Zazen
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| Kodo Sawaki practicing zazen | |
In
Zen Buddhism,
sitting meditation or
zazen (
Japanese: 座禅; literally "seated concentration") is a
meditative discipline practitioners perform to
calm the body and the mind and attain
insight into the nature of existence. While the term originally referred to a sitting practice, it is now commonly used to refer to practices in any posture, such as walking.
In Japan, seated zazen is traditionally performed on a mat called a
zabuton while sitting on a cushion called
zafu. The common positions used to sit on the zafu are:\n*
kekkafuza (full-
lotus)\n*
hankafuza (half-lotus)\n*
Burmese (a cross-legged posture in which the ankles are placed together in front of the sitter)\n*
seiza (a kneeling posture using a bench or zafu)
In addition, it is not uncommon for modern practitioners to sit zazen in a chair, often with wedge behind the lower back to help maintain the natural curve of the spine.
During zazen, the hands are folded together into a simple
mudra over the belly. In many practices, one breathes from the
hara (the
center of gravity in the belly) and the eyes are half-lowered, being neither fully open nor shut.
Long periods of zazen, usually performed in groups at a
zendo (meditation hall), may alternate with periods of
kinhin (walking meditation). The beginning of a zazen period is traditionally announced by ringing a bell three times (
shijosho), and the end of a round by ringing the bell once (
hozensho). Before and after sitting on the zafu, zen practitioners perform a
gassho bow to the cushion, to fellow practitioners, and to the teacher.
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