Red Thread Zen

Humanly Entangled in Emptiness

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, Eastern Religions, Zen Buddhism, Philosophy, Eastern
Cover of the book Red Thread Zen by Susan Murphy, Counterpoint Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Susan Murphy ISBN: 9781619028760
Publisher: Counterpoint Press Publication: October 1, 2016
Imprint: Counterpoint Language: English
Author: Susan Murphy
ISBN: 9781619028760
Publisher: Counterpoint Press
Publication: October 1, 2016
Imprint: Counterpoint
Language: English

A radical, life-affirming book that reconciles Zen with our embodied humanity.
 
Love, attachment, the passions, gender, carnality, birth, bodily being, mortality, belonging, suffering, hope, despair, personhood, imagination, vitality, the struggle to be fully human—how do these things dwell wholly in emptiness, how do we reconcile their vivid life with “no-thingness”?
 
The red (or “vermilion”) thread originally connoted the color of the silk undergarments courtesans were obliged to wear. Most spiritual traditions do their best to distance themselves as thoroughly as possible from such direct and intimate contact with the fact of impassioned human bodily being, if not to declare open war upon the flesh, and the female body that most plainly bears flesh into the world. Spirituality has trouble dealing with the fact that we arrive here covered in blood.
 
But the red thread can never be cut. Why not? Why would no perfectly accomplished saint ever even dream of cutting it?
 
Red Thread Zen will set out to explore every corner of the magnificent koan of being “still attached to the red thread,” or “line of tears.” This is an argument against the bloodless and socially disengaged form of Buddhism that is generally being gestated in the West, one that shades too readily into the blandest of bland self-help.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

A radical, life-affirming book that reconciles Zen with our embodied humanity.
 
Love, attachment, the passions, gender, carnality, birth, bodily being, mortality, belonging, suffering, hope, despair, personhood, imagination, vitality, the struggle to be fully human—how do these things dwell wholly in emptiness, how do we reconcile their vivid life with “no-thingness”?
 
The red (or “vermilion”) thread originally connoted the color of the silk undergarments courtesans were obliged to wear. Most spiritual traditions do their best to distance themselves as thoroughly as possible from such direct and intimate contact with the fact of impassioned human bodily being, if not to declare open war upon the flesh, and the female body that most plainly bears flesh into the world. Spirituality has trouble dealing with the fact that we arrive here covered in blood.
 
But the red thread can never be cut. Why not? Why would no perfectly accomplished saint ever even dream of cutting it?
 
Red Thread Zen will set out to explore every corner of the magnificent koan of being “still attached to the red thread,” or “line of tears.” This is an argument against the bloodless and socially disengaged form of Buddhism that is generally being gestated in the West, one that shades too readily into the blandest of bland self-help.

More books from Counterpoint Press

Cover of the book Architecture of the Novel by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book The Hidden Wound by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book The Extraordinary Life of Rebecca West by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book The Quiet Streets of Winslow by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book Elsewhere, California by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book Stars Go Blue by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book The Other Shoe by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book The Beautiful Unseen: Variations on Fog and Forgetting by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book Wedding Bush Road by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book Bone Rattler by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book Any Resemblance to Actual Persons by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book A Theory of Small Earthquakes by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book Half in Love: Surviving the Legacy of Suicide by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book Evening Thoughts by Susan Murphy
Cover of the book Alice in Bed by Susan Murphy
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy