ICE murders
another innocent man
It matters
These murders
he asked why
wouldn’t everyone
want to be one
with God
he was sitting
on a horse
talking about God
in a ring corral
comically cloistered
one breath after one shallow breath
afternoon slides by as I watch
We don’t want him assassinated.
We’d like him removed from office.
Changing a pitcher who is wild and erratic
For the good of everybody
Before he really hurts those he opposes
And those he thinks are with him.
Where is the manager?
Where are those who own the team?
Where the ambulance?
If you had not been born
I'd have not been born --
breithlá sona duit mamaí!
happy birthday, mom!
Spot on.
Randy Feltface. https://www.facebook.com/share/r/1befT4fvVk/
Then:
Zen Master Seung Sahn taught that there are only two kinds of people: those who will die soon, and those who will die later. He used this phrase to remind people that the future is uncertain. He wanted students to "wake up" to the present moment instead of wasting time. [1, 2]
Zen Master Seung Sahn often said "soon dead" to help his students remember that life is short. This wry wake-up call was his way of reminding people to stop wasting time on silly worries. He wanted people to focus fully on the present moment. [1, 2]
I am easily deceived.
How does one study Ch’an?
One has to awaken suddenly and directly have no mind; only then can you be joyful and at peace. If you do not awaken, then all you will be doing is mouthing a few phrases about emptiness, nonbeing, and quoting a few of the ancients talking about nonbeing.
In a mistaken fashion on the basis of this you will say: “I have obtained rest.” I want to ask you, can you succeed in resting or not? That is using the mind to make the mind not exist.
If you use the mind to make the mind not exist, the mind exists all the more. How can you then make it not exist? The ancient sages scoffed at this as the heresy of falling into emptiness.
--Ta-hui
Dahui Zonggao (1089–10 August 1163) (Chinese: 大慧宗杲; Wade–Giles: Ta-hui Tsung-kao; Japanese: Daie Sōkō; Vietnamese: Đại Huệ Tông Cảo) was a 12th-century Chinese Chan (Zen) master. Dahui was a student of Yuanwu Keqin (Wade–Giles: Yuan-wu K'o-ch'in; Japanese: Engo Kokugon) (1063–1135) and was the 12th generation of the Linji school of Chan Buddhism. He was the dominant figure of the Linji school during the Song dynasty.[1]
Dahui introduced the practice of kan huatou, or "inspecting the critical phrase," of a kōan story. This method was called the "Chan of gongan (kōan) introspection" (看話禪 Kanhua Chan).[2]
Dahui was a vigorous critic of what he called the "heretical Chan of silent illumination" (默照邪禪 Mozhao Xie Chan) of the Caodong school (Wade–Giles: Ts'ao-tung; Japanese: Sōtō). (wikipedia)
I look out the window, I look into the green leaves shielding the road busy with passing cars.
I am uncertain as to what I see.
But I’m looking into it.
Who talks like this?
President Trump kicked off the second day of the NATO summit in Turkey on Wednesday by restating his “need” to control Greenland, blasting European allies as “hopeless” and threatening countries that did not support the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.
The president called Spaniards “hopeless, bad people” and said he was cutting off trade with the country — even though the European Union’s 27 nations negotiate trade jointly. He mentioned France, Germany, Italy and Britain by name for not joining the war in Iran. He cast doubt on a temporary cease-fire aimed at ending the conflict and referred to Iran’s leaders as “evil, sick people” and “cancer.’’
“You know what you do?” he said. “You got to cut out cancer early.”
-- NYT, 8july26, https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/07/08/world/nato-summit-turkey-trump-ukraine
Awkward and unskillful speech unwins the day.
On days when I don’t feel so good, reminders come of, let’s say, difficult times running through body and mind that point out what wasn’t right.
The body remembers and the mind forgets what needs to be remembered and forgotten.
Many indeed are
The ways to climb
The mountain,
But it is the same moon
That we see over the peak.
--Ikkyu (1394-1481)
--AI searchJijimugé (事事無碍) is a Japanese Buddhist term. It translates to the "unhindered mutual interpenetration of all things and events." It means everything in the universe is connected. Every event and object flows into all other things without any blocks or limits.
Between one thing/event and another thing/event there is no barrier.
Right there, on my wall.
Water
Fire
Earth
Air
The Classical ElementsRooted in ancient Greek philosophy by thinkers like Empedocles and Aristotle, this model was used for centuries to describe the physical universe: [1]
It's maddening
Sexual predation
so rampant
Maddening
So many
suffer
so maddening
so maddening
so maddening
Once I wanted
To be
A monk
Now
I can’t
Remember why
Not
Wanting
Anything else
Than what I am
A monk
With no why
Truth is an honorable destination
I think the leadership
In Washington is lost
Reading poet Joanne Kyger book of poems, As Ever.
Could not find online poem in book, "12.29 & 30 (Pan as the Son of Penelope)" by Joanne Kyger, and too long to type. But came across this:
Night Palace
"The best thing about the past
is that it's over"
when you die.
you wake up
from the dream
that's your life.
Then you grow up
and get to be post human
in a past that keeps happening
ahead of you
(--Poem by Joanne Kyger, OCTOBER 2003
Learned she was married to Gary Snyder from 1960-65 and wrote alongside the Beats (Ginsburg, Creeley, Kerouac, Whelan).
This from a literary magazine:
In person, Kyger offers wide-ranging and inspired conversation. Through years of practice of poetry and Zen, as well as attending the manners and courtesies of village life in Bolinas, she has managed to compress in pragmatic fashion questions or statements that clear the air in an instant. “I don’t care what someone ‘knows’ or ‘feels,’” she said to me once in conversation about poetry, “I want to know what’s happening.” I repeat this because it impressed me deeply, and because it reveals much that is true of the new narrative forms that came out of the 1960s and ‘70s in and around Bolinas. Particularly, the statement draws attention to Kyger’s own careful, perceptive nature, and her uses of poetry. She exemplifies a faith in the life-long process of self-relation, trusting in the poem and its instantaneous recognition in the projective field articulated by Charles Olson. Unlike Olson, however, she focuses on events and happenings, moving herself out of the way as a kind of recording instrument. Philip Whalen, from whom she learned much too, created a similar ethos of detachment in his work. His finished poems, however, are more like seamless, well-crafted collages from notebooks. They are full of humor and detached observations of diverse physical and creative environments inter-textually stitched to delight and tease readers with exemplary wisdom and bardic aplomb. Kyger’s work by contrast is personally intimate, faithful to specific moments in time and attendant to the many spirits or moods of landscape. The real difference, perhaps, is the frame of attention, and the spirits guiding it. Whalen’s genius for quotation and for extending the context of the poem contrasts starkly with Kyger’s bright and socially centered attention to the immediate context of composition, as it is known through her words rather than through the quotes of others.
^
Her attention to place makes her an intimate observer of every day life in her beloved Bolinas. Her engagement with organic life processes is mirrored by the visual construction of her poems on the page, where lines often are set out into the space of the page rather than stacked along the left-hand margin. In this sense visually she is close to Pound and Williams, using the page as a kind of painting or glyph for the ease and pleasure of the eye. “I saw the page as some kind of tapestry and voice glyph,” she said in a 1997 interview,[12] echoing concerns for the poem that have been with her from her first book, The Tapestry and the Web. “When you move your line to the right, the lesser the impact of the line, the voice. The whole movement and rhythm on the page give us instruction as to voice and phrasing and import of what’s going on.” These concerns for her own creative environments reveal an openness to phenomena, an openness that withholds judgment in order to experience the moment through several perspectives. She is adamant too in stressing that anything can become part of a person’s poetic practice. “Your dreams are important,” she said, “your humorous life is important, your cooking life is important, your friendships, the dialogues you assume, the news that comes from within, the news that comes from out there. There’s such a wide variety of ‘things’ that go on. It’s important not to get stuck on any one of these as being the ‘I’ that writes. Being able to report, as it were, from all these areas of life and see that they’re equally ‘valid’ and ‘important.’ Nothing is more or less important than anything else. An egalitarian sense of what it’s like to be a human. What being alive is like.
—from Joanne Kyger and the Narrative of Every Day, by Dale Smith, Jacket Magazine, October 2007
Today, for we medievalists, Elizabeth of Portugal.
(Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese, Portuguese and Spanish; 4 January 1271 – 4 July 1336), also known as Elizabeth of Aragon, was Queen of Portugal from 1282 to 1325 as the wife of King Denis. She is venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church, under the name Saint Elizabeth of Portugal or Queen Saint Elizabeth (Rainha Santa Isabel in Portuguese).
After Denis' death in 1325, Elizabeth retired to the monastery of the Poor Clare nuns, now known as the Monastery of Santa Clara-a-Velha (which she had founded in 1314) in Coimbra. She joined the Third Order of St. Francis, devoting the rest of her life to the poor and sick in obscurity.[8][4] During the great famine in 1293, she donated flour from her cellars to the starving in Coimbra. She was also known for being modest in her dress and humble in conversation, for providing lodging for pilgrims, distributing small gifts, paying the dowries of poor girls, and educating the children of poor nobles. She was a benefactor of various hospitals (Coimbra, Santarém and Leiria) and of religious projects (such as the Trinity Convent in Lisbon, chapels in Leiria and Óbidos, and the cloister in Alcobaça).[10]
She was called to act once more as a peacemaker in 1336, when Afonso IV marched his troops against King Alfonso XI of Castile, his nephew, to whom he had married his daughter Maria, and who had neglected and ill-treated her. In spite of age and weakness, the Queen-dowager insisted on hurrying to Estremoz, where the two kings' armies were drawn up. She again stopped the fighting and caused terms of peace to be arranged. But the exertion brought on her final illness.[4] As soon as her mission was completed, she took to her bed with a fever from which she died on 4 July, in the castle of Estremoz. She earned the title of Peacemaker on account of her efficacy in solving disputes.[
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_of_Portugal#:~:text=During%20the%20great%20famine%20in,the%20children%20of%20poor%
Ah, the 13th and 14th centuries!
An elder used the word Wankelmut the other day -- fickleness.
Some German synonyms: Variabilität, Veränderlichkeit, Flüchtigkeit, Wandlungsfähigkeit, Unstetigkeit, Unbeständigkeit, Flatterhaftigkeit, Launenhaftigkeit, Wandelbarkeit, Sprunghaftigkeit, Lebhaftigkeit
And English definitions of fickleness
Noun:1
changeability, especially as regards one's loyalties or affections.
“the fickleness of youth”
Synonyms:
capriciousness, changeability, variability, volatility, vacillation, fitfulness, irregularity, tendency to blow hot and cold, disloyalty, undependability, inconstancy, instability, unsteadiness, infidelity, unfaithfulness, faithlessness, irresolution, flightiness, giddinesss, kittishness, impulsiveness, unpredictability, unpredictableness, randomness, technical: lability, literary: mutability.
It's the ancient tension identified by Parmenides and Heraclitus -- Being: the changeless; Becoming: change. One or the other, they argued.
Up through Plato (/ˈpleɪtoʊ/ PLAY-toh; Ancient Greek: Πλάτων , Plátōn; born c. 428–423 BC, died 348/347 BC); Aristotle[A] (Ancient Greek: Ἀριστοτέλης, romanized: Aristotélēs;[B] 384–322 BC); Augustine of Hippo (/ɔːˈɡʌstɪn/ aw-GUST-in, US also /ˈɔːɡəstiːn/ AW-gə-steen;[22] Latin: Aurelius Augustinus Hipponensis; 13 November 354 – 28 August 430)[23] ; Thomas Aquinas (/əˈkwaɪnəs/ ⓘ ə-KWY-nəs; Italian: Tommaso d'Aquino, lit. 'Thomas of Aquino'; c. 1225 – 7 March 1274); to Martin Heidegger[a] (26 September 1889 – 26 May 1976); Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein (/ˈvɪtɡənʃtaɪn, -staɪn/ VIT-gən-s(h)tyne;[5] Austrian German: [ˈluːdvɪç ˈjoːsɛf ˈjoːhan ˈvɪtɡn̩ʃtaɪn]; 26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951); Sir Karl Raimund Popper (28 July 1902 – 17 September 1994); Thomas Samuel Kuhn (/kuːn/; July 18, 1922 – June 17, 1996); Alfred North Whitehead (15 February 1861 – 30 December 1947); Bernardo Kastrup (born 21 October 1974); among many others -- who've thought about the being/becoming tension. (Cf. Wikipedia)
And that does not include the ancient and modern thinking out of China, Japan, India, etc.
Here's what I think.
Literally, "here."
Think about what is here. Feel what is here. Let what is here speak to and listen to you. Converse what is here.
Sit with this for a while. Sit with that.
When you stand up, try not to fall. Bruises and scrapes will follow if you fall.
Give me liberty or give me death. (Orator)
I will give you both. (Creator)
(Mulling)
I’ll have a double chocolate donut instead.
dog to go to pond
his breathing is labored
time for cooling
glad he has good mistress
Maybe a hotdog
some baked beans
Ginger ale
Yogurt and rhubarb kompot
Nothing special
A Saturday
Daddy has been
Unfaithful
He embarrasses
The family
And yet and yet
Sunday will dawn
Enjoyed listening to Christopher Hitchens.
Enjoyed listening to Thich Nhat Hanh.
Enjoyed listening to Thomas Keating.
Call me old fashioned
Intelligence and articulateness
Are pleasing companions
I suppose joy is the unquestioning appreciation of life and the world as it is.
To give up opinions and preferences is probably the clearest and safest way to live.
Perhaps to see the good or the possibility of good in everything.
To allow the possibility that, at core, everything is love.
I will walk that circle, I will try, as my Native friend says, to walk in peace. ("Wlakámigenokan ôlósamek)
Saying "walk in peace" in the Western Abenaki language (spoken by the Abenaki people of the Northeast) combines specific verbs and adverbs to express the idea of living in harmony. In this language, peace is more than the absence of violence; it is an active state of tranquility and "making good kin" with others and the land. [1, 2, 3]
Here is how you say it:
"Wlakámigenokan ôlósamek"
Breakdown of the phrase:
Wlakámigenoka: To make peace.
Ôlósamek: To walk or to continue along. [1, 2]