How to practice
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[This version: 23 November 1993]
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This file was copied from an archive of Zen Buddhist texts established at Sam Huston Univ, Texas, US on a Gopher Host: oac3.hsc.uth.tmc.edu
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The original document was provided by Steven Newton, <snewton@oac.hsc.uth.tmc.edu> of the Southwest Chogye International Zen
Academeia 1375 Bunker Hill Houston, TX 77055 English (713) 467-0998
Korean (713) 467-0997 Fax (713) 467-0998
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HOW TO PRACTICE
"One way of meditation practice is consistently cutting off random, irrelevant thoughts, thereby protecting yourself from delusions. As soon as one thought arises you must destroy it immediately by being attentively alert. After random, irrelevant thought has been alertly destroyed, subsequent associations will not arise. Do not even utilize the insights gained by this alertness, because being unconcerned with both random, irrelevant thought and attentive alertness is called No-Mind."
Practice resting your thought internally.
Practice being composed, unaffected by external phenomena.
Practice being cool and chilly.
Practice letting each moment become ton thousand years.
Practice becoming like cold ashes and a lofty dead tree.
Practice being like the incense holder in an ancient temple.
Practice being like a white silk thread hanging from on high.
Southwest Chogye International Zen Academeia