Hazy Moon Sesshin
with Geoffrey Shugen Arnold, Jody Hojin Kimmel, Danica Shoan Ankele · Zen
Six-day silent sesshin at Zen Center of New York City with 7–10 hours of daily zazen, chanting, oryoki meals, work practice, and dokusan. Traditional intensive format.
Hazy Moon is a traditional six-day sesshin — the core Zen retreat format. You sit zazen (Zen meditation) in silence for 7–10 hours each day, broken into periods of roughly 25–40 minutes with walking meditation (kinhin) in between. Meals are formal and silent, eaten in the zendo (meditation hall) using oryoki bowls. There's also work practice, chanting services, and short teaching talks from the teacher.
Dokusan — private meetings with the teacher — are offered throughout. These are not counseling; they're typically brief, focused exchanges where you report your practice and receive guidance. In sesshin, the schedule is strict and externally structured so your attention can turn inward.
This is residential, so you sleep, eat, and sit at the center for the full six days. What to expect: early wake-up (typically 4:30–5:00 a.m.), limited talking outside formal meals, simple accommodations, and a day of rest or reduced schedule partway through. Bring warm layers (meditation halls are unheated) and comfortable sitting clothes. If you've never sat sesshin, it's demanding — the length and silence can surprise people — but it's designed to be accessible to beginners willing to show up and follow the schedule.
Full details from Zen Mountain Monastery
An intensive six-day residential Zen retreat characterized by silence and deep introspection. The schedule includes 7-10 hours of zazen daily, chanting services, formal meals, work practice, teacher talks, and private interviews (dokusan) with the teachers.
Thursday – Sunday · 4 days
Ango Intensive (Online) – Turning Words and the Wellspring of Great Peace
Zen Mountain Monastery
Thursday – Sunday · 4 days
Ango Intensive – Turning Words and the Wellspring of Great Peace
with Geoffrey Shugen Arnold
Zen Mountain Monastery
Saturday
Touching the Earth: A Sangha Hike in the Woods
Zen Mountain Monastery