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About Mary Mocine

Mary MocineI was born in Los Angeles in 1944 and grew up there. I was graduated from UC Berkeley in 1965. I went to Hastings College of the Law and graduated in June 1971. I practiced law until 1989.

In 1988 I became interested in Zen Buddhism and began to practice at the Berkeley Zen Center and at Green Gulch Farm. My involvement grew and by 1989 I took three months off and spent a time of intensive residential practice at Green Gulch. I never really returned to the practice of law.

In September of 1990 I entered the monastery of the San Francisco Zen Center, Tassajara Zen Mountain Center. I was there almost four years. I was ordained a priest by Sojun Mel Weitsman in September of 1994. Sojun is my root teacher but I have also studied with Yvonne Rand, Norman Fischer, Blanche Hartmen and Reb Anderson.

In the winter of 1998 I was shuso at Tassajara for the three-month practice intensive. This position is also known as “head monk.” It is a kind of graduate school for a priest. At that time one begins to lecture and engage in individual practice discussion with students. After being shuso one is invited to give public lectures and teach classes as well as to continue offering individual practice discussion.

I have served in various roles as senior staff at the three S.F. Zen Center locations. I have been Tenzo or Head Cook, Shika or Guest Manager, Ino or Head of the Meditation Hall and Director or secular “CEO” of a location.

I also teach meditation at the Solano State Prison in Vacaville and work with the men there.

In the fall of 1999, I participated in the formal training of the Zen Hospice Project in San Francisco. I had already done hospice service in my own family and in my role as a priest but I felt that the formal training would be useful.

In 1998 I formed a meditation group in Vallejo California. The group grew and in late 1999 I left S.F. Zen Center and moved to Vallejo. Clear Water Zendo was formally opened in January of 2000. There is a full schedule, including daily meditation, a discussion group, classes, and a Saturday morning program that includes instruction and a lecture.

About VZC

Clear Water is the name of the Zendo at the Vallejo Zen Center. It is a Soto Zen Buddhist Temple in the tradition of Shunryu Suzuki Roshi and the San Francisco and Berkeley Zen Centers. The center offers regular meditation, meditation instruction, classes, one-day sittings, work practice, lectures and special workshops.

We are a lay sangha and most of us work in the world. A few of us are retired. There are a few staff positions but all of them are volunteer. We do pay our Abbess a stipend. Everyone in the sangha helps to take care of Clear Water because it belongs to us and in taking such care, we care for one another as well.

The name of the zendo, Clear Water, Comes from a poem by Zen Master Dogen, “The Point of Zazen.”

Realization, neither general nor particular,
is effort without desire.
Clear water all the way to the bottom;
a fish swims like a fish.
Vast sky transparent throughout;
a bird flies like a bird.

The purpose of the zendo is to offer a place for us to practice clarity together, a place to sit down, quiet our minds and pay attention. Compassion grows from this. What else is there?

The priest at Clear Water, Mary Mocine, was trained at San Francisco and Berkeley Zen Centers, including four years at Tassajara Zen Monastery. She was ordained in 1994 by Sojun Mel Weitsman, former Abbot of San Francisco Zen Center and continuing Abbot of the Berkeley Zen Center. Reverend Mocine has also trained with Abbess Zenkei Blanche Hartman and former Abbots Zoketsu Norman Fischer and Tenshin Reb Anderson of the San Francisco Zen Center. She received dharma transmission from Sojun Mel Weitsman in May 2005.

Suggested Donations

Daily Zazen & Saturday Program: In person and Online, 5.00 – 20.00

One Day Sit (6:30 – 8:40): In person – 45.00, Online – 40.00

One Day Sit (8:30 – 5:30): In person – 35.00, Online – 30.00

One Day Silent (9:30 – 5:30): In person – 25.00, Online – 20.00

Half Day Sit (8:30 – 12:30): In person – 25.00, Online – 20.00

Sesshins: In person – 45.00/Day, Online – 40.00/day

Classes: In person and online – 12.00 per class if you attend all, 15.00 per individual class

Chants often Used


Pali Refuges

Small Verses

Metta

Merging of Difference and Unity

Heart Sutra

Hsin Hsin Ming

En Mei Jukku

Dai Shin Dharani

Fukanzazengi