Monday – Sunday · 7 days
21–27
September 2026

Mountains and Rivers Sesshin

with Geoffrey Shugen Arnold, Jody Hojin Kimmel, Ron Hogen Green, Danica Shoan Ankele · Zen

Zen sesshin silent residential zazen

Six-day silent sesshin with 7–10 hours of daily zazen, chanting, oryoki meals, work practice, and dokusan (private interviews with the teacher). Traditional intensive format at Zen Center of New York City.

Mountains and Rivers is a traditional six-day sesshin — the standard intensive Zen retreat format. Expect silence from the moment you arrive through departure, broken only by teacher talks and the sound of the bell marking sitting periods.

The daily shape is steady: wake around 4 or 5 a.m., then alternating periods of zazen (sitting meditation) and kinhin (walking meditation) until meals. Oryoki — formal ritualized eating — replaces casual dining; it's part of the practice itself, not a break from it. Work practice (samu) fills part of the day, and in the evenings there are chanting services and teacher talks. Between 7 and 10 hours of zazen daily is typical for a sesshin of this kind.

Dokusan — a private meeting with the teacher, usually lasting 5–10 minutes — happens once or twice daily. This is where you bring questions, obstacles, or insights; the teacher responds in real time, often with directness that's hard to find elsewhere.

A sesshin works partly because you're not alone in it. The collective silence and rhythm of 20 or 40 or 100 people sitting together creates something different from solo practice at home. If you've never done this before, the first day is often disorienting; by day three or four, the schedule becomes almost invisible.

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Full details from Zen Mountain Monastery

An intensive six-day residential Zen retreat characterized by silence and deep introspection, featuring 7-10 hours of daily zazen, chanting services, formal meals, work practice, and private teacher interviews.

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