We are slowing opening our practices and events to in-person attendance. See the Home Page for current information.
When attending practices and events in our sangha space at the Bellingham Unitarian Fellowship (BUF), please adhere to the following safety protocols to help keep our members safe during the Covid pandemic.
Please send a photo of your vaccination card showing a completed vaccine series and one booster to registrar@redcedarzen.org.
Please stay home if you have any Covid symptoms, even if a home test is negative.
Please stay home if you have tested positive for Covid and refer to CDC Guidelines https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/your-health/quarantine-isolation.html
Please stay home if you have a known CoVid exposure and refer to CDC Guidelines https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/your-health/quarantine-isolation.html.
Please stay home if you have not completed a vaccine series, including one booster.
Mask up before you enter the building.
Sign in with the registrar and show the vaccination record if you have not already sent her a photo of your vax record.
Proceed to the hand-washing station.
N 94 or N 95 (not cloth!) masks are required and there will be a small supply at the door.
Maintain social distancing of 6 feet when sitting, walking, in restrooms, on stairways and anywhere we tend to cluster.
Wear masks continually during service.
Chanting while masked is acceptable.
Wipe down chairs and other hard surfaces.
Congregate outdoors for socializing.
Please let the registrar know at registrar@redcedarzen.org.
Using the registrar’s check-in list, we will follow best practices to notify individuals who may have been exposed. You will remain anonymous.
If you have been exposed please refer to the CDC website:
Update from the SCORE Committee
Dear Sangha, Your generous practice of dana paramita has given RCZC's search for a practice home a breath of life. We will be able to make a down payment exceeding $500,000 when a suitable property is found. Your SCORE committee (Bob Rose, Richard Eggemeyer, Nomon Tim, and Mary Durbrow) with Bob Penny's help with construction and design feasibility continues to browse the commercial and residential listings daily and physically visit anything that meets our criteria of: 2000-3000 ft sq Bellingham city limits, preferably downtown core Accessible by multiple modes of transportation ADA accessible Walking distance to amenities like coffee shop and greenspace Manageable mortgage for sangha now and in the future To date we have toured ten properties - none so far has been suitable. Our exploration has revealed that this is a fast-growing real estate market, and according to a real estate broker we are working with, we are competing with buyers from all over the world who are making cash offers on residential and commercial properties, sometimes sight unseen. The Bellingham market feels very expensive to us locals, but investors from other cities see Bellingham as a bargain. We are ready to take the leap off the 100-foot pole if the right property presents itself, thanks to funds that are now available and which will make a handsome down payment. We are meeting with lending institutions this week to prequalify for a loan, a step that will help us move more quickly when the time comes to present an offer. As no suitable property has presented itself in the past year, we are beginning to consider another alternative such as investing the sangha treasure in an interim property with a positive rental income stream, whose value will grow with the market, and whose positive income stream will make the mortgage payments for us. If we find a desirable property that meets these new criteria, we could remodel and move in in two years, or resell. Meanwhile, we will meet at BUF, as planned, and as Congregation Beth Israel did, while their new synagogue was being built. Our initial investment will have grown at the current real estate growth rate of 15%, far beyond what it would earn in a money market or savings account. Not investing the money we have, whether in a permanent or interim property, will leave us farther behind as the market continues to grow. This requires great patience paramita practice on all our parts, dear sangha. It seems fair to say that whatever we do, it could be two years or more before we settle into our new home. Even if we found the perfect property tomorrow, we will need to go through a conditional use permitting process, design and permitting for a remodel, then the actual remodel. That alone can take two years. We are so fortunate that BUF has welcomed us to their beautiful practice hall for as long as we need to be there, at a very fair price. Let's all take a couple of deep breaths, one in gratitude for BUF and the sangha's generosity and another to help us practice patience with so much uncertainty. Your SCORE team will continue to work relentlessly until our beloved sangha is settled together once again. With Gratitude, Mary Durbrow On behalf of the SCORE team
Dear Sangha,
Your generous practice of dana paramita has given RCZC's search for a practice home a breath of life. We will be able to make a down payment exceeding $500,000 when a suitable property is found. Your SCORE committee (Bob Rose, Richard Eggemeyer, Nomon Tim, and Mary Durbrow) with Bob Penny's help with construction and design feasibility continues to browse the commercial and residential listings daily and physically visit anything that meets our criteria of:
2000-3000 ft sq Bellingham city limits, preferably downtown core Accessible by multiple modes of transportation ADA accessible Walking distance to amenities like coffee shop and greenspace Manageable mortgage for sangha now and in the future
To date we have toured ten properties - none so far has been suitable. Our exploration has revealed that this is a fast-growing real estate market, and according to a real estate broker we are working with, we are competing with buyers from all over the world who are making cash offers on residential and commercial properties, sometimes sight unseen. The Bellingham market feels very expensive to us locals, but investors from other cities see Bellingham as a bargain.
We are ready to take the leap off the 100-foot pole if the right property presents itself, thanks to funds that are now available and which will make a handsome down payment. We are meeting with lending institutions this week to prequalify for a loan, a step that will help us move more quickly when the time comes to present an offer.
As no suitable property has presented itself in the past year, we are beginning to consider another alternative such as investing the sangha treasure in an interim property with a positive rental income stream, whose value will grow with the market, and whose positive income stream will make the mortgage payments for us. If we find a desirable property that meets these new criteria, we could remodel and move in in two years, or resell. Meanwhile, we will meet at BUF, as planned, and as Congregation Beth Israel did, while their new synagogue was being built. Our initial investment will have grown at the current real estate growth rate of 15%, far beyond what it would earn in a money market or savings account. Not investing the money we have, whether in a permanent or interim property, will leave us farther behind as the market continues to grow.
This requires great patience paramita practice on all our parts, dear sangha. It seems fair to say that whatever we do, it could be two years or more before we settle into our new home. Even if we found the perfect property tomorrow, we will need to go through a conditional use permitting process, design and permitting for a remodel, then the actual remodel. That alone can take two years.
We are so fortunate that BUF has welcomed us to their beautiful practice hall for as long as we need to be there, at a very fair price. Let's all take a couple of deep breaths, one in gratitude for BUF and the sangha's generosity and another to help us practice patience with so much uncertainty.
Your SCORE team will continue to work relentlessly until our beloved sangha is settled together once again.
With Gratitude,
Mary Durbrow
On behalf of the SCORE team
Buddhist Folk Painting, Free to a Good Home
Dear Red Cedar Zen Community Folks, Happy New Year of the Water Tiger! Two years after moving into a new (for us) home in Bellingham, my wife and I have decided that we do not have a suitable spot to hang a large Korean folk painting which we brought home with us after living several decades in Seoul. Measuring 51" wide and 41" high, the painting features an array of prominent Buddhist, Confucian and other personages from various Asian spiritual traditions. It was acquired by a fellow former Peace Corps volunteer in Korea in the 1970s, and handed down to us. Our Asian art connection cannot accept it, and we do not want to cast the fate of this special work to the fickle winds of E-Bay or Craig's List. We wonder, however, whether Red Cedar, or anyone associated with your Center, might have an interest in, or a place for, this painting. We would be delighted just to know that it has found an appreciative new home. Thank you for considering, and best wishes for a healthy, happy, and safe 2022! Ken Kaliher and Mary-Lee Mooney 430 S. Garden St., Bellingham, WA 98225-6117 (360) 734-2096 If a problem can be solved, why be unhappy? And if it cannot be solved, what is the use of being unhappy? - The Abbott, in Khyentse Norbu’s 1999 film, "The Cup"
Dear Red Cedar Zen Community Folks,
Happy New Year of the Water Tiger!
Two years after moving into a new (for us) home in Bellingham, my wife and I have decided that we do not have a suitable spot to hang a large Korean folk painting which we brought home with us after living several decades in Seoul. Measuring 51" wide and 41" high, the painting features an array of prominent Buddhist, Confucian and other personages from various Asian spiritual traditions. It was acquired by a fellow former Peace Corps volunteer in Korea in the 1970s, and handed down to us.
Our Asian art connection cannot accept it, and we do not want to cast the fate of this special work to the fickle winds of E-Bay or Craig's List. We wonder, however, whether Red Cedar, or anyone associated with your Center, might have an interest in, or a place for, this painting. We would be delighted just to know that it has found an appreciative new home.
Thank you for considering, and best wishes for a healthy, happy, and safe 2022!
Ken Kaliher and Mary-Lee Mooney 430 S. Garden St., Bellingham, WA 98225-6117
Ken Kaliher and Mary-Lee Mooney
430 S. Garden St., Bellingham, WA 98225-6117
(360) 734-2096
If a problem can be solved, why be unhappy? And if it cannot be solved, what is the use of being unhappy?
If a problem can be solved, why be unhappy?
And if it cannot be solved, what is the use of being unhappy?
- The Abbott, in Khyentse Norbu’s 1999 film, "The Cup"
Board Forms New Financial Future Committee
As you all know, we are entering into new financial territory and some uncertainty as we prepare to purchase a future home for the sangha. Our finances have remained quite stable and predictable for a very long time. Right now we have a robust financial position. But as the Board of Directors bears fiduciary responsibility for RCZC we need to assure we keep it as such. So, we are inviting 2-3 sangha members to look into the future with a couple of board members (John and Mary for now). Some data we might look at would be: How is the gain/loss of members trending? How do our membership dues and registration fees compare with other sangha's our size? What new income streams can we imagine, given our limited human resources? How can we keep our fees low and be financially sustainable in the future? What grants are out there that might be a good fit? What ideas do YOU have? This will be an ad hoc committee, hopefully winding up with a report with recommendations to the Board in a few months, maybe in time for the Annual meeting with Board and Sangha in April. If this sounds interesting to you, please contact Mary (mdurbrow1@gmail.com) or John (Johnmw47@gmail.com). Deep bows, John and Mary
As you all know, we are entering into new financial territory and some uncertainty as we prepare to purchase a future home for the sangha. Our finances have remained quite stable and predictable for a very long time. Right now we have a robust financial position. But as the Board of Directors bears fiduciary responsibility for RCZC we need to assure we keep it as such.
So, we are inviting 2-3 sangha members to look into the future with a couple of board members (John and Mary for now). Some data we might look at would be: How is the gain/loss of members trending? How do our membership dues and registration fees compare with other sangha's our size? What new income streams can we imagine, given our limited human resources? How can we keep our fees low and be financially sustainable in the future? What grants are out there that might be a good fit? What ideas do YOU have?
This will be an ad hoc committee, hopefully winding up with a report with recommendations to the Board in a few months, maybe in time for the Annual meeting with Board and Sangha in April.
If this sounds interesting to you, please contact Mary (mdurbrow1@gmail.com) or John (Johnmw47@gmail.com).
Deep bows,
John and Mary
November Sangha Conversation
In November we shifted our monthly conversation away from the theoretical, and discussed a local effort Red Cedar is currently involved in – the Multifaith Network for Climate Justice (MNCJ). Julie Johnson, Outreach person for the MNCJ, and Red Cedar’s representative to the MNCJ Reizan Bob Penny presented the current activities of this recently formed group. A lively conversation was had exploring how our practice can inform MNCJ’s efforts of “spiritual activism” to protect this planet and all beings.
Members with access to Ananda, our online document repository, can read the full meeting notes there. To request access, please email tech@redcedarzen.org
New Program Administrator Position Offered
The RCZC Program Administrator (PA) will provide essential administrative support for the smooth running of Red Cedar events. The Program Administrator will work closely with volunteer Registrars, Retreat Managers, and Inos, and will take direction from the Guiding Teacher.
Red Cedar Zen Community is an equal opportunity employer. We consider applicants for all positions, without regard to race, color, sex, age, national origin, ancestry, differential abilities, political affiliation, marital status, sexual orientation, or any other legally protected status.
Responsibilities will include:
Adding events to the website on request, this includes setting up registration types, levels, and deadlines as needed for each event.
Proofread submitted event descriptions and provide feedback about readability, inconsistencies or errors
Verify through active testing that new events and registration options are working smoothly for registrants
Manage ZOOM or facility availability, scheduling, and resolve scheduling conflicts
Manage master program calendars online and resolve scheduling conflicts
Assure that online program offerings are consistent in language, format, and accuracy.
Use events system to produce flyers and other simple promotional materials
Working with our bookkeeper to insure event registration payments are made and refunds processed, closing out invoices and resolving any payment issues in Wild Apricot.
Assisting the Guiding Teacher and with other program and website related tasks on request.
A successful candidate must:
Have strong technology skills and be comfortable learning new software systems such as our event management system (Wild Apricot)
Have excellent organizational, communication, and writing skills
Have proficiency with Google Drive (Docs, Sheets, Forms, etc)
Have basic web design skills including some knowledge of html and css
Be able to work independently and also discern when to ask for guidance, input, or help.
Desirable additional skills and knowledge:
Familiarity with Red Cedar Zen programs and Board and Sangha policies
Prior experience with event management.
Work Schedule and Salary Details:
Hours: Maximum of 22 hours/month (need will vary from week to week) and may be flexed as needed within a two week period. There is no assurance at this time that this position will be expanded
Pay rate: $25 / hour
This is a non-benefited position.
How to apply:
Please email your cover letter and resume to tim@redcedarzen.org
Responding Gate
Words From Our Guiding Teacher
“…After you have practiced for a while, you will realize that it is not possible to make rapid, extraordinary progress. Even though you try very hard, the progress you make is always little by little…” - Shunryu Suzuki Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind
“…After you have practiced for a while, you will realize that it is not possible to make rapid, extraordinary progress. Even though you try very hard, the progress you make is always little by little…”
- Shunryu Suzuki Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind
Several sangha members have told me they really appreciated a recent talk I gave based on an essay by Norman Fischer called Stages of Monastic Life and this got me thinking about what we're trying to do here at Red Cedar and with Zen practice in this midst of our busy modern lives.
There's a lot to our practice that's practical and makes sense. It does help us stay on the beam. Sitting down for zazen in particular can be such a valuable pause in the action. And even if we're in a period of life that isn't as externally busy there's always a lot of action in the mind. What a blessing to have received a way to stop for a time and just be. Even your mind happens to be racing around during a given zazen period, there's something magical to that time of pause. Something healing....
There's a lot to our practice that's practical and makes sense. It does help us stay on the beam. Sitting down for zazen in particular can be such a valuable pause in the action. And even if we're in a period of life that isn't as externally busy there's always a lot of action in the mind. What a blessing to have received a way to stop for a time and just be. Even your mind happens to be racing around during a given zazen period, there's something magical to that time of pause. Something healing.
And practice in sangha pulls us together with others. With community. With others who are also seeking something. In some ways they are like-minded others, but we're also an eclectic crew aren't we? Isn't there a movie or TV show that opens with the narrator talking about the protagonists as a "rag-tag band of adventurers"? We humans do have a deep need to connect with others! Wonderful, inspiring, and, yes, at times a bit challenging. But there's something to a life of practice that doesn't make sense in a way you can put your finger on, too. And being in the middle of it all, it's hard to feel into what this is. But there's something else about a life of practice, something that's deep in the core of our being, something vital, something deeply essential in a human life, that we're nurturing and living into through our practice.
Take a moment now to pause if you would. Feel into your gut. Into your heart. Breathe gently but deeply. What do you feel? What do you notice? Of course we have all of these Zen stories and Buddhist texts that talk about awakening, enlightenment, realization. Being stories they are often dramatic. And sometimes people do experience big shifts and changes that seem to arise from practice. But actually I think the vast majority of us don't have dramatic spiritual experiences. For most of us it's more like Suzuki Roshi's famous metaphor of walking through the fog.
"After you have practiced for a while, you will realize that it is not possible to make rapid, extraordinary progress. Even though you try very hard, the progress you make is always little by little. It is not like going out in a shower in which you know when you get wet. In a fog, you do not know you are getting wet, but as you keep walking you get wet little by little.
If your mind has ideas of progress, you may say, “Oh, this pace is terrible!” But actually it is not. When you get wet in a fog it is very difficult to dry yourself. So there is no need to worry about progress." - Shunryu Suzuki Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind
If your mind has ideas of progress, you may say, “Oh, this pace is terrible!” But actually it is not. When you get wet in a fog it is very difficult to dry yourself. So there is no need to worry about progress."
And as the practice gradually seeps in to our bones, we don't stop being ourselves. In some ways we settle more fully into ourselves - Suzuki Roshi also said, "When you are you, Zen is Zen." I'll always be some version of me and you'll always be some version of you. And we'll always be human with our joys and confusions.
Lately I've actually been agitated and lost in my own confusion more than usual! But when one of those waves of consternation drops me on the beach again and recedes, I think the difference that practice makes is it's more natural to get up again. To stand and breathe and appreciate the return of clarity and ease. And little by little I have more confidence that everything works out just as it is. In these busy times for many of us in sangha life - fundraising, sorting out temporary zendos, adjusting and changing as we go - and not to mention the confusing and rapidly changing times we're all living in - I want to keep encouraging myself, and all of us, to keep turning back towards this subtle core of our life. A life of practice.
Thank you for supporting my life of practice. I know I'm far from perfect but I'll keep doing my best to support your life of practice, too. We support each other. We do this each in our own way and we do this together.
Announcements
November Sangha Conversation - Our next Sangha Conversation will be Wednesday, November 24th (meditation at 7pm, meeting at 8pm). Our guest speaker will be Julie Johnson from The Multi-faith Network for Climate Justice (MNCJ), along with Bob Penny, Red Cedar’s representative to the MNCJ. This meeting marks moving our ongoing discussions from the visioning towards the applied, and is in response to the sangha’s stated interests in exploring ways to be involved with multi-cultural, multi-faith, justice, environmental, and community work – all concerns of the MNCJ. The meeting will serve:• To provide a brief update about MNCJ activities in the last year.• To discuss and offer different ways a community may participate, for example, hosting the Net of Interconnection, participate in the Green Resource Fair planned for Earth Day 2022, and other ways to be involved.• To learn more about any social/environmental activities in your community, and get some feedback about MNCJ's direction.
We welcome your participation in these monthly Sangha Conversations to help shape our collective direction as we move towards our new home.
Board of Directors Pledges 15% of Our Journey Home Goal
In our practice, we are reminded that paying attention and following what others are doing in the zendo encourages embodying the spirit and teachings of our Buddhist ancestors. We also learn that the first perfection is generosity or dana -- recognizing that giver, receiver and gift are one; not 3 separate entities but a seamless joining together in a virtuous circle. Our gift supports the sangha, the sangha supports us, and we live together fully in the Buddha way.
When we began our campaign last month, the Red Cedar Zen Community board of directors (Bob Rose, Mary Durbrow, Hannah Sullivan, John Wiley, Valerie Davenport, Terrill Thompson, and Nomon Tim Burnett) vowed to set an example -- to model dana for our good friends in the sangha. By “stretching” a bit out of our comfort zone we set out to exemplify the depth of our personal commitment to finding a new home.
I am pleased to let you know that your 7 board members have collectively pledged $86,000 toward our goal of $550,000. Even more impressive is that most of those funds will be available in the next few months for the 40% down payment required by our bank (WECU).
Your generous individual support has been the key to already nearly reaching our initial goal. No gift is too large, no gift is too small. Each will be recognized equally (or remain anonymous if you choose). We all have good reason to celebrate ---getting so far, so soon, by appealing only to our sangha membership. Now it’s time to reach out together to friends and family to help surpass that goal. That will allow more flexibility in our property search, make additional funds available to build or remodel, and/or have a lower mortgage burden for future sangha members.
Your Board of Directors is committed to finding the best possible location and situation for our Red Cedar Zen Community. Your deep and firm support make that possible. Please join us is meeting (and exceeding) our goal to find and finance our new home.
Three Bows in Ten Directions for helping to create a Dharma legacy in Bellingham.
Joden Bob Rose, Board President
Sangha Conversation - Sixteen sangha members attended our most recent Sangha Conversation on Wednesday, September 29. This open dialogue centered on a substantive discussion of the qualities and locations of the sort of place we are seeking for our new home.
Meeting notes are available on Ananda. If you need access to Ananda, you can request it here.
Here are some slides presented at the meeting, which summarize themes about these qualities which emerged from the visioning exercise, as well as the primary location criteria the SCORE committee have collected.
Upcoming Sangha Conversation - All current members are encouraged and warmly invited to participate in the next Sangha Conversation on Wednesday, September 29th. We follow last month’s very successful community dialogue with the next session in our renewed monthly engagement of sangha voices. This month will we gain valuable information, and be able to offer feedback, about the launch of our fundraising campaign in mid-September. In addition, to help our search committee in its process, we will explore as a community the question of “location”, and the perspectives that we imagine or hold towards various neighborhoods and sectors throughout the city, as potential places to find our new home. August Sangha Conversation Recap - Our Sangha Conversation on August 25th was attended by 23 members. Reports were made by the Campaign, Search, and Communications Committees. Board President Joden Bob Rose facilitated several breakout sessions where members engaged in a variety of discussions. It was an information rich evening, as there was much to share in preparation for the launch of our fund-raising campaign. Notes from the meeting can be found on Ananda, and here are screen captures of some slides presented:
Upcoming Sangha Conversation - All current members are encouraged and warmly invited to participate in the next Sangha Conversation on Wednesday, September 29th. We follow last month’s very successful community dialogue with the next session in our renewed monthly engagement of sangha voices. This month will we gain valuable information, and be able to offer feedback, about the launch of our fundraising campaign in mid-September. In addition, to help our search committee in its process, we will explore as a community the question of “location”, and the perspectives that we imagine or hold towards various neighborhoods and sectors throughout the city, as potential places to find our new home.
August Sangha Conversation Recap - Our Sangha Conversation on August 25th was attended by 23 members. Reports were made by the Campaign, Search, and Communications Committees. Board President Joden Bob Rose facilitated several breakout sessions where members engaged in a variety of discussions. It was an information rich evening, as there was much to share in preparation for the launch of our fund-raising campaign. Notes from the meeting can be found on Ananda, and here are screen captures of some slides presented:
Sitting at Shambala Suspended - Through community discussion at the last Sangha Conversation it became evident that the sangha has too much current trepidation and concern to go ahead with in-person practice at this time. The plans for in-person practice at the Shambala center have therefore been suspended for the moment, as we continue to monitor the Covid situation. Concern was also voiced that the Shambala center is not ADA accessible, and would therefore perhaps not be an ideal location for long. And yet, it was recognized that the center has the necessary cushions and gear to make a drop-in situation very workable. Multi Faith Network for Climate Justice (MCNJ) Event - Red Cedar Zen Community has been active in the past with the Multi Faith Network for Climate Justice (MCNJ). Reverend Dr. Andrea Asebado of MCNJ member organization The Center for Spiritual Living will host Greening With Integrity, September 24th, 6:30-8pm. Rev. Dr. Asebado will talk about her spiritual community’s successful effort to green their carbon footprint. The presentation is part of Bellingham’s “ALL IN - Climate Action Week” events. Asebado will be joined by Emily Larson-Kubiak, Energy Efficiency and Renewables Program Manager at Sustainable Connections, and Mark Schofield, Community Energy Challenge Manager for the Opportunity Council. Nomon Tim Burnett has been invited to give the closing practice. This is a live in-person, and live streaming, event. For more information visit the City of Bellingham's event page.
Sitting at Shambala Suspended - Through community discussion at the last Sangha Conversation it became evident that the sangha has too much current trepidation and concern to go ahead with in-person practice at this time. The plans for in-person practice at the Shambala center have therefore been suspended for the moment, as we continue to monitor the Covid situation. Concern was also voiced that the Shambala center is not ADA accessible, and would therefore perhaps not be an ideal location for long. And yet, it was recognized that the center has the necessary cushions and gear to make a drop-in situation very workable.
Multi Faith Network for Climate Justice (MCNJ) Event - Red Cedar Zen Community has been active in the past with the Multi Faith Network for Climate Justice (MCNJ). Reverend Dr. Andrea Asebado of MCNJ member organization The Center for Spiritual Living will host Greening With Integrity, September 24th, 6:30-8pm. Rev. Dr. Asebado will talk about her spiritual community’s successful effort to green their carbon footprint. The presentation is part of Bellingham’s “ALL IN - Climate Action Week” events. Asebado will be joined by Emily Larson-Kubiak, Energy Efficiency and Renewables Program Manager at Sustainable Connections, and Mark Schofield, Community Energy Challenge Manager for the Opportunity Council. Nomon Tim Burnett has been invited to give the closing practice. This is a live in-person, and live streaming, event. For more information visit the City of Bellingham's event page.
Dear Sangha, I'm noticing that I’m "cycling" a bit lately. Getting a bit revved up, getting a bit over involved with things, and then settling back down again: re-opening to trust and acceptance that everything works out. Finding again my breath in my hara. The feeling of the earth beneath my feet. It's a "big" time for us as a sangha: preparing to do our first ever big capital campaign, a committee starting to look at properties to purchase, numbers like $1 million dollars and more being bandied about. Seeing visions of us in this place or that place setting up a zendo and opening our doors wide to the community. And all of this happening against the confusing background of another round with Covid. And it's also just another day, another moment, another breath. Everything just as it is. There is so much to do and there's also nothing to do. I visited a center here in Sonoma County, California, and had an interview with the Zen teacher there who reminded me to rest deeply in zazen practice and the tradition. That zazen dissolves the ego and shows us our true face. In terms of fundraising, here's a nice bit of Zen historical context: including this wonderful quote from Dogen himself:
I'm noticing that I’m "cycling" a bit lately. Getting a bit revved up, getting a bit over involved with things, and then settling back down again: re-opening to trust and acceptance that everything works out. Finding again my breath in my hara. The feeling of the earth beneath my feet.
It's a "big" time for us as a sangha: preparing to do our first ever big capital campaign, a committee starting to look at properties to purchase, numbers like $1 million dollars and more being bandied about. Seeing visions of us in this place or that place setting up a zendo and opening our doors wide to the community. And all of this happening against the confusing background of another round with Covid.
And it's also just another day, another moment, another breath. Everything just as it is. There is so much to do and there's also nothing to do. I visited a center here in Sonoma County, California, and had an interview with the Zen teacher there who reminded me to rest deeply in zazen practice and the tradition. That zazen dissolves the ego and shows us our true face.
In terms of fundraising, here's a nice bit of Zen historical context: including this wonderful quote from Dogen himself:
“It might be possible to build the hall with a donation from one patron, but I would like to encourage many people in the ten directions to make a donation in order to allow a wider range of people to form a good affinity with the Buddha Dharma.” Keep sitting! Nomon Tim
“It might be possible to build the hall with a donation from one patron, but I would like to encourage many people in the ten directions to make a donation in order to allow a wider range of people to form a good affinity with the Buddha Dharma.”
Keep sitting!
Nomon Tim
Dear Red Cedar Zen Community members, Our next All-Sangha conversation will take place at 8 PM, Wednesday, September 29, following regular services. We will focus on two critical aspects of “Our Journey Home: the Capital Campaign”; a funding raising update, and where we establish that sanctuary. We will open with a status report on the capital campaign, which will be transmitting its first mailing the previous week. This will be your opportunity to ask questions, offer additional ideas, and to benefit from other sangha members’ thoughts on engaging our colleagues, friends, family, and other supporters in this legacy-building effort. We’ve heard repeatedly of the desire to be an open and engaging community that offers the opportunity for Zen practice to all. We’ve also heard of the desire for a facility open to other students of the Buddha’s teachings, as well as to the creative and healing arts, which would be in keeping with the long tradition of a multi-purpose Dharma Hall in Bellingham. A key question for the board-designated Search Committee on Real Estate (SCORE) is where these community offerings could best be located. The campaign goal of $550,000 was set to raise adequate funds for the down payment on a $1 million property, as well as pay for initial modifications. As a community non-profit, our bank (WECU) tells us we must come up with a 40% down payment. Our calculations show that the remaining mortgage could be funded by about the same amount we previously paid in rent at Forest Street. Where would we prefer our new sanctuary be located; near the city center, in a neighborhood, or on the outskirts of town/in the county??? Each choice has financial and access implications. Some choices may be precluded, depending on budget and available property. The search committee would benefit greatly from having a better sense of what sangha members envision. Meeting that vision will depend, in large part, on the success of our campaign. Sangha leaders need to hear your voices as we set out on Our Journey Home. Please join us for next month’s Sangha Conversation. With deepest gratitude for your practice and generosity- Joden Bob Rose, President Red Cedar Zen Community Board of Directors
Dear Red Cedar Zen Community members,
Our next All-Sangha conversation will take place at 8 PM, Wednesday, September 29, following regular services. We will focus on two critical aspects of “Our Journey Home: the Capital Campaign”; a funding raising update, and where we establish that sanctuary.
We will open with a status report on the capital campaign, which will be transmitting its first mailing the previous week. This will be your opportunity to ask questions, offer additional ideas, and to benefit from other sangha members’ thoughts on engaging our colleagues, friends, family, and other supporters in this legacy-building effort.
We’ve heard repeatedly of the desire to be an open and engaging community that offers the opportunity for Zen practice to all. We’ve also heard of the desire for a facility open to other students of the Buddha’s teachings, as well as to the creative and healing arts, which would be in keeping with the long tradition of a multi-purpose Dharma Hall in Bellingham. A key question for the board-designated Search Committee on Real Estate (SCORE) is where these community offerings could best be located.
The campaign goal of $550,000 was set to raise adequate funds for the down payment on a $1 million property, as well as pay for initial modifications. As a community non-profit, our bank (WECU) tells us we must come up with a 40% down payment. Our calculations show that the remaining mortgage could be funded by about the same amount we previously paid in rent at Forest Street.
Where would we prefer our new sanctuary be located; near the city center, in a neighborhood, or on the outskirts of town/in the county??? Each choice has financial and access implications. Some choices may be precluded, depending on budget and available property. The search committee would benefit greatly from having a better sense of what sangha members envision. Meeting that vision will depend, in large part, on the success of our campaign.
Sangha leaders need to hear your voices as we set out on Our Journey Home. Please join us for next month’s Sangha Conversation.
With deepest gratitude for your practice and generosity-
Joden Bob Rose, President
Red Cedar Zen Community Board of Directors
The Search for a New Home Begins Joden Bob Rose, Board President Fellow Sangha Members, Your Board of Directors recently appointed a small group to work on your behalf to find our new “permanent” home in this impermanent and rapidly changing world. As we are all aware, the Bellingham real estate market is vibrant and dynamic. The Search Committee on Real Estate (SCORE) is purposefully small to respond rapidly and decisively if the right opportunity arises. The committee’s members are: Guiding teacher Nomon Tim Burnett, Board President Joden Bob Rose, Vice President Mary Durbrow, and Bellingham commercial real estate broker Richard Eggemeyer (semi-retired). In addition, sangha members Bob Penny and Chris Burkhart will provide essential technical assistance and guidance. We have formulated a set of criteria (below) to guide our investigation of available real estate within the Bellingham city limits. We are only a limited set of eyes and ears, so we would welcome your suggestions of suitable properties if they fit some or most of these criteria. Please contact one of the SCORE members if you identify a suitable candidate property. Finding the right site, addressing the inevitable remodeling/renovation issues such as permitting, design, finding contractors, and completing a complex work order in a timely fashion, will all take more time than we would like. We will all have to translate the patience and equanimity we find on the cushion to this process. But we will, at the appropriate time, step across the threshold, into a Zendo and Dharma Hall we can truly call our own. Your Board looks forward to your active participation in the upcoming RCZC campaign to build our new sangha home. It will be the perfect time for simultaneously practicing patience and generosity as we build our legacy in Bellingham and Northwest Washington. Please contact one of the SCORE members if you have any questions or ideas as we begin this process. CRITERIA FOR NEW RCZC SANCTUARY Required: 3,000 sq ft minimum on a single level with room for dedicated zendo Existing building rather than bare ground Reasonable visibility and accessibility by bus & bike Adequate parking /space available to meet city code) As close to city core as financially feasible Minimum cost and time to renovate (unless price discount compensates for added costs) Upgrade interior walls and façade ADA accessible Preferred: Zoning allows Churches outright (or minimal time/hassle for variance or conditional use) Close to or adjacent to park/green space/urban trails Near neighborhood services such as coffee shop/grocery Easily modified and/or flexible spaces Space to share as rental to other groups to increase cash flow Limited external noise (traffic, freeway, mfg.) Estimated cost for building ready for move in: +/- $ 1,000,000 - $1,200,000 Sangha Conversation To discuss our current status of fund raising and property acquisition All current members are encouraged to attend the August Sangha Conversation during our regular Wednesday evening practice on August 25th 7pm. Board President and 2021 Shuso Joden Bob Rose will host the conversation. Joden Bob will introduce the current status of our fund raising efforts, and other currently unfolding developments in our effort to find a suitable property. Ample time will be given for Q & A. We look forward to hearing voices from the sangha contribute your input and ideas to the current efforts. Sangha Conversations are our whole-community time to discuss important topics of business and our practice amongst the entire sangha. At the end of June we held our first sangha conversation in quite a while, and it served as a nice ice breaker to re-engaging our community dialogue. In July, because Guiding Teacher Nomon Tim was not present, we did not hold a conversation. In the past we have had these conversations only about every three months, with a shifting emphasis upon whatever topic seemed current. But presently we will be conducting these sangha conversations going forward on a monthly basis, the last Wednesday of the month, at least for this period of time we are engaged in the process of finding a new physical home. We feel it is important at this time to keep the membership up to date, and gain critical input from members, as we enter a very active phase of planning and fundraising. We encourage everyone to attend. If you are not able to attend then information from the sangha conversation will be included in next month’s newsletter. Nomon Tim is moving back to Bellingham Over the course of August, Red Cedar’s Guiding Teacher Nomon Tim Burnett with his partner Raizelah Bayen will be getting situated permanently back in Bellingham. Nomon has been living in California for the last year, participating with our activities, as we all have been, on Zoom. July has been his accustomed annual sabbatical month to get the batteries recharged for another year of guiding the Sangha. In August Nomon will resume regular attendance at weekly zazen and will again be giving regular dharma talks and conducting dokusan via Zoom. Wilderness Dharma Program News Summer is time for hiking and enjoying the outdoors, and is when our Wilderness Dharma Program gets out on the trails. On July 10th Reizan Bob Penny led a very successful Opening the Mountains day hike to Skyline Divide. About half a dozen Red Cedar pilgrims performed our Dividing Water Ceremony on the ridge, in full view of Mt. Baker, Mt. Shuksan, and the North Cascades. The Salish Sea water we gathered at our Receiving Water Ceremony, conducted in May at Larrabee Beach, was divided into three vials, to be exchanged later in the hiking season with mountain water at each of the three branches of the Nooksack River. To complete our annual water cycle ceremonies the mountain water will be recombined and then returned to the Salish Sea at Larrabee Beach at our Closing the Mountains hike in October. In late June Terrill Thompson led a very peaceful and quite mindfulness walk for over half a dozen sangha members around the Stimpson Family Forest Reserve, a wonderful land holding near Lake Whatcom managed by the Whatcom Land Trust and Whatcom County Parks. We were graced by the silent presence of great old growth trees, and the passing flight of a barred owl during the easy five mile walk. Upcoming Mountains and Rivers Backpacking Retreat September 7-9 (tentative) We believe our annual pilgrimage to Mt. Baker will happen despite the pandemic. All participants must be fully vaccinated. Final decision will be made closer to the time. This trip to the high upper flanks of Mt. Baker involves many wilderness based ceremonies, including a grand “sutra mapping” of Dogen’s Mountains and Rivers Sutra across the landscape of the upper Middle and South Fork watersheds of the Nooksack River. The trip this year is being organized informally, through direct communication with Nomon Tim Burnett, who is leading the backpack, as long-time Wilderness Dharma Program Coordinator Reizan Bob Penny is currently unable to participate. To view a past (somewhat outdated) trip description for reference please click here Contact Nomon Tim directly you may email him at tim@redcedarzen.org if you are interested in joining. You must have some backpacking experience. There are only a very few spaces still available for this trip.
The Search for a New Home Begins
Fellow Sangha Members,
Your Board of Directors recently appointed a small group to work on your behalf to find our new “permanent” home in this impermanent and rapidly changing world. As we are all aware, the Bellingham real estate market is vibrant and dynamic. The Search Committee on Real Estate (SCORE) is purposefully small to respond rapidly and decisively if the right opportunity arises.
The committee’s members are: Guiding teacher Nomon Tim Burnett, Board President Joden Bob Rose, Vice President Mary Durbrow, and Bellingham commercial real estate broker Richard Eggemeyer (semi-retired). In addition, sangha members Bob Penny and Chris Burkhart will provide essential technical assistance and guidance.
We have formulated a set of criteria (below) to guide our investigation of available real estate within the Bellingham city limits. We are only a limited set of eyes and ears, so we would welcome your suggestions of suitable properties if they fit some or most of these criteria. Please contact one of the SCORE members if you identify a suitable candidate property.
Finding the right site, addressing the inevitable remodeling/renovation issues such as permitting, design, finding contractors, and completing a complex work order in a timely fashion, will all take more time than we would like. We will all have to translate the patience and equanimity we find on the cushion to this process. But we will, at the appropriate time, step across the threshold, into a Zendo and Dharma Hall we can truly call our own.
Your Board looks forward to your active participation in the upcoming RCZC campaign to build our new sangha home. It will be the perfect time for simultaneously practicing patience and generosity as we build our legacy in Bellingham and Northwest Washington.
Please contact one of the SCORE members if you have any questions or ideas as we begin this process.
CRITERIA FOR NEW RCZC SANCTUARY
Required:
3,000 sq ft minimum on a single level with room for dedicated zendo
Existing building rather than bare ground
Reasonable visibility and accessibility by bus & bike
Adequate parking /space available to meet city code)
As close to city core as financially feasible
Minimum cost and time to renovate (unless price discount compensates for added costs)
Upgrade interior walls and façade
ADA accessible
Preferred:
Zoning allows Churches outright (or minimal time/hassle for variance or conditional use)
Close to or adjacent to park/green space/urban trails
Near neighborhood services such as coffee shop/grocery
Easily modified and/or flexible spaces
Space to share as rental to other groups to increase cash flow
Limited external noise (traffic, freeway, mfg.)
Estimated cost for building ready for move in: +/- $ 1,000,000 - $1,200,000
Sangha Conversation
To discuss our current status of fund raising and property acquisition
All current members are encouraged to attend the August Sangha Conversation during our regular Wednesday evening practice on August 25th 7pm. Board President and 2021 Shuso Joden Bob Rose will host the conversation. Joden Bob will introduce the current status of our fund raising efforts, and other currently unfolding developments in our effort to find a suitable property. Ample time will be given for Q & A. We look forward to hearing voices from the sangha contribute your input and ideas to the current efforts.
Sangha Conversations are our whole-community time to discuss important topics of business and our practice amongst the entire sangha. At the end of June we held our first sangha conversation in quite a while, and it served as a nice ice breaker to re-engaging our community dialogue. In July, because Guiding Teacher Nomon Tim was not present, we did not hold a conversation. In the past we have had these conversations only about every three months, with a shifting emphasis upon whatever topic seemed current. But presently we will be conducting these sangha conversations going forward on a monthly basis, the last Wednesday of the month, at least for this period of time we are engaged in the process of finding a new physical home. We feel it is important at this time to keep the membership up to date, and gain critical input from members, as we enter a very active phase of planning and fundraising.
We encourage everyone to attend. If you are not able to attend then information from the sangha conversation will be included in next month’s newsletter.
Nomon Tim is moving back to Bellingham
Over the course of August, Red Cedar’s Guiding Teacher Nomon Tim Burnett with his partner Raizelah Bayen will be getting situated permanently back in Bellingham. Nomon has been living in California for the last year, participating with our activities, as we all have been, on Zoom. July has been his accustomed annual sabbatical month to get the batteries recharged for another year of guiding the Sangha. In August Nomon will resume regular attendance at weekly zazen and will again be giving regular dharma talks and conducting dokusan via Zoom.
Wilderness Dharma Program News
Summer is time for hiking and enjoying the outdoors, and is when our Wilderness Dharma Program gets out on the trails. On July 10th Reizan Bob Penny led a very successful Opening the Mountains day hike to Skyline Divide. About half a dozen Red Cedar pilgrims performed our Dividing Water Ceremony on the ridge, in full view of Mt. Baker, Mt. Shuksan, and the North Cascades. The Salish Sea water we gathered at our Receiving Water Ceremony, conducted in May at Larrabee Beach, was divided into three vials, to be exchanged later in the hiking season with mountain water at each of the three branches of the Nooksack River. To complete our annual water cycle ceremonies the mountain water will be recombined and then returned to the Salish Sea at Larrabee Beach at our Closing the Mountains hike in October.
In late June Terrill Thompson led a very peaceful and quite mindfulness walk for over half a dozen sangha members around the Stimpson Family Forest Reserve, a wonderful land holding near Lake Whatcom managed by the Whatcom Land Trust and Whatcom County Parks. We were graced by the silent presence of great old growth trees, and the passing flight of a barred owl during the easy five mile walk.
Upcoming Mountains and Rivers Backpacking Retreat September 7-9 (tentative)
We believe our annual pilgrimage to Mt. Baker will happen despite the pandemic. All participants must be fully vaccinated. Final decision will be made closer to the time.
This trip to the high upper flanks of Mt. Baker involves many wilderness based ceremonies, including a grand “sutra mapping” of Dogen’s Mountains and Rivers Sutra across the landscape of the upper Middle and South Fork watersheds of the Nooksack River. The trip this year is being organized informally, through direct communication with Nomon Tim Burnett, who is leading the backpack, as long-time Wilderness Dharma Program Coordinator Reizan Bob Penny is currently unable to participate. To view a past (somewhat outdated) trip description for reference please click here
Contact Nomon Tim directly you may email him at tim@redcedarzen.org if you are interested in joining. You must have some backpacking experience. There are only a very few spaces still available for this trip.
Red Cedar Zen Community is a 501(c) non-profit organization.