The school is unaffiliated with any Zen centers which fall outside of its own network, however many Ordinary Mind Zen teachers are members of the
White Plum Asanga.[1] The history of the Ordinary Mind Zen School dates back to 1983, which was the year that Joko Beck had left the
Zen Center of Los Angeles.[2] That was the year her teacher,
Hakuyu Taizan Maezumi, had been confronted by his students about his
alcoholism and sexual liaisons with some female students. Joko Beck established the Zen Center of San Diego[3] in 1983.
According to Richard Hughes Seager, "By 1998, the Ordinary Mind School had centers in
San Diego,
Champaign, Illinois,
Oakland, California, Portland, Oregon and
New York City."[4] There is no one set structure of curriculum in the Ordinary Mind School, as the
Dharma Successors of Joko Beck get to decide their method of training independent of any organizational head. Long before retirement, Joko Beck had done away with all titles and no longer wore her
okesa. (For formal occasions she often wore a rakusu after ceasing to wear okesa; she also ordained several Zen priests throughout her life.) She had distanced herself considerably from her roots in the
Sōtō school, and much of the ceremony had been abandoned in favor of pure meditation practice.[2]
Note that Joko wrote a letter saying that she revoked transmission for two teachers she gave transmission to: Ezra Bayda and Elizabeth Hamilton.[20] However it is unclear if Joko or anyone had the authority to revoke transmission.[21]