
From Swirling Dust, author of Nothing Else: A Two-Month Journey Home
If you've discovered that "awakening" is just another trap for the seeking mind, welcome.
Most spiritual books teach you to find the light. This one shows you what darkness reveals.
Shadow Zen is not gentle. It's not comfortable. It doesn't offer promises of permanent peace or transcendent states. Instead, it leads through the 821st Dharma door-the one most teachers won't open, the one that goes through darkness rather than around it.
Drawing from decades as a physician, combat veteran, and contemplative practitioner across Buddhist, Hindu, and Christian mystical traditions, Swirling Dust offers raw, unpolished teachings for those who've reached the post-awakening desert and discovered: there's nowhere to go because you were never anywhere else.
What you'll find inside:
This book includes:
For readers who are:
Not for readers seeking:
"In every murderer, I saw myself. Not metaphorically. Actually. Same awareness. Different conditioning. But underneath: Nothing Else."
If you're ready to open the 821st door, start here.
For readers of Nothing Else: A Two-Month Journey Home
If Nothing Else took you home, Shadow Zen begins where that journey ended-with the recognition that you never left. But that recognition itself can become a trap, another place for the separate self to hide.
Nothing Else was the journey home. Shadow Zen is what happens after you realize there was nowhere to go-and that recognition doesn't end the exhausting loop of self-consciousness unless you see why you're still monitoring, still checking, still seeking.
Both books point to the same recognition. This one goes through the door most won't open.