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Our Zen Way

"Alice laughed: "There's no use trying," she said; "one can't believe impossible things."
"I daresay you haven't had much practice," said the Queen. "When I was younger, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast."
—Alice in Wonderland.

Our PZI mission is to create a culture for transforming the mind. That’s what we do. And it’s not so hard to have an experience of enlightenment. It’s like the Red Queen said in Alice in Wonderland. But the trick is to embody the transformation, to live in the world that is transformed.

Alice in Wonderland statue

Alice in Wonderland statue in Central Park

To find out what it’s like to be free, to live inside a mind that is open and free, that’s worth a lot. It’s nice if we can do that without too much effort. One feature of enlightenment is that it’s light, you can wear it because you don’t need a lot of equipment.

And what does it mean to create a culture of enlightenment? It means we want to make it easy to trip over moments of clarity, big and small, and also to support each other to live in that fresher air. Enlightenment happens to you in a place along with other beings. The Bodhisattva idea is that we live in a field with each other, and our most profound wish is that we can be happy and hear each others’ joy and find the way. A culture is something we all contribute to.

When we are creating a culture together we get a chance to live inside the enlightened world, not as a static unchanging place but as a path that keeps opening between the trees. The core of the culture is the koan practice and the experience of awakening. There is also the idea that at bottom, we are not selfish, we do want to help each other. In PZI we refer things back to that vision of waking up.

— John Tarrant, PZI Director



photo of Alice in Wonderland statue by wallyg






So, the whole idea, you see, is that everything's falling apart, so don't try and stop it. When you're falling off a precipice, it doesn't do you any good to hang onto a rock that's falling with you. See? But everything is doing that. And so, again, this is another case of our completely wasting our energy in trying to prevent the world from falling apart. Don't do it. And then you'll be able to do something interesting with the free energy.

—Alan Watts