CHARLOTTE JOKO BECK, one of the most influential Western-born Zen teachers, was born in 1917 and died June 15, 2011. She began her practice of Zen with Hakuyu Taizan Maezumi Roshi, from whom she received Dharma transmission. She was the founder of the Zen Center of San Diego and the Ordinary Mind Zen School. Through her teachings, and her work as the author of two modern Zen classics--Everyday Zen- Love and Work and Nothing Special- Living Zen--Joko Beck became a visible and widely admired force among the first generation of America's convert Buddhists. Her influence continues through her teachings and through those for whom she was a direct teacher.
“For heaven’s sake, practice what Joko Beck recommends, what she
spent forty years doing and teaching: sitting silent and still, for
long periods of time, experiencing everything that is happening in
what you call your body, your thoughts, and your emotions. If you
persist, you will find, as Joko did, an ease and a simple happiness
in all that life presents you.”—from the foreword by Jan Chozen
Bays, author of Mindful Eating
“Beck’s work was foundational in developing communities of Zen
practice in the United States, and her work in the early years of
the movement solidified the place of women in American Zen
tradition. This collection carries the full weight of her
significance, but also echoes the lightness of her teaching and way
of being.” —Foreword Reviews
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