Start with Zen

Come to try Zen Meditation around your place

Zen centers of the Kwan Um School of Zen can be found in many countries worldwilde. Their main goal is to make the practice of Zen Buddhism available to all people of different religions, ages, educations, nationalities—to all who find interest in meditation practice. Zen centers also offer the opportunity to live in a community that shares meditation practice together—sitting meditation, sutra chanting, bowing and kong an interviews with the teacher.

All new comers are warmly welcome to practice with us.

You can get in touch by following Facebook pages, And if you like our organization, you can join Kwan Um as member and get discounts for planned actions and retreats, seminars and others. You will get quarterly Primary Point magazine, together with other materials.

Starting with meditation

Traditionally, in China and Korea, only monks did Zen practice. But Zen has come to the West and here lay people practice Zen. This has changed the character of Zen. Now our teaching is about Zen in everyday life. Sitting Zen all the time is not possible for lay people. Everyday-life Zen means learning mind-sitting. Mind-sitting means not-moving mind. How do you keep not-moving mind? Put down your opinion, condition and situation moment-to-moment. When you are doing something, just do it.

This is everyday Zen. For lay people the teaching of great love, great compassion and the Great Bodhisattva Way is very important. To attain that, it is necessary to keep a not-moving mind, then correct situation, correct function, and correct relationship appear by themselves in everyday life.

There are various forms of meditation. Each technique has a special effect on the mind. The various techniques are discussed below.

Mind practices

These practices are the heart of meditation. They have different effects on the mind when they are practiced. Also the speed of the effect can be different depending on the technique used. In all meditation techniques, the breath is important. To calm your body down, it is helpful to take several long, deep breaths at the beginning of meditation. Breathe using the diaphragm and center the breath in the lower belly. It should be relaxed, natural and quiet—the breath should breathe you.

Technique 1: counting the breaths

This practice, often recommended for beginners, brings attention to each breath and helps to still and focus the mind. The count may be done on either the inhalation or exhalation. The count is done either up to three or up to ten and then repeated for the duration of the sitting period. If the count is lost, then the practitioner returns to one.

Technique 2: keeping a question

Having a great question is fundamental to Zen practice. The questions most often used are “What am I?” or “What is this?” (in Korean “Shi Shim Ma?”). Let go of all thinking, opinions and desires and continually return to the questioning. This practice is usually co-ordinated with the breath.

The question may be asked during the inhalation, followed by a prolonged “Don’t Know” on the exhalation; or the question may be asked on the exhalation. Both techniques promote a return to the before-thinking mind.

Technique 3: mantra practice

Using a mantra to calm the mind and strengthen the center is another technique used by Zen practitioners. The main difference between the mantras is the length of the mantra used and the mantra’s direction. Generally the more incessant the thinking, the shorter the mantra should be. The usual technique is to recite the mantra constantly, paying attention to it and allowing all other thinking to drop away. This takes some practice since it is very easy to let one part of the brain “chant” the mantra while the other part is thinking about dinner or going to the movies. When this happens, gently bring the mind back to the mantra without any judgement. The most common mantras recommended for beginners are the two listed below.

1) Clear mind, clear mind, clear mind, don’t know

This mantra is usually suggested to beginners in conjunction with a breathing exercise. Breathe in to a count of 3, saying “clear mind” at each count and breathe out to a count of 7 saying ‘dooooonnnn’t knnnnooooooow’ just once for the whole 7 count. The count may vary with the individual, but the exhalation must be more than twice as long as the inhalation.

2) Kwan Seum Bosal

This is the Korean name of the Bodhisattva of Compassion, Avalokitesvara. This mantra is commonly suggested for people whose minds cannot be quiet one minute or who cannot concentrate for very long. Because it is short it can be repeated over and over (usually with a set of beads for counting). The usual recommendation is for 3000 to 10000 a day for someone who really wants to clear their mind of a particular problem. It is also used on a daily basis by many people as part of their sitting meditation technique. More advanced students often use the entire Great Dharani as a mantra, reciting it sub-vocally as fast as possible over and over again.

Technique 4: chanting

Although the individual chants—especially the Great Dharani—may be done alone as mantras, chanting done in a group is also meditation practice. The key to chanting correctly is to chant with 100 percent focus and energy: just loud enough to hear your own voice, and softly enough to hear everyone else in the room. This allows everyone to follow the moktak master for the chant as there is no one voice over-powering all the rest. Also people who have a hard time singing in key can then blend in with everyone and the sound from the chant in group will truly be togetheraction – all minds becoming one. Kido chanting is an especially strong form of chanting meditation.

Technique 5: prostrations

Prostrations are a very powerful technique for seeing and working through the karma of a difficult situation because both the mind and the body are involved. Something that might take days of sitting to digest may be digested in a much shorter time with prostrations. A common practice, especially popular in Korea, is to do 1000 bows a day (actually 1080). This can be done all at once or as is usually the case, spread out through the day.

For instance,

1 set for morning bows,
2 sets before breakfast,
2 sets at lunch time,
2 sets mid-afternoon,
1 set before evening practice,
2 sets after evening practice.

This is a demanding schedule. Practitioners often commit to to 300 or 500 bows a day.

Technique 6: clear mind meditation

This form of meditation involves just sitting and being aware of what is going on at just this moment. This is moment-to-moment mind. It hears the birds in the trees, the cars going by, the planes overhead, and the children playing outside. To the clear mind there is no such thing as ‘noisy’, it all just ‘is.’ This is not a technique for beginners, but is an out-growth of experience with the previous meditation techniques.