
Podcasts | Upaya Zen Center
Joan Halifax | Zen Buddhist Teacher Upaya Abbot
Show overview
Podcasts | Upaya Zen Center has published 26 episodes during 2026. That works out to roughly 25 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 44 min and 1h 2m — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-US-language Religion & Spirituality show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 4 days ago, with 26 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Joan Halifax | Zen Buddhist Teacher Upaya Abbot.
From the publisher
A Santa Fe, NM Zen center and community with retreats, daily meditation, weekly Dharma talks on Buddhist teachings
Latest Episodes
View all 26 episodesLiberating Intimacy – Softening Barriers to Love
Dharma Lab – Practicing the Truth of Our Lives
SPP2026: Sesshin Day 6: Entering the Marketplace
SPP2026: Sesshin Day 5: Returning to the Source
SPP2026: Sesshin Day 3: Holding the Keys
SPP2026: Sesshin Day 2: Free From The Start
SPP2026: Sesshin Day 1: Joyful Effort
Forgetting the Ox, Forgetting the Self
SPP2026: Zazenkai: Ordinary Mind
SPP2026: Zazenkai: Searching For The Ox
SPP2026: The Ox-Herding Pictures
SPP2026: The Ten Ox-herding Pictures – Our journey of Awakening: Opening Session
The Measure of Our Humanity: REHUMANIZATION
This Is It: The Ox-Herding Pictures and Our Spiritual Journey
A Glimpse of Awakened Mind. Now What?
Bearing Witness in Gaza

The Measure of Our Humanity: Transformation
In this session of The Measure of Our Humanity, Roshi Joan Halifax opens by reflecting on six years of monthly gatherings exploring socially engaged Buddhism — and on the urgency of the question […]

Up a Tree: Precarity, Not-Knowing, and Awakening Times
In this Wednesday Night Dharma Talk, Roshi Joan Halifax opens by naming her deep concern for the ongoing wars, displacement, and political upheaval seen throughout the world. Rather than offering direct reassurance, she turns to two stories held in deliberate tension: Kyōgen’s koan “Man Up a Tree,” in which a man hanging by his teeth from a branch is asked a question he cannot answer without falling, and the more familiar parable of a man clinging to a twig on a cliff face, stalked by tigers above and below. Together they frame a teaching on aimlessness and indeterminacy at the heart of Zen. Roshi points to aimlessness not as passivity but as a requirement of appropriate action: “When you are aimless, you’re not grasping towards something. You actually have the capacity to respond to things as they are.” Sensei Dainin follows, reflecting on the uncertainty of our times through her own not-knowing during Roshi’s recent open-heart surgeries. Drawing on Zen teacher Zenju Earthlyn Manuel, she names this era as belonging to “awakening times” — a call not to despair, but to vow, and to practice together.

As The Wheel Turns
In this Wednesday Night Dharma Talk, Butsumon Tuck Stibich — a resident priest at Upaya — opens with a teaching from Thich Nhat Hanh. No stranger to war, Thich Nhat Hanh explains that […]

Finding Our Way
In this Wednesday Night Dharma Talk, Sensei Fushin addresses what so many of us are carrying right now — the weight of a world in upheaval, the accumulation of personal grief, and the […]