Outside teaching; apart from tradition, not founded on words and letters, pointing directly to the human mind, seeing into one's nature and attaining Buddhahood - traditional definition of Zen. Filled with anecdotes, stories and meditations drawn from both the ancient and the modern world, "Zen Questions" serves as a wake-up call to the true self, and contains all the guidance and encouragement you will need on your journey to peace, harmony and understanding. Illustrated throughout with graceful sumi-e paintings, this beautiful book provides a delightful visual stepping stone to an enlightened state.
I loved this. I have read a lot of books about Buddhism and this is one of the most accessible. It manages to make something as indefinable and mysterious as Zen a lot clearer. The prose is quirky and illuminating and the sumi-e paintings are beautiful. Here's a description of Zen meditation or Zazen: "Have you ever learned a language? Zazen is the same but backward ... In zazen each day you unlearn a little. You unlearn more and more until you reach Don't Know. This is not ignorance; this is real knowledge."
A near perfect little tome. Robert was a great writer and certainly he’s missed. A natural successor to Alan Watts but speaking in a straightforward Scottish manner. There’s nothing to be found online at all of exactly how and when he passed and it was a sad surprise to realise he’d gone. A proper 21st century Brit Zen master.
Written without a lot of mumble jumble words that know one really understands. Allows for a simple obtainable understanding of zen for those who apply a little awareness to their daily journey.
Loved this book. The simple q&a format, engaging writing and beautiful illlustrations made it a wonderful end-of-day read. It answered several questions I had regarding zen and enlightenment. The book found me in the shoe aisle at TJ Maxx. I kid you not. I knew I was meant to read it. Will reference it as I write Type A to Zen.