Dharma talks from Clouds In Water Zen Center

Enter the Cave: How to bring resolve, courage, and sincerity to collective Buddhist practice by Rev. Keika Karín Aguilar- San Juan

33 min · 14. juni 2026
episode Enter the Cave: How to bring resolve, courage, and sincerity to collective Buddhist practice by Rev. Keika Karín Aguilar- San Juan cover

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Date: 2026/07/14. Speaker: Rev. Keika Karín Aguilar- San Juan. At Clouds in Water Zen Center. Keika came to Clouds in Water Zen Center in 2005 and served on the Board for more than a decade before being ordained as a novice priest by Sosan Flynn in 2024. Areas of interest include Buddhist liberation theology; Buddhist pedagogy; and the Daoist roots of Chan. One favorite thing about Teen Practice is when conversations take surprising turns. She and her wife life in St. Paul with a single bonsai tree and a bevy of mismatched tropical plants.

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episode Ancestral Herbalism and Gathas of Nature by Joanna Hill and Rev. Rin LaJoy cover

Ancestral Herbalism and Gathas of Nature by Joanna Hill and Rev. Rin LaJoy

Date: 2026/05/24. Speakers: Joanna Hill and Rev. Dr. Rin LaJoy. At Clouds in Water Zen Center. Joanna Hill is from the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe in Minnesota. My clan is the Bullhead (Wawaazisii) which is one of the five original clans of the Anishinaabe People. The Wawaazisii clan people are mediators, teachers, scholars and healers. My Ojibwe name is Kiizhibaayaanimadookwe, which means Whirlwind Woman. I am an Indigenous Herbalist. I use and practice my ancestral wisdom when working with the plants. I've had lifelong relationships with plants but when I started to learn more deeply about my cultural teachings and ceremonies this opened a door for me and deepened my relationships with the plants. I am deeply grateful for my elders and spiritual teachers. Rin LaJoy (he/him), PhD is a plant evolutionary biologist by training and received his doctorate degree from the University of Minnesota in 2014. His dissertation research focused on how long-lived trees respond to changes in their environment to predict how they will respond in the short-term and evolutionarily to climate change. His research primarily focused on tropical ecology, and he had the privilege to spend half of his graduate career living and working in Costa Rica and Honduras. His academic interest now revolves around how to effectively teach biology in a way that is meaningful, accessible, and relevant in multicultural college classrooms. Rin is a priest-in-training at Clouds in Water and is most interested in how Buddhist teachings can be used to unravel systems of harm and oppression. Rev. LaJoy referred to the following readings in his talk: The Way of the Bodhisattva [https://www.shambhala.com/the-way-of-the-bodhisattva-1660.html?srsltid=AfmBOorMy5BxKdr1H8rXIH3mgzPRqzsxIkbaHaGtN0l940fBhZ_0z2sX] and Dhammapada [https://www.shambhala.com/dhammapada-480.html?srsltid=AfmBOoqnAiXadhQEZHjcTljrklMiojAuIMnkSc6ToZoZce5XxLGyU7L0] .

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