In the cowshed there's a basket on my bicycle over front tire. It carried home two small pizzas from ride to town the day it arrived. I am again in Brooklyn's 20th Avenue Met's Food Market, my Saturday schoolboy job, carrying boxes of groceries on delivery bike cycling this two-wheeled Mack truck to row house 2nd floor walkup on 67th Street down from synagogue diagonally across schoolyard. I am happy with 25 cent tip and empty oversized basket riding back. I will buy an egg cream from Archie's soda fountain on corner of 69th Street and scan across room new comic books.
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Friday, May 17, 2013
poetically embodying origin
What we recognize outside us as something judged inadequate or insufficient is the mirroring of an interior block inhibiting the passing through us or our passing through what might be called 'reality' or existence-as-itself.
As form is emptiness, as emptiness is form, it is the movement of each through each, the passage itself, that exemplifies impermanence and no-self.
What we are is the betweening movement of existence seeking itself becoming itself in an infinite equation of possibility formulating, situating, and transcending its-very-own on its way elsewhere.
We're seldom here because 'here' is an ongoing exchange between there and then with where and when.
And so, are we ever at home?
Home -- when experienced as this unfolding revelation of manifesting arrivals through which we explore energies vibrating with our names and particular histories -- is where the art is.
The eternal and infinite particularity of creative interchange with whatever is, wherever it is, and however it appears -- this is our holy project of encounter with what-is-called-God.
And so it is.
And so we are.
And so it is as we are passing through it all on its way poetically embodying origin.
As form is emptiness, as emptiness is form, it is the movement of each through each, the passage itself, that exemplifies impermanence and no-self.
What we are is the betweening movement of existence seeking itself becoming itself in an infinite equation of possibility formulating, situating, and transcending its-very-own on its way elsewhere.
We're seldom here because 'here' is an ongoing exchange between there and then with where and when.
And so, are we ever at home?
And so it is.
And so we are.
And so it is as we are passing through it all on its way poetically embodying origin.
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
No explanation, embodiment
Wind blows prayers from prayer-flags over sprig-green field,
Cosmos, intelligent beyond knowing, finds solace in thoughtfulness of remembrance.
The language of cemeteries is stone silence.
Meet me there.
Wordless.
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
In the woods on the mountain
Spring comes and dogs walk with man and woman on zig zagging trails.
We are the movement of transforming emptiness as it becomes the next form moving through the between into new emptiness entering form again on its way through between-time morphing another appearance.
So lovely, light, and steep.
So far we've gone, and so asleep.
Would that we soon awake!
Monday, May 13, 2013
He watches the flowers and birds outside
He said his name was Lawrence.
That's all he remembered.
That's enough, don't you agree?
Do you remember your name?
Write it down.
Lose the paper.
That's all he remembered.
That's enough, don't you agree?
Do you remember your name?
Write it down.
Lose the paper.
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Saturday, May 11, 2013
No replacing, no restricting: where religion next resides
All that is needed is a name.
No, not a name.
A gaze.
One without nothing within.
Thursday, May 09, 2013
Wednesday, May 08, 2013
Tuesday, May 07, 2013
Upon missing by 30 seconds...
...the comments (closed) for:
OP-ED Columnist, RELIGION BEYOND THE RIGHT, by Frank BruniPublished: May 6, 2013, The New York Times
Excerpt:As the Boy Scouts of America reassesses its ban on gay scouts and leaders, we’re hearing a lot about the organization’s need to remain sensitive to people whose religions condemn homosexual behavior. Their morals must be properly respected, their God aptly revered. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/07/opinion/bruni-religion-beyond-the-right.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rssToo-late comment:
It's not about being gay.
It's about being able to tell people they are wrong, perverse, outsiders, and illegitimate in the eyes of a God closely held and guarded by the condemnation squad.
Let's face it -- there's a new movement to purify others according to the standards of the purifiers. Institutions, churches, clubs, schools, the Senate and House of Representatives -- all have a purity & condemnation agenda that is not only annoying, but frightening.
Today's gay is tomorrow's non-fundamentalist religious follower, is next week's member of the Democratic Party, is next month's non-Caucasian, is next year's non-millionaire.
May the god of heterodox unions and humans have mercy on we the non-purists and non-condemnatory! Amen! Or: Hey-humanity!
Monday, May 06, 2013
I'll have the nothing special
Winnie dies. The sign of the unicorn is no longer readable. Nothing special.
Everything slows. Finish reading penultimate papers for ethics course. Final class Wednesday night.
Brain stalls. Time comes round to circumferential swirl. Nothing stretches. Pinpoint.
Maybe Christ is metaphor for emerging engagement with evolving experience. We live. We die. We return. Eternally recurring.
It doesn't matter. Not any of it. There's this...collapse.
Meanwhile, ordinary.
Nothing special.
Thanks Winnie!
Everything slows. Finish reading penultimate papers for ethics course. Final class Wednesday night.
Brain stalls. Time comes round to circumferential swirl. Nothing stretches. Pinpoint.
Maybe Christ is metaphor for emerging engagement with evolving experience. We live. We die. We return. Eternally recurring.
It doesn't matter. Not any of it. There's this...collapse.
Meanwhile, ordinary.
Nothing special.
Thanks Winnie!
Sunday, May 05, 2013
As, In The Upper Room, Ballet for Chamber Ensemble, by Philip Glass, plays
Sunday morning , cat saunters into room. Sun daze early on winter-beaten mountainside.
The overwhelming variegation of people! Watching New York Times short videos -- seltzer man, poets in unexpected places, architecture of Bowery, fashion hats in Manhattan, street duds in Bronx, biker club in Queensboro.
This mind attending has slowed. Either it empties out by dint of early dementia or burrows into emptiness with late awareness.
Either way, it recognizes complaints of body, underground subway system groaning wheels as curving rails lift passage of millions of neurons to other places. It's a big unknown territory -- the territory of dark intelligence, dark knowing that never sees outer day, relegated to loam and root-systems of psyche's sparking synapses sending syncopating sorrow and solace through (now) violin strains of Going Home.
I don't live in New York City --- not for a long stretch of years -- but I did, once, turning keys to locks in Brooklyn and Bronx, visiting foreign lands of Staten Island, Manhattan, and Queens, as well as extra-terrestrial New Jersey address for the senseless span of heart's rambling pilgrimage.
I found home with zafu and zabuton in solitary practice a hermit's passing along village sidewalks and rural roads now in Maine these thirty two years.
My mind is not right. It belongs to a mysterious conclave of perennial, perpetual inquiry into language and symbol, vibrating truth and indecorous lies. But now, blessed relief, without feeling the urge to judge, need to justify, or purpose of explanation -- a coursing stream of attention-specific-reordering.
Everything is itself.
No more.
No less.
All...
Itself.
Nowhere to be found!
The overwhelming variegation of people! Watching New York Times short videos -- seltzer man, poets in unexpected places, architecture of Bowery, fashion hats in Manhattan, street duds in Bronx, biker club in Queensboro.
This mind attending has slowed. Either it empties out by dint of early dementia or burrows into emptiness with late awareness.
Either way, it recognizes complaints of body, underground subway system groaning wheels as curving rails lift passage of millions of neurons to other places. It's a big unknown territory -- the territory of dark intelligence, dark knowing that never sees outer day, relegated to loam and root-systems of psyche's sparking synapses sending syncopating sorrow and solace through (now) violin strains of Going Home.
I don't live in New York City --- not for a long stretch of years -- but I did, once, turning keys to locks in Brooklyn and Bronx, visiting foreign lands of Staten Island, Manhattan, and Queens, as well as extra-terrestrial New Jersey address for the senseless span of heart's rambling pilgrimage.
I found home with zafu and zabuton in solitary practice a hermit's passing along village sidewalks and rural roads now in Maine these thirty two years.
My mind is not right. It belongs to a mysterious conclave of perennial, perpetual inquiry into language and symbol, vibrating truth and indecorous lies. But now, blessed relief, without feeling the urge to judge, need to justify, or purpose of explanation -- a coursing stream of attention-specific-reordering.
Everything is itself.
No more.
No less.
All...
Itself.
Nowhere to be found!
Saturday, May 04, 2013
Friday, May 03, 2013
Joan will be leaving soon
Elderly friends spoke about the poem. About "alone."
They had much to say.
Say goodnight!
They had much to say.
ALONE
"When I'm alone"—the words tripped off his tongue
As though to be alone were nothing strange.
"When I was young," he said; "when I was young..."
I thought of age, and loneliness, and change.
I thought how strange we grow when we're alone,
And how unlike the selves that meet and talk,
And blow the candles out, and say good night.
Alone... The word is life endured and known.All but...
It is the stillness where our spirits walk
And all but inmost faith is overthrown.
(Poem by Siegfried Sassoon, 1886-1957)
Say goodnight!
Thursday, May 02, 2013
May flowers
In Montpelier Vermont, at the end of the street where a fellow I know lives, police detonate a suspicious-looking box found on a sidewalk near a bank.
It contained, they discovered after the blast, home-school materials.
It is Thursday night in early May.
And we are a troubled people.
It contained, they discovered after the blast, home-school materials.
It is Thursday night in early May.
And we are a troubled people.
Wednesday, May 01, 2013
You?
Ursula K. LeGuin wrote the short story, "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas"in 1973.
It needs reading.
One commentator wrote:
The main point, I think, is slightly hidden near the end. As the narrator describes the people who decline the bargain, she mentions the place to which these people go. It is a better place than Omelas; she says, almost in passing, "I cannot describe it at all."
Recall -- and this is the thing that would be easy to miss -- that this same narrator just spent the beginning of the story describing a city of perfect happiness to us. And she did it very well. She did not introduce the tragedy, the price, the child, until later on. And yet here she is, now, saying that she cannot describe this place that is better than Omelas, at all. One would have thought that the better place would simply be like Omelas, minus the hidden room, minus the tormented child. But the narrator could have described that; in fact, she did. So the place to which the decliners go must be some other sort of place, entirely.
The point here is very deep. I think the idea of the story is that the narrator cannot violate the logic of human happiness, which requires a price, a flip-side. Our very conception of happiness, perhaps, has built into it a notion of the impossibility of perfection. This being the case, the fact that there must be a price of some sort -- not so dramatic or singular as the price of a tormented child in a locked room, but a price none the less -- seems inescapable. The place where the people who decline the bargain of Omelas go must therefore be a place where something other than happiness reigns; a place where some other inconceivable concept applies. http://www.dailykos.com/story/2009/01/25/688925/-About-That-Kid-in-Omelas#The inconceivable concept other than happiness -- interests me.
You?
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Monday, April 29, 2013
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Coming round
Back in the cabin, repaired, painted, and cleaned, for Sunday Evening Practice. Then, afterwards, compline.
The question arises, again: remain a hermit? or, throw hat in ring for full time position?
Searching out "no" answers. None forthcoming. Will have to take another tack.
The question arises: Where do you want to die?
That answer is easy: nowhere.
Then, just do
what I am
doing.
Only moreso.
The question arises, again: remain a hermit? or, throw hat in ring for full time position?
Searching out "no" answers. None forthcoming. Will have to take another tack.
The question arises: Where do you want to die?
That answer is easy: nowhere.
Then, just do
what I am
doing.
Only moreso.
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Feeling lucky?
The are no second chances. There is only the first chance repeated.
Until we take it. And that's no chance at all.
Until we take it. And that's no chance at all.
Friday, April 26, 2013
You inspire me
Drones kill the way madmen kill. Without shame.
I ask my government to return to sanity.
It is a shame to kill so many innocents.
I will no longer use drones, albeit metaphoric drones.
Let this be an inspiration.
Embrace this, be sane!
I ask my government to return to sanity.
It is a shame to kill so many innocents.
I will no longer use drones, albeit metaphoric drones.
Let this be an inspiration.
Embrace this, be sane!
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Balance returns
Back to Thursday conversation 20/20/20. Equal triadic hour of sitting silence, collation, & recollection. Tonight some Edwina Gateley, Dietrich Von Hildebrand, then Richard Rohr.
Kindly companionship, a new beginning!
Kindly companionship, a new beginning!
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
That's all for me
"The universe is a communion of subjects,
not a collection of objects."
--Thomas Berry
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
The next words are yours
The young boys fell to bomb blast;
One was 8 years old -- He died.
One was 19. He thinks about
the other boy, the one he killed
with a bomb.
Both boys would have preferred
inattention.
On a sunny day in Boston,
runners crossing finish line,
where we are right there, there
where nothing else is,
beginning the world again --
asking: Who sees what is
taking place, sees what is
the origin of what is to come?
One was 8 years old -- He died.
One was 19. He thinks about
the other boy, the one he killed
with a bomb.
Both boys would have preferred
inattention.
On a sunny day in Boston,
runners crossing finish line,
where we are right there, there
where nothing else is,
beginning the world again --
asking: Who sees what is
taking place, sees what is
the origin of what is to come?
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