist life existed across the entire system. This is one of the least acknowledged chapters in American Zen history.

After the war, many temples had been shuttered or damaged, older priests had died or returned to Japan, and communities were rebuilding from trauma. Into this fragile landscape, Sōtō-shū’s International Mission Office, under the supervision of its seventy-two-member ecclesiastical assembly, began assigning priests to overseas temples. These placements were administrative rather than visionary. Through this structure, Taizan Maezumi Roshi was assigned to Zenshuji in Los Angeles in 1956, and Shunryu Suzuki Roshi was assigned to Sokoji in San Francisco in 1959. Their instructions were simple: serve the Japanese-American congregation, conduct ceremonies, and maintain the temples. Neither man was sent with the mission of introducing Zen meditation to the broader American public.

Yet that is precisely what occurred. When young Americans began appearing before dawn to sit, Suzuki Roshi and Maezumi Roshi quietly welcomed them. From these small beginnings grew communities that would shape the future of Zen in the West: the San Francisco Zen Center, Tassajara Zen Mountain Center, Green Gulch Farm, the Zen Center of Los Angeles, the White Plum Asanga, and many of the lineages active today, including the lineage connected to our own community. Their willingness to meet seekers with sincerity and humility transformed routine assignments into spiritual movements.

To honor this hundredth anniversary is to honor the full arc of this history: the immigrant families who built the first temples, the early priests who served quietly and steadfastly, the Buddhist communities who maintained practice inside internment camps, the administrative structures in Japan that made overseas temples possible, the teachers who opened their doors to new practitioners, and the generations of students who helped build American Zen as we know it. For those of us practicing today, this anniversary is a reminder that our tradition is rooted in resilience, adaptability, and the human capacity to meet difficulty with integrity. Each time we sit, we participate in a lineage carried across oceans, maintained through adversity, nearly erased by war, and renewed through genuine encounter.

A hundred years later, the seeds planted in Hawai‘i, Los Angeles, and San Francisco continue to bloom in zendos, retreat centers, living rooms, and communities across the continent. The practice we inherit carries the imprint of all who came before, and the responsibility of all who will come after.

Today we recognize the 90th birthday of Jakusho Kwong Roshi, a Chinese-American Zen teacher whose life reflects the uniq...
11/15/2025

Today we recognize the 90th birthday of Jakusho Kwong Roshi, a Chinese-American Zen teacher whose life reflects the uniquely American blending of traditions that helped shape modern Sōtō Zen.

Kwong Roshi was born in Santa Rosa, California, and discovered Zen not through cultural inheritance, but through curiosity and a personal search for meaning. That path led him to Shunryu Suzuki Roshi, under whom he trained in the full Japanese Sōtō monastic style—zazen, liturgy, oryoki, and the steady discipline of everyday practice.

In Asia, it would have been rare for a Chinese student to enter a Japanese lineage so naturally. But in America, a new kind of Zen was emerging—one that crossed cultural boundaries and welcomed sincere practitioners regardless of background. Kwong Roshi became one of the first clear expressions of that shift.

In 1973, together with his wife Shinko, he founded Sonoma Mountain Zen Center (Genjōji), which he led for fifty years. He stepped down as Abbot in 2023, and although retired, he still offers occasional Dharma talks and remains a guiding presence in his community.

His life mirrors the larger story of American Zen itself: a meeting of cultures, teachers, and sincere students creating something rooted in lineage but alive in a new land.

Official Teacher Page (Sonoma Mountain Zen Center)
https://www.smzc.org/teacher

No Beginning, No End — Shambhala Publications
https://www.shambhala.com/no-beginning-no-end-1882.html

Dharma Talks (DharmaSeed Archive)
https://dharmaseed.org/teacher/911/


This Sunday marks the 52nd anniversary of the death of Alan Watts, a writer, broadcaster, and philosopher whose voice sh...
11/14/2025

This Sunday marks the 52nd anniversary of the death of Alan Watts, a writer, broadcaster, and philosopher whose voice shaped the earliest American encounters with Zen long before the word “mindfulness” became common in our culture. Watts was not a Zen master in the traditional lineage sense, but his role in the story of Buddhism in the West is unmistakable: he helped create the cultural space where Zen could take root.

Alan Wilson Watts was born in England in 1915 and immigrated to the United States in 1938. Before becoming a public philosopher, he trained briefly for the Anglican ministry and earned a reputation for his sharp intellect and gift for language. But it was his lifelong fascination with Asian philosophy—particularly Zen Buddhism and Taoism—that became the center of his life’s work.

Watts emerged during a crucial transitional moment for Buddhism in America. D.T. Suzuki, the great Japanese scholar of Zen, had just begun to electrify academic audiences at Columbia University in the early 1950s. Suzuki introduced Zen to the West as a serious philosophical tradition and translated its language of awakening into clear, accessible English. His work opened a door.

Alan Watts walked through that door.

Where Suzuki addressed scholars, theologians, and philosophers, Watts addressed everyone else. He translated Zen into something ordinary people could understand—alive, curious, humorous, and psychologically grounded. His 1957 book The Way of Zen was the first major attempt to explain Zen to a general Western audience, and it remains one of the most influential introductions to Buddhism ever written.

His radio talks in the 1950s and 60s brought concepts like non-duality, emptiness, and interdependence into living rooms and college dormitories across the U.S. Watts’ voice—quick, witty, and deeply intuitive—reached people who would later become artists, meditators, poets, psychologists, and spiritual seekers.

This included the Beat poets.
Jack Kerouac, Gary Snyder, and Allen Ginsberg all read Watts, absorbed Suzuki’s writings, and used these ideas to shape the early Beat Buddhist sensibility. Their work helped push Zen from academia into the bloodstream of American culture. By the time teachers like Shunryu Suzuki, Maezumi Roshi, Joshu Sasaki, and Seung Sahn established the first Zen centers in the 1960s and 70s, Watts had already built a cultural audience ready to receive them.

In this sense, Watts occupies a very specific—and essential—place in the chain of influence:

D.T. Suzuki opened the intellectual door.
Alan Watts opened the cultural door.
The Zen masters who followed built the communities.

Watts spent his final years on Mount Tamalpais in California, writing, lecturing, and collaborating with musicians and scholars. He died on November 16, 1973, leaving behind more than 25 books and hundreds of recorded talks. His ashes were later interred at Green Gulch Farm Zen Center, a fitting symbol of his contribution to the Dharma in the West.

As we approach the anniversary of his passing, we remember a bridge-builder—someone who did not claim the authority of a Zen lineage but who played a decisive role in preparing the American mind for Buddhist practice.

“You are the aperture through which the universe looks at and explores itself.”
— Alan Watts

May his words continue to illuminate the curiosity that leads us toward practice, insight, and wonder.

Alan Watts Organization (Official Site)
https://alanwatts.org/

Alan Watts Audio Archive (Free Collection)
https://archive.org/details/alanwattscollection

Lions Roar – Celebrating Alan Watts
https://www.lionsroar.com/celebrating-alan-watts/

Green Gulch Farm Zen Center
https://www.sfzc.org/green-gulch-farm

Alan Watts Memorial Marker at Green Gulch
https://blogs.sfzc.org/blog/2023/06/21/alan-watts-memorial-new-marker/



Recommended Talks (Direct Links)

The Nature of Consciousness
https://youtu.be/8cnOdX0z-N0?si=NGKe565whe8dCcWx

The Mind
https://youtu.be/lHXisYGjvmM?si=NneuwESVtorizwD2

Buddhism as Dialogue
https://youtu.be/phvcWMuXC00?si=FH0al7zjD2p05AzW

The Way of Zen (Audio)
https://youtu.be/vSmzTlan80E?si=I7cBz19KGgBep7nd

Conversation: Alan Watts, Gary Snyder, Allen Ginsburg & Timothy Leary
https://youtu.be/8gXYllN2iLQ?si=PWSivS92cTmiCP-j




11/13/2025

Sometimes the sky teaches the Dharma.
The Northern Lights appear when invisible forces meet — solar wind, magnetic fields, particles colliding in silence.
Out of that unseen tension, a moment of pure beauty unfolds.

Zen practice is very much the same.
Inside the swirl of emotion, thought, memory, and the press of daily life, something luminous can appear when we simply stay still and let things move around us.

You don’t have to control the sky.
You don’t have to fix the storm.
Just stand where you are, breathe, and let the world reveal itself.

Practice is the art of being steady while everything is dancing.
Sometimes the mind is the storm.
Sometimes the storm becomes light.

— Two Arrows Zen

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21 G Street
Salt Lake City, UT
84103

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Tuesday 6:45am - 9am
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