Kansikuva näyttelystä The Zen Engineer

The Zen Engineer

Podcast by Koubun_Osho

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What if ancient Zen wisdom could debug the stress of modern life? The Zen Engineer explores the intersection of Buddhist philosophy and everyday human experience — through the eyes of Koubun Araki, a Soto Zen vice-abbot who spent years as an automotive engineer before entering the temple. Each episode takes one Zen concept and traces it through a story you'll recognize: a moment of disconnection, a sudden loss, a decision that didn't sit right. No robes required. No prior knowledge of Buddhism needed. Just honest inquiry into what it means to live with clarity. New episodes monthly.

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jakson Your Heart Doesn't Reach — A Buddhist Monk's Take on Loneliness kansikuva

Your Heart Doesn't Reach — A Buddhist Monk's Take on Loneliness

Most people translate dukkha as "suffering." But what if the word actually points to something closer to loneliness — the ache when your heart doesn't reach? In this episode, Koubun Araki — Soto Zen vice-abbot and former automotive engineer — starts with a raw confession: his words completely failed at a funeral. That moment of disconnect sent him back to the root meaning of dukkha: a wheel whose axle doesn't fit. Things that won't connect. A flow that's blocked. He walks through three everyday scenes of disconnection, unpacks the Buddhist teaching of interdependence (pratityasamutpada), and tells the story of Brahma's Request — when even the Buddha hesitated because he feared his Dharma wouldn't reach anyone. Then a personal story reframes everything: a fellow priest who died suddenly at forty, and the widow who stood frozen at his funeral, unable to perform the rituals — the pain too vast inside her to find a door out. Dukkha isn't only when your heart doesn't reach someone. Sometimes the suffering inside a person is so heavy that none of it can come out. The reaching has to come from us. Dukkha isn't proof something is broken. It's proof your heart is still reaching. Your one action: today, reach toward the one who went quiet. KEY POINTS - Dukkha redefined: The original metaphor is a wheel with a misaligned axle — not "suffering" but "when things don't connect, don't reach." - Three daily disconnections: Family dinner on phones, ideas ignored in meetings, social media posts vanishing into silence — dukkha is everywhere. - Brahma's Request: Even the Buddha hesitated to teach, fearing his realization was too subtle to reach anyone. Connection has always been the hard part. - Reaching is the whole practice: A close friend — a fellow priest — died suddenly at forty. At his funeral, his wife stood frozen by the altar, unable to do any of the rituals. The pain was too vast inside her to come out. Dukkha isn't only when your heart doesn't reach. Sometimes the silent ones can't send out, either. - One action: Don't wait for someone to signal that they need you. Today, think of one person who went quiet — not the one asking — and send them a single line: "I was thinking about you." BUDDHIST TERM GLOSSARY - Dukkha (苦) — Often translated as "suffering"; here reinterpreted as "when your heart doesn't reach" via the wheel-axle etymology. - Pratityasamutpada (縁起) — Interdependence; the teaching that all phenomena arise in relation to each other. - Brahma's Request (梵天勧請) — The mythic moment when Brahma persuaded the newly awakened Buddha to teach, despite his doubt that anyone would understand. CHAPTERS (00:00) A funeral where my words didn't reach (02:18) "When was the last time you felt truly understood?" (03:18) Three scenes of disconnection you'll recognize (05:28) What dukkha actually means (hint: it's not "suffering") (06:30) The wheel-axle metaphor and Japanese wordplay (08:15) Pratityasamutpada: why connection is the default, not the exception (09:32) Brahma's Request: even the Buddha hesitated (11:01) A friend's sudden death, and a wife who couldn't move (13:48) "Reaching is the whole practice" (14:42) Dukkha is proof your heart is still reaching (15:50) Your one action: reach toward the one who went quiet REFERENCES - Ayacana Sutta (SN 6.1) — Brahma's Request to the Buddha - Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta — The Buddha's First Sermon on Dukkha - Analayo — on dukkha translation and interpretation - Brendan Kelly, "Buddhism and Psychiatry" (2025) CONNECT - X: https://x.com/koubun_osho - Note (blog, Japanese): https://note.com/koubun

1. touko 2026 - 17 min
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