coming home to ourselves

coming home to ourselves

Author: Amy Kisei January 26, 2025 Duration: 37:21

Greetings Friends,

I remember when I first entered a space dedicated to dharma practice, after sitting in the zendo that first night my body felt like I was home.

Which was strange because the building and atmosphere was so foreign to me, the spicey smell of incense, the monotone chanting, the long black robes that the monks wore, being told to sit still and face a wall. None of these things were reminiscent of any kind of home that I was familiar with and yet, I felt at home.

The homecoming wasn’t about the particulars of place, it was deeper then that. Somehow that environment, the silence of the meditation hall, the deeply embodied practice of meditation brought me home to myself.

I was discovering myself in a way that I had tasted in peak moments scattered throughout my childhood and adolescence—myself before the labels, names, beliefs, judgments, self-criticisms, notions of good and bad, right and wrong.

at home in myself was a spacious home of deep acceptance—and love unconditioned. everything was welcomed, nothing was amiss.

through dharma practice my sense of being at home in the mystery of who I am has become a reliable refuge. a place of return when i get tangled up from time to time in thoughts, judgments, worries, fears and self-protective strategies.

starting in the beginning of 2025, i have been giving talks on the heart of great perfect wisdom sutra. this teaching claims to offer a practice of liberation from suffering. in this podcast episode i offer some commentary and practices on the first two stanzas of the heart sutra. here is an excerpt below.

Avalokiteshvara Bodhisattva, when deeply practicing prajña paramita, clearly saw that all five aggregates are empty and thus relieved all suffering.

Shariputra, form does not differ from emptiness, emptiness does not differ from form. Form itself is emptiness, emptiness itself form. Sensations, perceptions, formations, and consciousness are also like this. Shariputra, all dharmas are marked by emptiness; they neither arise nor cease, are neither defiled nor pure, neither increase nor decrease.

The heart sutra is reminding us of the ground of who we are.

The stillness, quiet, spaciousness of our being before identification happens.

Before we grab a hold of something and make a story out of it, make a problem out of it, and then need to try to fix or solve or get rid of the problem.

Forms, sensations, perceptions, thoughts and consciousness are emptiness—pure potential energy—pure possibility—spaciousness—unconditional acceptance

This is the heart of who we are.

Its not something that we have to get to, or make happen.

It is already us, we just tend to forget about it, or don’t notice it—because we are busy identifying with our thinking, our problems, our worries, our to do list, our comparisons, our judgments.

Avaloketeshvara is saying—our thinking, our problems, our worries, our to do lists, our comparisons, our judgments are no other then emptiness.

Insubstantial—yet appearing.

Shaping or coloring this moment of life.

And there’s nothing wrong with them —they aren’t defiled or pure.

It’s just that their content isn’t the whole of who we are. It just isn’t the whole truth.

We can follow them back home, being awake to them but instead of following them into some conclusion about ourselves or the world, or into crisis—

What happens when we trace thought back to its source? Or judgements back to their source? Where do they seem to come from? Or go?

What are we left with?

What is this moment made of? What is this thought or feeling or belief made of?

Anything that is seeming to arise, is already accepted in our awareness.

Awareness doesn’t flinch or push away or judge or shame us.

Simply allows.

Even our deepest pain or our most tremendous suffering is allowed—is accepted at the moment of its happening.

Even our strategies to distract or resist feeling—are allowed at the moment of their happening.

The heart sutra is welcoming us back home to ourselves.

To our whole self.

We often fall out of touch with the heart of who we are.

We start identifying with a particular thought, belief about who we are or what is happening.

And through that identification a world is born, usually a world of suffering—a world of fear, hatred, judgment, but sometimes a world of pleasure or delight.

Often this identification happens so quickly, we don’t even realize it.

And when we do, it can be hard to come back to ourselves, it can be scary to look into the thoughts, beliefs or feelings that are creating our world—because its what we are used to, its feel familiar and though its uncomfortable we mistake its familiarity with who we are or what is true.

We feel caught but we also are too afraid to let go…

Adding more seeming degrees of separation between what’s actually happening and what we think is happening.

So in meditation we are practicing coming back to zero, that’s the more direct translation of shunyata, the word we translate as emptiness.

coming back to zero.

taking the backward step to the space before thought

coming back home to ourselves, to the ground of being, the heart of who we are.

for more—listen to the podcast! Thanks for reading folks!

I’m Amy Kisei. I am a Zen Buddhist Teacher, Spiritual Counselor, budding Astrologer and Artist. I offer 1:1 Spiritual Counseling sessions in the styles of IFS and somatic mindfulness. I also offer astrology readings. Check out my website to learn more.

Below you can find a list of weekly and monthly online and in-person practice opportunities. I will be traveling to Oregon in February and will be facilitating three events of varying lengths while I am there (most of which are taking place at Great Vow Zen Monastery.)

Weekly Online Meditation Event

Monday Night Dharma — 6P PT / 9P ET Join weekly for drop-in meditation and dharma talk. Feel free to join anytime. Event last about 1.5 hours. ZOOM LINK

Monthly Online Practice Event

Sky+Rose: An emergent online community braiding spirit and soul

First Sundays

10:30A - 12:30P PT / 1:30P - 3:30P ET

next Meeting March 2nd

In-Person in Oregon

Feb 1 — Sky+Rose Daylong Retreat: The Strange Garden of Desire

The strange garden of desire: wandering, dreaming, feasting, tending, destroying.

In this daylong workshop each person will explore their singular Strange Garden of Desires, taking a fresh look at what loves, longings, obsessions and obligations live within us.

Through parts work, meditation, and practices of somatic expression we will engage our gardens in five distinct ways: wandering, dreaming, tending, feasting and destroying.

Feb 2 - 9 — Pari-Nirvana Sesshin: A Meditation Retreat exploring Life, Death & the Unknown

Feb 13 - 16 — Emergent Darkness – A Creative Process, Parts Work and Zen Retreat

In-Person in Ohio

(See Mud Lotus Sangha Calendar for weekly meditation events, classes and retreats)



This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit amykisei.substack.com/subscribe

Hosted by Zen teacher Amy Kisei, Earth Dreams: Zen Buddhism and the Soul of the World is a quiet space for exploring what it means to be truly awake in a living, dreaming world. Rather than treating spiritual practice as a retreat from daily life, this podcast gently examines how the core insights of Zen-interconnection, non-separation, and our original nature of freedom-are intimately woven into our dreams, our relationship with the earth, and our sense of soul. Each episode feels like a thoughtful conversation, where ancient teachings meet the raw material of our inner lives and the ecological world around us. You’ll hear Kisei’s reflections on how dreamwork can be a surprising ally on the path of awakening, revealing our deep entanglement with the cosmos. The aim here isn’t abstract philosophy, but a palpable sense of how these liberating perspectives can reshape our experience of reality itself. Tuning into this podcast offers a rare blend of grounded spirituality, where the soul of the world speaks through both silence and symbol, inviting a more creative and loving engagement with existence. It’s for anyone curious about how the heart of Zen Buddhism illuminates our most profound connections.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 95

Earth Dreams: Zen Buddhism and the Soul of the World
Podcast Episodes
Opening the Skies [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 32:54
Spaciousness/emptiness is considered the Ground of Being or the Mind-ground—the heart of who we are. Here spaciousness is love. But maybe not love in the traditional way that we think of love, which is often conditional.…
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Emptiness is an often misunderstood concept in modern Buddhist practice, partially because it is not really a concept so much as a realization. Yet, without the concept we can’t really prepare for what opens up in this p…
The Heat of Spiritual Longing [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 18:28
Exploring the Great Element Fire we are invited into the heat within our bodies. Fire illuminates the heat of our living and connects us to our passions. In this talk we are invited to feel the heat of life within and al…
The Waters of Compassion [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

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In the Mountains and Waters Sutra, we are invited to study water--to take it up as our body and mind? This level of intimacy is characteristic of the Zen school. Water is alive and life-giving. In Mahayana Buddhism the a…
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Duration: 30:26
The Water Element makes up around 65% of the human body. To attend to the element water we are invited to feel the gravity and flow of embodied experience. Contemplative practitioners throughout time use the images of bo…
The Wisdom of the Earth Element [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 33:45
The first of a five series exploration into the teachings of the Five Great Elements. In this episode we explore the Great Element Earth through embodiment, presence, contemplations on interconnection and the practice of…
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Duration: 25:31
What we believe shapes how we perceive. If we think that we are separate from all the rest of life, we live an isolated life--ignoring the everyday magic of the earth, relationships and our human hearts and minds. In thi…
Count the Stars in the Night Sky: Zen Koans and the Imagination [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 30:01
The miscellaneous koans of the Zen lineage are image rich, as is much of the teachings on awakening found in the Zen literature. In this talk we will open to the image of the koan Count the Stars in the Night Sky and dis…
Approaching Emptiness through Koan Practice [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 26:10
One of the great gifts of the Zen tradition is it's teachings on emptiness. Far from being nihilistic, the teachings and practices of emptiness remind us of the inherent spontaneity and creativity of the universe. This t…
Emptiness, Unknowing and the Dark [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 24:37
In this dharma talk Kisei explore's the phrase from Hongzhi in Silent Illumination:If serenity neglects illumination; murkiness leads to wasted dharma.This life is a play of emptiness and illumination, yin & yang. When t…