a. jesse jiryu davis's dharma talks by A. Jesse Jiryu Davis

Last Updated: March 17, 2026
Talks on Zen from a senior student at the Village Zendo. Frequent delusion and swearing.
Speak Up If You're Stuck in a Zazen Rut
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Certain topics seem off-limits in Zen, like: What's the goal of meditation? How do I get better at it? What is everyone else experiencing when they sit? I spoke at the New Paltz Zen Center about getting stuck at a plateau in meditation skill, and about Zen communities' reluctance to discuss peak experiences, progress, and goals.

Which Beings Are Sentient?
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Which animals are sentient, and how can we liberate them from suffering? I review the philosopher Jonathan Birch's book "The Edge of Sentience" and shares good news about humanity's moral progress regarding animal welfare.

Is an Enlightened Person Afraid of Illness and Death?
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This is a dharma talk I gave at the Village Zendo December 12, 2024, about my mother's brain surgery and end-of-life decisions. Here's the video and a transcript.

Are You Prepared To Save A Life?
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You can find yourself in a critical situation without warning. Is Zen practice preparing you?

Bodhisattvas Always Smile
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Bodhisattvas smile, though they hear the suffering cries of the world. You should smile too! A Zen talk I gave against doomerism.

Give Something Away to a Stranger
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Rich countries and drug firms act selfishly the COVID pandemic. Selfishness is natural, but we can strengthen our universal goodwill through training.

These Unreliable United States
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The United States as we know it will someday come to an end. It's shocking to see how vulnerable our democracy is, but as Buddhists we aren't surprised: Buddha told us that nothing lasts, and we can't rely on anything except the truth revealed by our own practice. A talk at the Village Zendo, November 8, 2020.

American Religion in America's Time of Crisis
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Buddhists must respond to the current political crisis, just as abolitionists like Frederick Douglass did in the 19th Century. A talk at the Village Zendo, September 3, 2020.

Who Can You Trust?
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Our leaders are plainly untrustworthy. And when we hear about toilet paper hoarders, or protestors storming the Michigan governor's office, or covidiots crowding together on beaches, we stop trusting each other, too. But there is someone we can trust. Listen to find out.

How Buddhism Survived The Japanese Internment
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Japanese Americans founded our practice, and they preserved and adapted it to life in the internment camps during WWII. Today we must adapt our practice in a crisis, are we up to the challenge?

How Not To Panic
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Panic obliterates the self. We need a strong self to face fear in meditation and all of life. Dharma at the Village Zendo, February 23, 2020.

You Look So Zen
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On a visit to some Buddhists incarcerated on a jail barge, I had to improvise how to practice Zen, just like we always have to improvise our practice.

When The Buddha Met A Murderer
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Everyone deserves a place where we can practice together. Everyone deserves the opportunity for redemption. A talk I gave at the Village Zendo on December 5, 2019.

Five Ways to Establish a Rock-Solid Meditation Habit
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Meditation can transform your life, but it only works if you sit regularly. You can establish a strong, serious practice following these five methods.

How To Dissolve The Self
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When you do something with attention, your self merges with your activity. Watch how the self shifts and moves, and you'll start to see through the illusion of ego.

How To Be Free From Greed
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We waste our lives chasing temporary, superficial things, and our disappointment leads to grief. Here's a practice that loosens greed's grip on our minds, and frees us to appreciate this moment.

Are the Six Senses True Reality, Or Not?
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When we practice mindfulness of what we're experiencing here and now, we can be at peace and free of worry. But we can go much deeper than that. Buddha taught that we can see through our greedy, self-centered delusions and clearly comprehend the truth of our lives.

Meaningless Striving
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Each new year, Americans resolve to work harder and be more austere, for no reason. Let's stop torturing ourselves.

The Day That Yunmen Broke His Foot
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The old stories all have the same punchline: the monk was suddenly enlightened. What really happens when we have an experience of insight?

Rules for Hyenas
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If we treat the Zen precepts as a set of rules to obey, that's just conformity. Let's use them instead as a tool for busting the hierarchy!

The Meteor
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What if you knew you had 30 minutes to live? Would you want to be awakened?

Why Did Master Rinzai Slap Jo?
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In the Blue Cliff Record, Case 32, a monk named Jo asks Master Rinzai, "What is the essence of Buddhism?" In response, Rinzai grabs the monk and slaps him. Why?

The Real Shit Stick
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A monk asked Unmon, "What is Buddha?" Unmon replied, "A dry shit stick." Why? Where is Buddha in this regular, shitty, unsatisfactory experience? I've heard a thousand times that ordinary mind is Buddha. Here, I try to explain how to actually practice this truth.

Running in Circles
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Running a half marathon, serving a prison term, practicing Zen for a lifetime: I'm trying to learn how people make friends with time, and how to appreciate each moment within an eon.

Why Generosity Turns To Rage, And What To Do About It
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So often, I find myself lashing out at someone I intended to help. The expectation that my generosity would require only a certain amount of effort, and would lead to a predictable payoff, is the culprit. How can I practice a Beginner's Mind that has no expectations?
Living While Dying is Tasty
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 My mother plans to die at 85. What will that final year be like? 
Your Nerve Plant
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To focus the mind, you first have to understand and accept the mechanism of mind-wandering.

Memorial Day
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My father-in-law is a soldier and my mother is a peace activist. On Memorial Day weekend, 2017, I describe how Buddha's Middle Way allows us both to honor veterans and to oppose war.

"For or Against?"
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On the 15th anniversary of 9/11, I describe my difficulties practicing nonviolence in a world full of violence.

"I Saw You Fall So I'm Helping": The Feminist Awakening in the Software Industry
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Women have been systematically excluded from computer programming for decades. But it wasn't this way in the past, and it doesn't need to be in the future. The software industry, it seems, is waking up overnight to how unfairly we've treated women and minorities, and we're beginning to take action to fix it. A talk I gave at the Village Zendo on May 22, 2016.

A Fierce Tiger
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Practice with fear and overcome it, bit by bit, for the sake of a whole and liberated life. A talk I gave at the Village Zendo on April 7, 2016.

Year's End And The Insanity Of Self-Improvement
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Being satisfied with what I have. A talk I gave at the Village Zendo in December 2015.

Facing Everything: Hiroshima and Our Complicity
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On the 70th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima, I talk about our double complicity in the history of WWII, both as Americans and as Zen students. Can we face in both directions and see the facts about our lineage?

Grace
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Desires Are Inexhaustible
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The second of the Four Vows is, "Desires are inexhaustible, I vow to put an end to them." What do we really mean when we make this promise, and how can we accomplish it?

Yangshan Plants His Hoe
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For my first dharma talk at the Village Zendo I take up the Book of Serenity Case 15, "Yangshan Plants His Hoe." The koan may seem obscure, but in fact it's about our work now in New York City, our work to understand and end homelessness, unjust incarceration, and racism.

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