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I'm Jeff Kocan, a writer and editor living in Brooklyn, New York. Contact me directly via email: jkocan [at] google mail.

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« Mais pourquois? | Main | The blizzard of '06. »
Sunday
Feb192006

Zen and the art of podcasting.

One Sunday night back in the high-school days, when I was still in that stage where driving a car is still a wonderful novelty, I tuned in to WDUQ, my local jazz station, for an appropriate cruising soundtrack. Instead of music, though, I heard a voice that I haven't forgotten since. It was an Englishman, and he was talking about Zen Buddhism. That voice belonged to Alan Watts, and I spent just about every Sunday night listening to the NPR broadcasts of his old lectures. (Although "lectures" makes it sound like more of a chore, every one I've ever heard has been an absolute joy to listen to.)

Over the years I've amassed a pretty healthy Alan Watts audio archive - about two and a half days' worth - and I just found out that an Alan Watts Podast is now available. You can subscribe through iTunes, and if you'd like to catch up on the previous installments, the mp3 files are archived here. These don't seem to be complete lectures, but they're still great to listen to. Online so far: "Images of God," "The Sense of Nonsense," and the first part of "Coincidence of Opposites."

You can purchase lots of Watts's CDs and videos on AlanWatts.com. I've also heard rumors that his lectures are widely available on file-sharing networks. Like Soulseek. For example.

Do yourself a favor and check this out. Each podcast is about 15 minutes in length, it's updated a couple times a week, and it's totally free of charge. Listen to one with your morning coffee and you'll have a better day for it.

Reader Comments (2)

This man has influenced me since the day I heard his first lecture. Generations to come will scarce believe that such a one as this walked the earth in flesh and blood.

October 21, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterJoseph

One day I picked up "The way of Zen" in a garage sale. Even after I purchased it, it was lying around for a few weeks before I touched it. Once, before going to sleep, I wanted something to read and I picked it up.
It changed my life. I mean it.
It is so simple, so down to earch, so straight-forward. Does not ask you to assume or believe anything. Pure, plain insights in reality.

January 31, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterKedar

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