Cuke Audio Podcasts
Cuke Audio is a project of Cuke Archives
preserving the legacy of Shunryu Suzuki and those whose paths cross his
-
and anything else that comes to mind.
In addition to the podcasts listed below there are many Interviews
which were conducted mostly before Crooked Cucumber was written.
Podcast links below to Podbean, the Cuke podcast host. For links to the podcast on other platforms, use one of the links above, or search for “Cuke Audio Podcast” in your favorite podcast app.
Podcasts up to Now
[for the most up-to-date listings see Podbean Cuke Audio]
- Zen related guests (below)
- Outtakes from Zen Is Right Here/Now (more podcast links to be added)
- Podcasts for Thank You and OK!: an American Zen Failure in Japan [removed]. Now there's an audiobook.
- Shunryu Suzuki Audio Excerpts and Crooked Cucumber Audiobook Excerpts
- Life in Bali often with guests
- Zen Center Stories
- Other DC Podcasts
- Podcasts for Crooked Cucumber: the Life and Zen Teaching of Shunryu Suzuki - [removed] - Now there's an audiobook.
- Mini-podcasts for Zen Is Right Here: Teaching Stories and Anecdotes of Shunryu Suzuki (Completed)
- Mini-podcasts for Brief Memories of Shunryu Suzuki and others (Completed)
- Tassajara Stories: The Early Years with Shunryu Suzuki - drafts from a work in progress. (Completed for now)
- Mini-podcasts of The Haiku Zendo Chronicles Part I Part II (Both completed)
Began transcribing podcasts with AI in 2023. They're useful to facilitate reviewing the podcast discussion to note places to cut and edit, and to locate stories and memories for the archives in other ways such as material for Brief Memories of Shunryu Suzuki. They have to be gone over to make presentable for posting such as with this one for the Mark Foote podcast.
Zen Related Guests Podcasts
Displaying the past year's podcasts. Use the search box to find others or use this list.
(Click name for their Cuke page; podcast links go to Cuke Audio Podbean, our host. Click ⇵ headings to sort.)
When ⇵ | Then | Who/Links ⇵ | Later |
---|---|---|---|
2024-12-03 | Reading from Della Goertz's Notebook | Podcast - Della Goertz began her practice with Shunryu Suzuki soon after he arrived in America in 1959. Herein we read from a notebook she kept with brief quotes and paraphrases from his talks and her encounters with him. | ||
2024-11-25 | DC Rap on Refuge | Podcast - David Chadwick, Rap on Refuge - like not taking refuge in our hopes and dreams | ||
2024-11-17 | DC on Visiting | Podcast - David Chadwick on keeping in touch with those who are ill or isolated. Visiting my monk friend. Visiting a Japanese neighbor now in a convalescent clinic, a touching experience. Visiting Katrinka on the way home and sharing her birthday cake. Chatting with ChaptGPT. | ||
2024-11-10 | A Memorial Podcast for Gene DeSmidt | Podcast - Gene DeSmidt was a dear friend of mine and the SF Zen Center who died on October 30th. Gene was a creative builder who left behind a number of sound structures at Tassajara and Green Gulch. He was also a musician who helped me much in that realm. He was a great character and a humorous, generous, good hearted person. | ||
2024-11-03 | David Chadwick | Don't Worry (Excessively) - DC riffs on not worrying excessively about undocumented immigrants and the ongoing election. | ||
2024-10-28 | Susan Ross | Podcast - Susan Ross is an illustrator and artist who worked on Be Here Now. In this podcast she takes us from her native Ohio to Smith College to Woodstock to New Mexico, to Shunryu Suzuki's funeral with Gary Snyder and David Padwa, to Colorado studying with Trungpa Rinpoche. She's in Mexico now still being an artist, practicing Tibetan Buddhism, and working on turtle rescue. Her website is susanrosscreative.com. | ||
2024-10-21 | A Talk on the Sandokai Podcast - This podcast is a talk I gave with the All Beings Zen Sangha in Washington DC on October 19, 2024. Inryu Ponce-Barger is the teacher of this group currently focusing on the Sandokai, an ancient Chinese Zen poem that is chanted at the SF Zen Center. I talk about being at Tassajara when Shunryu Suzuki lectured on it. Also, see this page on cuke.com for the Sandokai - DC. | ||
2024-10-13 | Reading–Silas Hoadley Interview and more | Podcast - Silas Hoadley began studying with Shunryu Suzuki in 1964. He was highly involved with the founding of Tassajara. Suzuki had Silas giving lectures there, and he would have received transmission if Suzuki hadn't died too soon. Silas was a much beloved priest in the SFZC. In this podcast I read a 1994 interview with Silas and a scene with him from the upcoming Tassajara Stories. | ||
2024-10-07 | A Month with Dharma Sangha Germany | Podcast I talk about my recent month spent at Dharma Sangha's ZBZS, their Zen Buddhist center in the Black Forest. The high point of the trip was the passing of the abbotship of Dharma Sangha Germany and America from Zentatsu Richard Baker to Tatsudo Nicole Baden. | ||
2024-09-28 | Alan Senauke | Podcast - This is an encore presentation of a May 2023 podcast with Alan Senauke, the abbot of the Berkeley Zen Center and author of Turning Words, Transformative Encounters with Buddhist Teachers. He has a long involvement with Buddhist peace work and music. The new introduction to this podcast tells about Alan's heart attack, coma, and recovery which has enabled him to return to teaching and lecturing while being confined to bed and wheelchair. Learn more in the intro to the podcast and at Caring Bridge and Go Fund Me. | ||
2024-09-20 | Bill Porter | Podcast - Bill Porter is a translator and interpreter of Chinese Buddhist and Taoist poetry and texts, with books on Chinese hermits and travel. His pen name is Red Pine. Learn more about Bill on his Wikipedia page, on cuke.com, and at redpinemovie.com. This podcast is an encore presentation of a talk with Bill Porter from August 8, 2020. | ||
2024-09-14 | Vanja Palmers | Podcast - Vanja Palmers is a Zen teacher who was at the SFZC centers for years, ordained by Richard Baker, transmission from Kobun Chino. He talks about his life, his way-seeking mind story, work with animal rights, and psychedelics, and dangerous hang gliding. He has a center in the Alps near Lucerne named Felsentor and the Ecumenical House of Silence he and Brother David Steindl-rast founded in Austria. This is an encore presentation of a June 2020 podcast. | ||
2024-09-06 | Paul Rosenblum | Podcast - Ryuten Paul Rosenblum was a student of Shunryu Suzuki and is the vice abbot of Johanneshof, Richard Baker's retreat in the Black Forest. He lives half time in Germany and half time in Northern California. His website is ryutenpaulrosenblum.com. This is an encore presentation of a podcast from July 2020. | ||
2024-08-30 | Nicole Baden | Podcast - Tatsudo Nicole Baden is a Dharma Successor of Zentatsu Baker in the Dharma Sangha Soto Zen Lineage. She has been practicing Zen since 2001 and received Dharma Transmission in 2017. She graduated as a psychologist from the University of Oldenburg in 2008. She also trained at the School for Body Mind Centering for four years. Since 2009 she has been living and practicing either at the Crestone Mountain Zen Center or at the Zen Buddhist Center Schwarzwald (ZBZS) in Germany. At present, she is Director and a resident teacher at the ZBZS. Early this September Richard Baker will be stepping down and Nicole Baden will be stepping up to be the abbot of Dharma Sangha in Germany and the US. This is an encore presentation of a podcast talk with Nicole that was posted on March 20, 2021. | ||
2024-08-23 | Kelly Chadwick | Podcast - Kelly Bernard Chadwick grew up in and around Tassajara, the SFZC City Center, and Green Gulch Farm. He is my older son. His mother is my first wife, Daya Goldschlag, called Dianne back in 1973 when Kelly was born at Green Gulch Farm. Dianne has a Zen group now in Spokane, Washington, and Kelly is an arborist in Spokane and has a business there called Spirit Pruners. In this podcast he talks about his youthful ZC memories but more about his recent experience of Tassajara where he takes a crew in the spring to trim trees. Deep stuff. | ||
2024-08-20 | Jane and Peter Schneider | Podcast - Jane and Peter Schneider are the founding teachers of the Beginner's Mind Zen Center in Northridge, a part of greater Los Angeles.They were students of Shunryu Suzuki. This is the third podcast with both of them and the third with Peter. In this podcast we focus on Jane's way-seeking mind story and then branch out to other reminiscences. | ||
2024-08-12 | Stephan Bodian | Podcast - Stephan Bodian runs an annual school for awakening. In this podcast he talks about his spiritual path, his teachers including Shunryu Suzuki, Kobun Chino, Taizan Maezumi, Sogyal, and Jean Klein. He's a marriage and family therapist but mainly a teacher of awakening. His website is stephanbodian.org. | ||
2024-08-05 | Frank Kilmer | Podcast - Frank Kilmer first meditated with Chogyam Trungpa then Dainin Katagiri then Richard Baker. He studied with other Zen and Tibetan teachers. He lives in Santa Fe where he managed Upaya's plant for some years. He's a great plumber too. He has a lot of juicy tidbits to share from all these years of Buddhist study and practice. Check him out in this podcast. | ||
2024-07-28 | Frazer Bradshaw | Podcast - Frazer Bradshaw was a student at Tassajara in the summers for years, starting off when he was still a student at the SF Art Institute. He'd made some experimental films and at Tassajara he made his first documentary, Tassajara: a Meditative Portrait in the late nineties. It's in his Vimeo page with 209 others, and there's a link to it in the film/video section of cuke.com. He went on to make many other films. Check him out at frazerbradshaw.com or his film biz site, peculiarpelicula.com or on IMDB. Thanks Tano Maeda for letting me know about Frazer's Tassajara film which he featured in the 2003 (I think it was) Buddhist International Film Festival. Check out what Frazer has to say about Zen practice, film, Tassajara and more in this podcast. | ||
2024-07-22 | Suzanne Suarez | Podcast - Suzanne Suarez Hurley heard Shunryu Suzuki give lectures in 1969 then joined Steve Gaskin as a founding member of The Farm in Tennessee. In 1975 she practiced with Dainin Katagiri in Minneapolis then headed back to SF to practice at the SF Zen Center with Richard Baker. With Baker's blessing she started a sitting group in Florida where she practiced law defending midwives. Through the years she has continued her connection to Zen and The Farm. She talks about all this and more in her podcast. | ||
2024-07-14 | David Weinstein | Podcast - David Weinstein is the founding teacher of the Rockridge Meditation Community in Oakland, California. He's a teacher for the Pacific Zen Institute and a therapist listed on the Psychology Today website. His spiritual journey started in a bar in Germany. His path led to Nepal, Afghanistan, Iran, India, Korea, Japan, Hawaii, and the Bay Area. Listen to his podcast and hear his story. | ||
2024-07-08 | Teresa Rivera | Podcast - Teresa Rivera started reading books about Eastern religion while living in France. She liked them but they didn't tell her what to do, how to practice. She found what she was looking for when she started sitting with Taisen Deshimaru's group in France. In 1973 she arrived at the San Francisco Zen Center. Before long she was living at Tassajara. She practiced for years at Green Gulch and worked for years at the SFZC's Greens Restaurant all the while raising three kids. She just turned 90 and is living in a retirement home in San Diego. Hear about all that and more in this podcast with her. | ||
2024-06-30 | Myphon Hunt | Podcast - Myphon Hunt arrived at the San Francisco Zen Center in the early seventies after five years living at The Farm in Tennessee founded by Steve Gaskin. She's now living at the Enso Village retirement community in Healdsburg north of San Francisco along with other senior Zennies, Vipassana Buddhists, and Quakers. Along the way she spent some time in Dharamsala and Tibet, studying with Joshu Sasaki's group in LA and New Mexico, as well as other pursuits. Hear about that and more in this charming podcast visit with Myphon. | ||
2024-06-23 | Tim Ream | Podcast - Tim Ream came to the SF Zen Center in the nineties. He has continued his Zen practice, alternating between practice periods and periods of environmental activism. He recently published a book Fallen Water: a Novel of Zen and Earth - on Amazon which has an alternate reality Tassajara and the surrounding wilderness as a setting. In this podcast he will talk about the book, his spiritual path and environmental activism and more. | ||
2024-06-17 | Cindy Beavon | Podcast - Cindy Beavon came to the SFZC in 2007 going straight to Tassajara. She practiced at Zen Center until 2011 when she had an upsetting experience that made her feel unwelcome. She went back this year for the work interim and once again loved being there. She's a hospice nurse and a professional rock climber which became a deep and fulfilling practice for her. Hear all about it in this podcast with her. | ||
2024-06-09 | Marc Lesser | Podcast - Marc Lesser came to the SFZC in 1974. After ten years with the ZC and being the director of Tassajara, he got an MBA, continued his Zen practice while working with and founding some noble businesses. He founded ZBA Associates to help companies, notably Google, with mindfulness and emotional intelligence training and consultation. He is co-chair of the SFZC Elders Council and teacher at Mill Valley Zen (millvalleyzen.com). His latest book of five is Finding Clarity. To learn more check him out at marclesser.net and listen to this podcast with him. | ||
2024-06-02 | Jon Bernie | Podcast - Jon Bernie came to the SF Zen Center in 1973 and practiced there for years. In this podcast he talks about his relationships with Richard Baker, Brother David Steindl-Rast, Papaji (Punjaji), Adyashanti, Robert Adams, Mike Murphy of Esalen Institute, psychic Anne Armstrong, and others. He was an Alexander Technique therapist for years and now teaches Inspired Aliveness. His website is inspiredaliveness.com. Hear about all this and more on his cuke podcast. | ||
2024-05-26 | Amber Hoadley | Podcast - Amber Hoadley was the first baby at Tassajara in the Zen era. In this podcast she talks about growing up at Zen Center, mainly Green Gulch, and her parents, Kathy and Silas Hoadley who were a significant presence in Zen Center in those formative days. Amber also talks about her practice path and more. She will be hosting a memorial for Silas on Father's Day, June 16th from 3-7pm, at the Mostly Natives Nursery, 54 B St., Point Reyes Station, California. | ||
2024-05-19 | Dan Kaplan | Podcast - Dan Kaplan came to the SF Zen Center in the mid-seventies and plugged away there for ten years. He still lives in the neighborhood and has been a student of David Weinstein in the Yamada/Aitkin lineage for years. He's a LMFT, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist. In this podcast he talks about his spiritual and therapist life, Harry Roberts, Lama Govinda, and Vina Yoga too. His website is danielmkaplan.com. | ||
2024-05-12 | My? Denis Lahey | Podcast - is the abbot of the Hartford Street Zen Center in San Francisco and has been since 2002. He first came to the SF Zen Center in 1970. Listen to this podcast on the path his life has taken. | ||
2024-05-06 | Tom White | Podcast - Tom White is a friend of mine from Texas who visited me at Tassajara with his wife before the first practice period on their way to the Philippines to spend a couple of years there in the Peace Corps. While living on Whidbey Island in the NW US, he got involved with the One Drop Zendo founded by Shodo Harada from Sogenji in Japan. Hear about all this and more in this podcast. | ||
2024-05-01 | Ed Brown | Podcast - This is the third Cuke podcast with Ed Brown. He's the author of several books, including The Tassajara Bread Book, Tassajara Cooking, No Recipe: Cooking as Spiritual Practice, and he also edited the book of Suzuki Roshi lectures, Not Always So. He was ordained as a Zen priest by Suzuki Roshi in 1971. He received Dharma Transmission from Mel Weitsman in 1996. Ed is the founder and teacher of the Peaceful Sea Sangha. In this podcast Ed talks about his banishment from teaching, giving lectures, or leading sesshins at Green Gulch and the whole SFZC. He also talks about his prostate cancer, how The Tassajara Bread Book came about, and other subjects. The podcast ends with two brief excerpts from talks he gave at Green Gulch Farm six years ago that contain the words he spoke that offended a person who wrote a letter of complaint that led to Ed's ouster, the straw that broke the camel's back. There's also a surprise at the end of this podcast. | ||
2024-04-21 | Susan O'Connell | Podcast - Zesho Susan O'Connell was ordained and given transmission by Reb Anderson. She was VP and president of the SF Zen Center for ten years. She came up with the idea of the Enso Village retirement community and made it a reality. She had a 25 year career in the film biz before coming to ZC and produced ten ZC related films. She's been instrumental in promoting the ZC digitizing and archiving thousands of ZC lecture recordings. Hear what she has to say about a lot of this and more in this podcast. Podcast with shorter intro | ||
2024-04-14 | Gil Fronsdal | Podcast - Gil Fronsdal is the senior guiding co-teacher at the Insight Meditation Center (IMC) in Redwood City, California and the Insight Retreat Center in Santa Cruz, California. He started Buddhist practice in 1975 at the San Francisco Zen Center, and has been teaching for IMC since 1990. Gil is an authorized teacher in two traditions: the Insight Meditation lineage of Theravada Buddhism of Southeast Asia, and Japanese Soto Zen. He holds a Ph.D. in Buddhist Studies from Stanford. He is a founder of the Sati Center for Buddhist Studies. He is a husband and the father of two sons.Thanks for that Wikipedia. In this podcast, Gil takes us on his way-seeking mind journey. | ||
2024-04-08 | Tai Sheridan | Podcast - Tai Sheridan showed up at the SFZC in the late sixties. He practiced at Tassajara in 1971 and later at Green Gulch Farm. He was close to Mel Weitsman and the Berkeley Zendo for years. He's written many books including Buddha in Blue Jeans that are available for free as ebooks. Recently he created a distillation of his writings into five books available from cuke.com for free download. He encourages a donation to Cuke Archives if one is so inclined. To donate just click on this donate link here and on many pages of cuke.com and shunryusuzuki.com. Find out more at taisheridan.com and listen to this podcast. | ||
2024-03-31 | Ned Hoke | Podcast - Ned Hoke was on Esalen Inst. staff when Shunryu Suzuki led a two day workshop there in 1968. After that, Ned came to Tassajara in the summers as a student. He's been an acupuncturist for forty years. In this podcast he talks about that, we talk about Bolinas, CA, and he tells about bringing Suzuki's headstone up to the Hogback at Tassajara. | ||
2024-03-22 | Steve Silberman | Podcast - Steve Silberman came to the SF Zen Center in 1979 and worked with me, DC, at Greens Restaurant. He's a writer for Wired magazine. He talks about his bestselling Neurotribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity. He also wrote Skeleton Key A Dictionary for Deadheads. He talks about all this and more in this podcast. He has done his homework. | ||
2024-03-17 | Sheridan Adams | Podcast - Sheridan Adams, formerly Sheridan Ericson, came to Zen Center in 1965. She was at the first practice period at Tassajara. She practiced Vipassana at Spirit Rock and was involved with studying and encouraging diversity there and elsewhere for years. She's going to retire as a psychotherapist next year. As you will hear in this podcast, she's stayed on a spiritual path through the years. | ||
2024-03-10 | Alan Rabold | Podcast - Alan Rabold's Buddhist study began before he came to the SF Zen Center in 1968 and continued on with Maezumi, long solo retreats, to Boulder and Trungpa and more. He had a career as a schoolteacher and a photographer. See alanrabold.com and get a copy of his beautiful book of photographs, Appreciating the World, and check him out on Instagram. He's teaching meditation these dats at Naropa University. In this podcast he talks about all that and more. | ||
2024-03-03 | Peter Coyote | Podcast - Peter Coyote is a Zen teacher, writer, activist, actor, and that's just a start. Check him out on cuke.com, at petercoyote.com, and in this podcast. | ||
2024-02-25 | John Steiner | Podcast - John Steiner came to the San Francisco Zen Center in 1967 a few months before the first practice period at Tassajara and participated in that practice period. His involvement with peace and environmental work began before then and continues to this day as does his spiritual path. These days he's focusing on getting young people and minorities registered to vote. In this podcast he talks about how he got on the so-called spiritual path and the engaged one and more. This is the second of two podcasts with John. | ||
2024-02-18 | John Steiner | Podcast - John Steiner came to the San Francisco Zen Center in 1967 a few months before the first practice period at Tassajara and participated in that practice period. I recall him and Bill Lane being the trash collectors and moving materials around. His involvement with peace and environmental work began before then and continues to this day as does his spiritual path. These days he's focusing on getting young people and minorities registered to vote. In this podcast he talks about all this and more. Next week we'll continue our dialogue with John, my dear bodhisattvic friend. | ||
2024-02-12 | Rick Wicks | Podcast - Rick Wicks went to Tassajara briefly in 1971. He returned there to practice in 1974. In this podcast he tells about living in Sweden for decades, traveling extensively in Asia and Europe, being at Zen Center, and more. He's got a doctorate in economics and is a consultant in that realm. He's worn lots of different hats. He calls himself a successful autistic in the podcast. There's a great deal on and from him on cuke.com. | ||
2024-02-04 | Rhonda Johansen Karzag | Podcast - Rhonda Johansen Karzag was at Tassajara with her parents for three summers when she was in elementary school. In this podcast she talks about what that was like for her and reads from an account of it she wrote for school when she was in the fourth grade. You can read it while listening if you go to her mother, Toni Johansen Weisberg's cuke page where there's a link to it in her excellent young handwriting. | ||
2024-01-28 | Toni Weisberg | Podcast 2 - Last week's guest, Toni (Johansen) Weisberg, reads from the notebook she created in 1966 at the request of Shunryu Suzuki - with some comments from him. She calls it Mad Monkey Mind. | ||
2024-01-22 | Toni Weisberg | Podcast 1 - Toni Weisberg was Toni Johansen in her Zen Center days. She and her husband Tony came to the SFZC in 1965. In this podcast she talks about how they got there, her close relationship with Shunryu Suzuki, and more. | ||
2024-01-15 | Lynne Lockie | Podcast - Lynne Lockie, then Warkov, came to Sokoji in 1960 with her husband Saul Warkov. She was a founder of the Minneapolis Zen Meditation Center in Minneapolis that invited Dainin Katagiri to be their teacher. She became a psychoanalyst and retired recently from teaching mindfulness at the New College in Sarasota, Florida. She is still involved in contemplative practice. | ||
2024-01-07 | Linda Hess | Podcast - Linda Hess came to the SF Zen Center in 1974 after a decade of studies and seeking in India. She has continued returning to India through the years. She became a senior lecturer emeritus at Stanford University in religious studies. She's written three books focusing on the poet Kabir and translating his songs/poems and is working on another. The Bijak of Kabir, Bodies of Song: Kabir Oral Traditions and Performative Worlds in North India, Singing Emptiness: Kumar Gandharva Performs the Poetry of Kabir. She and husband Kazuaki Tanahashi live in Berkeley. She tells about all that and her life in this podcast. | ||
2024-01-01 | John Nelson | Podcast - John Nelson was for years a Professor of East Asian religions in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies, University of San Francisco. He is the author of Experimental Buddhism: Innovation and Activism in Contemporary Japan. His studies and teaching have included a good deal on Zen. In this podcast he talks about experiences and observations in Japan, Indonesia, Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Christianity, and more. Check out his blog Far West Passage: Experimental Views on Asia, Buddhism, and the Awakening Mind. More on John Nelson at his page on cuke.com. | ||
2023-12-26 | Stuart Lachs | Podcast - Stuart Lachs was at the first practice period at Tassajara, and has practiced with many other groups through the years, including two years with Eido Shimano and eleven years with Walter Nowick. Check out his website, Zen Perspectives: Commentaries on Zen and Society - and learn more about him in this podcast. | ||
2023-12-17 | JJ Wilson | Podcast - JJ Wilson founded the Women's Studies program at Sonoma State U. Her husband Phillip Wilson was one of Shunryu Suzuki's early ordained disciples. They came to Sokoji, Suzuki's SF temple, in 1961. She wrote her thesis on Virginia Woolf there and is a leading authority on Virginia Woolf. | ||
2023-12-10 | Daigaku Rumme | Podcast - Daigaku Rumme is the teacher at the Confluence Zen Center (confluencezen.org) in Maplewood, a suburb of St. Louis, Missouri. He was ordained by and received transmission from Seikkei Harada and practiced for 27 years at Hosshinji in Obama, Japan. He was with the Soto Zen International Center for seven years while living at the SFZC City Center. For five years he was director of the Soto Zen Buddhism North America Office and the Head Priest of Zenshuji in LA. In 2015 he moved to St. Louis and has been teaching there ever since. In this podcast, Daigaku fills in the blanks on all that, and talks about the latest book he's translated working with the author: The Formless Record of the Transmission of Illumination: a Contemporary Commentary on Keizan Zenji's Denkoroku - volume 1" by Gien Inoue. |
(Click here to go to the top of the list.)
For the first ten weeks there was one podcast a week uploaded on a Tuesday. They were like a variety podcast. The first podcast titled May All Beings Be Happy was a general introduction.
After that, there were six a week and settled into a schedule which continued with a chapter and comments on Crooked Cucumber on Tuesdays. See the Crooked Cucumber page for links to online text with comments by DC.
See Anecdotes from Zen Is Right Here for links to online text and podcasts of chapters from the book Zen Is Right Here.
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