he was killed and dismembered
trump suggests he deserved it
bin salman is feted at white house
trump suggests he deserves it
those who fail to understand this ugliness
deserve both these men, the shame, and
degradation
he was killed and dismembered
trump suggests he deserved it
bin salman is feted at white house
trump suggests he deserves it
those who fail to understand this ugliness
deserve both these men, the shame, and
degradation
I apologize
I’ve been crude
I criticized visiting prince
and the king of usa
I should know my place
speak about jesus, or
muhammad, krishna or
jacob -- you know, those
beyond reproach, the ideals
we might tithe or prostrate to
instead, these mortal men slither
and swoon across payouts and
bribes, grifts and criminal smiles
mocking any questioner questioning
their deception, theft, or ugliness --
I apologize
I’m sure my opinion is irrelevant
as is the gospel, koran, gita, and torah,
those inconveniences nicely bound
in leather covers, on book shelves, off to side
dog snores on rug
two compromised men sit in Oval Office
i'd rather the dog’s company
everything corrupts, is impermanent
truth sours in liars' mouths, still we
contemplate any path to wisdom
read poets, psalms, pericopes
inching toward enlightened understanding,
the memory of dear and sweet acquaintances
if you murder
and dismember
a Washington Post
correspondent, we
will welcome you
with gifts and guns
flying munitions pomp
and circumstance
because . . . we don’t
care . . . we’re hollow
and diseased -- welcome
don’t look back, Satchel Paige said
good advice
the past is never what we remember
the past is a different dimension
somewhere off in a different direction;
on 70th street and 20th avenue Hershkowitz
grocery next to Archie’s soda shop
just down from Mr. Epstein’s tailor’s
I remember Jane walking by to subway
just that, she was tall, I was unconscious
high school years, our universe was
a square block beyond which -- the void
Licks her paw
Looks out open window
Screen at nose
Wants breakfast
Sun slants
Deer across road
Man complicates
With lies
Arising moening
Take inanity out of Christianity.
Begin to explore ‘Christ’ without ‘ianity’
Tell me what you arrive at
“The only time I don’t have to pee is when I am peeing.” (—elderly man in series ‘The Beast in Me’)
We’ve got to admire taste, however bitter, when we see it.
connoisseurship \ ˌkɑnəˈsɜrʃɪp \ noun
1. love of or taste for fine objects of art
2. expertise in a particular subject, especially an area of art
There is an art of dodging, evasion, chicanery, subterfuge, and mendacity.
We are regaled with the best this current administration has to offer.
Time will go by.
Perhaps we’ll laugh at the canvas depicting the close call we survived.
Perhaps we’ll mourn and weep and lament the collapsed sculpture, the destruction, de-effectuation, disappearance, and catastrophized rubble.
1.
We’ve not known in this country someone like our chief executive.
Now we do.
In Maine there’s this saying, “Hard telling, not knowing.”
2.
When Christ finally realized there was no one to save him, he stood before Pilate, a bloody representation of this truth.
Then he was killed.
When we realize this truth, we say, “Nah, not me."
We’re not killed, maybe, but something more intriguing. We glean what Christian means. And walk away.
3.
If eternal means only now, no time, then now is only what God is, only what life is.
Some call
These wanderings
Spontaneous
Others
That it is
Being lost
Unfocused
Disconnected
Without enthusiasm
Rain
slowly arriving
dawn
Last night
Final pee
Yellow-green eyes
Just beyond
Enclosure fence
Woman put Apple peals
I wave
Dog unphased
Late night snack
Reading about Irish crime family
Doing billion dollar cocaine business
Money laundering, ocassional hits
Sometimes prison, the danger and
Glamor of it all
I realize I’m way out of my depth
Criticizing the first family of crime
In the U.S., as though nobody knew
Of their shenanigans, their popinjay
Struts, smiles, sneers, brazenness
New Yorker article (when do I ever
Open the magazine?) reads like a
Netflix movie causing me to
Remember what an old shit I am
Poking my nose into someone’s
Corrupt but powerful, maybe necessary
Business this time of the world. That’s
Why we watch the telly, to be entertained
By cruel crime and corruption— best to
Leave the real criminality to itself
I look around at books by my chair —
Philo the Jew, Changing Light at
Sandover, Latin American Poetry,
The Journal of Religion — out of date
Sunday New York Times — Ilia Delio —
It has always been this way, nobodies
Like me wander about the edges of
Culture curious about things they’ll never
Comprehend, and the real players, smug
And untouchable, sitting at center, parrots
Late do I finish night prayer.
Late do I have any idea what I am doing.
1. Te lucis ante términum,
1. Before the ending of the day,
Rerum Creátor póscimus,
creator of the world, we pray
Ut solíta cleméntia
that with thy wonted favor thou
Sis præsul ad custódiam.
wouldst be our guard and keeper now
… …. …
Salve, Regína, mater misericórdiæ:
Hail holy Queen, Mother of mercy,
Vita, dulcédo, et spes nostra, salve.
our life, our sweetness, and our hope.
Ad te clamámus, éxsules, fílii Hevæ.
To thee do we cry, poor banished children of Eve.
Ad te suspirámus, geméntes et flentes in hac lacrimárum valle.
To thee do we send up our sighs, mourning and weeping In this valley of tears.
Eia ergo, Advocáta nostra,
Turn then, most gracious Advocate,
illos tuos misericórdes óculos ad nos convérte.
thine eyes of mercy toward us.
Et Jesum, benedíctum fructum ventris tui,
And after this our exile show unto us
nobis post hoc exsílium osténde.
the blessed fruit of thy womb, Jesus.
O clemens! O pia! O dulcis Virgo María!
O clement, O loving, O sweet Virgin Mary.
…. … …
Upon reflection, there’s no place else I’d rather be, nothing else I’d rather be doing.
Hic et nunc!
Hic et nunc!
Earth doesn't tire
Turns, spins revolves, floats — tell me
What are you, doing
We are this cosmos
Dangling emptiness watching
Itself — sees nothing
This look through night chant
Monastic choir rising
Falling into God
Perhaps it is listening itself.
The body does not know how to discourse or to listen to a discourse. This which is unmistakably perceivable right where you are, absolutely identifiable, yet without form, this is what listens to the discourse.
—Rinzai (d.867) dailyzen
Drop the”I” drop the “you”, try not to think about it.
Can you hear it?
(Me neither.What now?)
I don’t know.
Where do I go from here?
I don’t know.
(pause, pause...)
... ... ...
“The body,” Rinzai (d. 876) tells us, “does not know how to discourse or to listen to a discourse ... This which is unmistakably perceivable right where you are, absolutely identifiable yet without form - this is what listens to the discourse.” Here the Chinese master, along with Kabir and the rest, is echoing the Surangama Sutra (a pre-Zen Indian scripture) which teaches that it’s absurd to suppose that we see with our eyes, or hear with our ears: it’s because these have melted together, and vanished into the absolute Emptiness of our “original bright and charming Face,” that experience of any sort is possible.”
― Douglas E. Harding, On Having No Head: Zen and the Rediscovery of the Obvious
God, I’m told, is here.
I am here, I’m told. You’d think
These tellings matter
We are living under the rule
of a man who doesn't care.
It’s unusual to be so damaged,
We suffer his lacunae.
Eyes must be open to see coming to definition shapes of civil dawn occurring outside window.
Revelation of what is there seems like creation out of nothing dark and unshapen.
There but not yet apparent.
We’ve called it creation, from nothing.
Appearance requires the availability of someone to perceive it.
Nothing is unpercieved.
Something is when what is there is seen by someone there to see it.
Readiness is all.
What’s right is each instant revealing itself in vicinity of an awareness available to allow and acknowledge what is coming to be sustained by necessary attention willing to take in and allow to be the thing itself as it is.
Way I see it, wrong has no way of sustaining itself. No one is actually there to sustain what is not there for any length of time absent the vivifying nurturance of actual care.
What is wrong has no nurture in nature to thrive beyond false positive.
So, we stay close to what is right, wait for it to rub sleep from eyes, stretch our limbs, and walk out into light.
Take heart! What’s right and what’s true will prevail — only with creative presence revealing itself to itself.
If you will. If we will. If I will.
Freely assent to it all.
Dwell with wisdom and love surrounded by what is here.
Coming to be with it as parent, as apparent participipant in whole process of revelation.
We are creating the cosmos, the universe, the coming-to-be of what-is, always and only here, and, now.
Can you see,
what I am,
referring to
As
Who I am
Coming to be
With
Care
In prison today
Bonaventure’s center
everywhere periphery
nowhere — quantum
God, nirvana, aesthetic
thislife not afterlife
Mindfulness is reincarnation
To dwell in present moment is to not be dead
Here and now is the only thing that is
In a conversation On Time, Mystery, and Kinship, An Interview with Jane Hirshfield in Convergence magazine, October 24, 2024, Hirshfield says:
JHIt’s only like four lines. So I probably have it by heart, but I’m going to find it in the book that I have, because then I won’t be nervous about getting a word wrong. What I was perplexed by was, how can anyone who has children or grandchildren or imagines the future, how can anyone not behave—2004, remember?—as if global warming is established fact, and as if we might need to do something to prevent its getting worse? And so I’ll read you the poem and then I’ll say why this introduction led to this poem.
Global WarmingWhen his ship first came to Australia,Cook wrote, the nativescontinued fishing, without looking up.Unable, it seemed, to fear what was too large to be comprehended.
Now that’s a true story, and I found it in the historian Robert Hughes book about Australia. But why this poem led to this title and this framing—why that story led to this—is it helped me find compassion for the climate deniers. And I want to find compassion. I do not want to be angry, and I do not want to be totally bewildered, which is how I was feeling, and say, How can anyone—said the indignant, leaping little Jane inside of me, How, how, how?And when I found this story, I understood how: “unable to fear what was too large to be comprehended.” And, you know, right or wrong, I’m sure there were some people who understood just fine and decided to be short-term greedy over long-term concerned. But I feel better as a human being if I can find compassion. —Ibid
. . .
There are many things too large to be comprehended.
I go about my fishing.
. . .
I also read Stephen Batchelor’s After Buddhism, Rethinking the Dharma for a Secular Age (2015).
He is interested in translating suffering as reactivity.
Non-reactivity is the experience of nirvana -- not reacting, but responding.
The transpersonal unity that is God, this is an arrival, he says, worth our interest.
He writes:
Consider how Gotama understands the Indian metaphor of rivers losing their identity when they pour into the ocean. The Muaka Upanishad says: “As the flowing rivers disappear into the sea, losing their name and form, thus a wise man, freed from name-form, goes to the Divine One.”[54] Here the aim of human life is to lose one’s identity as a person differentiated by name-form and merge into the transpersonal unity of God. For Gotama, however, the ocean becomes a metaphor for his dharma and the community of those who practice it. “Just as the great rivers on reaching the ocean lose their former names and identities, so also those of the four castes—nobles, brahmins, merchants, and workers—having gone forth from home to homelessness in the dharma and discipline, abandon their former names and identities and are just called ‘wanderers, followers of the Sakiyan Son.’”[55] Instead of losing oneself in mystic union with the Absolute, one loses one’s class identity in order to practice the dharma as a free, self-creating person.
--Stephen Batchelor, Ibid, 7. Experience, (7)
. . .
My dharma room is quiet.
Everyone is here.
Practice continues.
There is a fishing pole leaning behind door.
There’s no bait and no hook at end of line.
When absurdity reveals its face
take down all mirrors
look away do something else
No image means
no issue to face
We are free when
Invisible
Say good
Bye
Moon rises over bald mountain
One is across the road
The other 238,856 miles away —
So it seems, so it seems
early winter
hits this land
icy hatred and cruelty
cover the streets
only a sane mind
and warm heart
can reverse
this frigid time --
cosmic algorithm
longs for caring defrost
waits for
it
of course we’re fragile
anything can hurt us
but its the sharp bad ideas
that cut the deepest
like “we don’t want you here”
like “poor people are disgusting”
stop it!
heal the sickness of ideology
heal the ugliness of self-referential
narcissism and grandiosity, you
are now patient number one in
this current moral plague
get treatment, go for healing
don’t throw up on the rest of us
we have our own lies to negotiate
our own deceptions to navigate
we don’t need yours, not a bit --
let’s assume you’re simply hurting
someone in pain, innerly distraught
deep-rooted conflict, emotional nausea
we can commit to helping you heal
we don’t have to scream and curse you
we’ve not exhausted sympathy, empathy
we’re not cruel, unfeeling, you’re one of us
do you see this? can you understand this?
you are not alone until you are alone --
and if you are alone, we are all alone
an abyss of unconnected dissolution
so, stop it, stop the ugly screenplay
written for you by the worse self within
throw it out, face a new blank page
stare at it, don’t make a mark, wait ...
it will come to you, the healing diacritical
mark, the word that begins anew what longs
to connect to next word, gathering phrase
sustaining sentence full of copulatives and
parallel lines, verses of interspecific gather
a realization of something you are not yet --
we are fragile
don’t let the fear of it run you into psychosis
yes, you will live on further until you die
but you won’t die detached from everything
the way you seem to be right now
thinking you are the only one, the best, the king --
you’re not, you’re one of us, be that, before it's
too late, for you, for us, forgone and forlorn
round up the jews
round up the latinos
round up führer’s enemies
round up president’s critics
germany wound up ugly
america grounds up decency
and we the people? our wound
is too deep to feel, but mortal
hitler was ugly in belief and act
trump is ugly with ice and lies
fury and furor follow indignity
round and round we go
and where it’ll stop
we know, we know
Richard Rohr’s Center for Action and Contemplation today:
https://cac.org/daily-meditations/set-yourself-on-the-right-way/ |
I watch moonlight
On empty road
Very slowly
Pale distance
Lumbering gait
One car
Passes through
This meditation
Vigiling
Sacred transition
From here to
Deeper here
Not sure it’s understood what is meant by the word hermitage. It’s where a hermit lives. It’s not really a meditation center. It’s not really much of anything anymore, if it ever was.
So it’s nice when exiting the barn there is a car in the dooryard and a man standing next to it. He was wondering about the “Dogen” center and if people came on retreat here. “No,” I said, "we don’t do much public stuff anymore." An Israeli, he tells me about his children, his interest in Buddhism, and I point him to the chapel/zendo.
The last few days we’ve run into three or four old-timers from meetingbrook, whether at marine harbor, small grocery store, large grocery store. It feels like a school reunion, to which I never go.
The hermitage has gone inside itself.
I love that there are places groups gather to meditate. Our conversations seem to be our only public practice -- on zoom three times a week, in prison twice a week, and soul-friend conversations whenever they happen. Although, the other resident at the hermitage carries the frequency of such encounters.
I have gone remarkably idiorrhythmic.
It’s not really an advance in practice. More like a meandering haphazard awareness that everyplace is meditation hall, every person is sangha practitioner, each bit of news is dharma talk, whatever arises is koan study.
Bald Mountain across the way grows dark. A tilting fade of blue sky above it with darker clouds scattered. The clock-change sobers everything.
Perhaps one thing a hermit does is live the alone.
The alone, or the Alone, is a curious mystery. Hard to tell whether it is a general meshugana, or some form of undiagnosed idiopathy that arises and remains. Or, giving a positive spin, there is a beckoning into legitimate contemplative homeopathy burrowing below an asymptomatic absorption into the unknown.
The world is a monastery, this residence is a hermitage, my life is a mendicancy dependent on what falls into the begging bowl of my grateful soul.
circumnavigating an unasked koan
My words are leaves
falling through bare branches
on a path never swept clear
I let them settle where they fall
my life has no direction
at all
both a concern
and (surprisingly, happily)
a joy
(wfh, nunc)
“Being in the world is essentially care.” (Martin Heidegger)
If so, those who act in uncaring ways are, essentially, not in the world.
One can only wonder where they are?
If not here, where?
With so many in the current Washington DC administration, we look at their attitudes and actions are reasonably conclude they’re not from around here.
They live a little distance from themselves.
And very far from the rest of us.
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/browse?volume=87&issue=6&page=1 (ff)
I find Les Transparents,
by Rene Char.
Then it occurs to me:
Nothing is hidden from us
We are the ones invisible
Dwelling as
Not willing to be seen
We think: ‘I’d love to see God’
But, alors, God is not to be seen —
God is “affable and quick of tongue”
And we are morose
and slow to hear
Transparencies, that’s what we are
Reluctant to be morning
Sunlight glinting off passing cars
something was lighter
in the air today
like breaking surface
gasping for air --
the relief that barrier
can be broached
no hand holding down head
fresh breath suddenly drawn
Thinking of Peter Maurin (1877-1949), his curiously written essays, friendship with Dorothy Day, The Catholic Worker.
Blowing the Dynamite
Writing about the Catholic Church,
a radical writer says:
“Rome will have to do more
than to play a waiting game;
she will have to use
some of the dynamite
inherent in her message.”
To blow the dynamite
of a message
is the only way
to make the message dynamic.
If the Catholic Church
is not today
the dominant social dynamic force,
it is because Catholic scholars
have failed to blow the dynamite
of the Church.
Catholic scholars
have taken the dynamite
of the Church,
have wrapped it up
in nice phraseology,
placed it in an hermetic container
and sat on the lid.
It is about time
to blow the lid off
so the Catholic Church
may again become
the dominant social dynamic force.
The Catholic Church, like the US Government, is a potential force for good, if the personnel within each are able to transcend their personal and moral flaws.
As does, the above sentence, apply to me.
(Damn, non-duality!)