Thursday, June 18, 2026

chicago

 dignified ex-President 

and First Lady --

such delight

temet nosce

when the vase breaks

flowers scatter

glass shatters


one cannot understand  

what one is doing if

thinking about it


one is not one when

it becomes two -- oh the joy

should one come to know this

why monks and nuns have no flotation devices

when Kierkegaard retold the story

of Abraham and Isaac he was telling


about the commander telling bunker pilots

to shoot the shit out of an Iranian girl’s school


they did, they did not withhold the knife

they slit their daughter’s throats


but it’s ok, the commander got richer

his nestlings got stupider, the people


dimmer, the country more baffled than ants

scurrying to bet on sports and buy red hats


When last I looked, the stymied were legion

the ugly reprobates were having suits cleaned


and the monks and nuns were trying to balance

their teetering boat on river rapids careening wildly


it’s simple, there is no safe passage, the biblical story

was edited to reflect a test, a test (ha!) instead of this world

山道

We watch The Mountain Path - 山道 - 

learning with China's Buddhist Hermits



a quiet reflection --

each step, each face, each glance



how difficult the hermit life

how joyful seeing it



this mountain path

these huts and happy hermits

i remember thinking, who writes like this

Documentary on Charles Bukowski 

his wanting to do nothing, drink, sleep,

sex, and write

AI Overview


Charles Bukowski is most famous for his gritty, unapologetic "dirty realism" and for popularizing a hard-drinking, anti-establishment literary persona. Through his raw poetry and novels, he chronicled the dark, unglamorous side of urban American life—specifically in Los Angeles—focusing on outcasts, alcoholics, gambling, and poverty


I read him in the seventies and eighties

he was raw and notably monotonous

something of his writing says

just put it down, don’t dress it up

    someone collected some Bukowski quotes:
    1. Great art is horse shit, buy tacos.
    2. An intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way.
    3. Find what you love and let it kill you.
    4. Sometimes you climb out of bed in the morning and you think, I’m not going to make it, but you laugh inside – remembering all the times you’ve felt that way.
    5. People run from rain but sit in bathtubs full of water.
    6. Nothing is worse than to finish a good shit, then reach over and find the toilet paper container empty. Even the most horrible human being on earth deserves to wipe his ass.
    7. Baby, I said, I'm a genius but nobody knows it but me.
    8. I guess the only time most people think about injustice is when it happens to them.
    9. The tigers have found me and I do not care.
    10. And yet women –– good women –– frightened me because they eventually wanted your soul, and what was left of mine, I wanted to keep.
    11. Bad taste creates many more millionaires than good taste.
    12. The nine-to-five is one of the greatest atrocities sprung upon mankind. You give your life away to a function that doesn’t interest you.
    13. I wanted the whole world or nothing.
    14. How the hell could a person enjoy being awakened at 6:30AM, by an alarm clock, leap out of bed, dress, force-feed, shit, piss, brush teeth and hair, and fight traffic to get to a place where essentially you made lots of money for somebody else and were asked to be grateful for the opportunity to do so.

--from 95 Charles Bukowski quotes that blew my f*cking mind.

WRITTEN BY COLE SCHAFER



closed gate, dishes in sink

 Hissing tires on wet road

Buddha watches me

There is a hermit

In this vicinity

Hasn't been seen yet

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

astounding at sounding

 Motorcycle

Burps by

Dopplering

Towards town

o say can you see, can you hear

 The loyal courtiers of the naked emperor

Are also naked


What a world

Admiring each other’s tuchus


Their posteriors shiny buffed

With gold leaf and green dollars


This new aesthetic

Gauche, vulgar, perverted


An American symphony

For the deaf and dumb

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

night life

 The frog

Inside barn door

Scooted behind box

As we came through

the possibility of sheltering and caring for each other.

 Reading preface on porch to Responding to Loss: Heideggerian Reflections on Literature, Architecture, and Film, by Robert Mugerauer.

Straw hat shading eyes. 

Thinking about how worlds open.

How there are innumerable worlds within what we call one world.

How every hour is a different world.

Abstract

The Crossing opens the enigma of whether we live in a chaos or in an ordered realm. In McCarthy's novel of death and destruction almost all that one cares for is taken away, seemingly without human or divine pity, though a few things, such as a church, are stubborn, refusing to pass. Heidegger's explication of Heraclitus and Anaximander considers how things are out of joint in regard to time: the insistence necessary to things generates injustice because by persisting they do not let other things come forth. Contrary, another rereading of Anaximander tells us that things also have the possibility of sheltering and caring for each other. In the end, we have only the conflicting testimony on both sides of the case. Clearly our usual understanding of nature, mortals, and the gods is woefully inadequate; nonetheless, we are called to respond, to make a judgment ourselves.

https://academic.oup.com/fordham-scholarship-online/book/13101/chapter-abstract/166342292?redirectedFrom=fulltext 

I understand why some do not like Kierkegaard or Heidegger, McCarthy or Jean-Luc Marion. There is a cost to reading them. Our frugality reveals our interests.

And so, the day slips away.

Address and responsiveness. So too Toynbee's challenge and response. How we go on.

I suspect it’s silly to continue to read philosophy after all these years.

Might be.

And yet, and yet, and yet...

everywhere I hear the tweet of birds.

At practice Sunday someone said that Confucianism was too rigid for them. That’s understandable. The tight lines of duty up and down the scale can easily feel constraining.

Meng hao-jan might have been listening.

 Confucian and Taoist: though different ways,

They merge here in all this forest and cloud,

Our two minds joined together in such joy


As we talk and laugh in the day’s last light.




Ready for sleep, we return


To high twilight windows,


Gaze across distant peaks aflame:


It carries thought back to red-cliff beacons,


Brings memories of towering coastal peaks.




With a creek’s windswept sound so crystalline,


Who needs the tune of a silent mountain sage?



    --Meng hao-jan (689-740)


Wikipedia says "He had the desire to pursue a career in politics in his youth, but never succeeded in securing an official position.[1]

He stayed as a hermit in his locale and practiced landscape poetry.

春眠不覺曉,
處處聞啼鳥。
夜來風雨聲,
花落知多少。

 In spring slumber, I am unaware of daybreak, 


 Though everywhere I hear the tweet of birds.


 Last night came the sound of wind and rain;   

                                                                                          

Who knows how many flowers must have fallen?   

--Mêng Hao-jan; 689/691–740)  

Perhaps his duty was to wind and rain, sound and flowers.

We are lucky to have each one of us telling what we see and feel in one another’s presence. 

seeks/finds//finds/troubled//troubled/astonished// -- / reign

We look at

The whole 

Through fragments


We see

Fragments through

The whole



Gospel of Thomas Saying 2



This Gospel of Thomas Commentary is part of the Gospel of Thomas page at Early Christian Writings.


Nag Hammadi Coptic Text [tap for clearer view]




BLATZ

(2) Jesus said: He who seeks, let him not cease seeking until he finds; and when he finds he will be troubled, and when he is troubled he will be amazed, and he will reign over the All.

LAYTON

(2) Jesus said, "Let one who seeks not stop seeking until that person finds; and upon finding, the person will be disturbed; and being disturbed, will be astounded; and will reign over the entirety."

DORESSE

1 [2]. Jesus says: "Let him who seeks cease not to seek until he finds: when he finds he will be astonished; and when he is astonished he will wonder, and will reign over the universe!"

Oxyrhynchus Greek Fragment


2.

[Néya 'In(ooũ)5]

uh TaUoáo0w ó Tn[tấ Tốũ Tntấy đoc ẩv]

súọn, Koi ötav aóon, [Oaußn0noetot kai Oap]

Bn0as Baoraon kali Baoltaoas avana]


nostaI.

DORESSE - Oxyrhynchus

[Jesus says:] "Let him who see[ks] cease not [to seek until he] finds: when he finds, [he will wonder; and when he wond]ers, he will reign, and [reigning, he will have r]est!"

ATTRIDGE - Oxyrhynchus

(2) [Jesus said], "Let him who seeks continue [seeking until] he finds. When he finds, [he will be amazed. And] when he becomes [amazed], he will rule. And [once he has ruled], he will [

 

Scholarly Quotes


Marvin Meyer quotes two parallel passages in the Book of Thomas the Contender (The Gospel of Thomas: The Hidden Sayings of Jesus, pp. 68-69). 


The first: "[Fortunate is] the wise person who has [sought truth, and] when it has been found, has rested upon it for ever, and has not been afraid of those who wish to trouble the wise person." (Book of Thomas 140,41 - 141,2) The second: "Watch and pray. . . . And when you pray, you will find rest. . . . For when you leave the pains and the passions of the body, you will receive rest from the Good One, and you will rule with the king, you united with him and he united with you, from now on, for ever and ever." (Book of Thomas 145,8-16) 


A somewhat similar statement is found from Clement of Alexandria: "Being baptized, we are illuminated; illuminated we become sons; being made sons, we are made perfect; being made perfect, we are made immortal." (Instructor, 1.6.26.1) 


Funk and Hoover write: "Thom 2:2-4 is a gnostic expansion: the gnostic quest leads to being disturbed, which causes one to marvel, and that ends in reigning. The Greek fragment of this same verse adds a fifth stage: the reign of the gnostic results in 'rest,' which is the gnostic catchword for salvation. 


Gnostic insight into the 'real world,' as opposed to the world of appearances, is what brings all this about. The term 'rest' is employed in the book of Revelation, on the other hand, for future salvation: those who die in the Lord 'may rest from their labors' (Rev 14:13)." (The Five Gospels, p. 471) 


Robert M. Grant and David Noel Freedman write: "'Rest' is mentioned not in the Coptic text but in the Greek fragment; but 'rest' or 'repose' occurs in Sayings 51, 52, 60, 61, 86, and 90. It is found in the Gospel of the Hebrews (Clement of Alexandria, Strom., 2, 45, 5; 5, 96, 3), from which this saying is taken; presumably the author of Thomas changed the saying in order to lay emphasis on the idea of becoming a king. Compare 2 Timothy 2:11-12: 'Trustworthy is the saying, "If we have died with him, we shall also live with him; if we have endured, we shall reign with him.' The difference, once more, is between the action of the Christian and the knowing of the Gnostic." (The Secret Sayings of Jesus, p. 120) 


J. D. Crossan writes: "The restoration of the Greek text in Oxy P 654, of which only the first half of each line is extant, is relatively secure due to its citation by Clement of Alexandria (Fitzmyer, 1974:372-373; Hofius: 27; Marcovich: 56). In form it is a quadruple-stich saying climactically word-linked from one stich to the next: seeks/finds//finds/astounded//astounded/reign//reigned/rest (see Hennecke and Schneemelcher: 1.164)." (In Fragments, pp. 99-100) 


J. D. Crossan writes: "On the other hand, the version in Gos. Thom. 2 breaks both the form and content of that Greek version: seeks/finds//finds/troubled//troubled/astonished// -- / reign. The result is that the Coptic version climaxes with "rule" while the Greek text climaxes with "rest" (see Bammel, 1969). It is fairly certain that the Greek version is more original, but it is difficult to explain the Coptic deviation since 'rest' is one of Thomas's major themes (Vielhauer, 1964:297). The best explanation is probably some form of misreading of his Greek original by the Coptic translator (see Marcovich: 57; or Menard, 1975:79)." (In Fragments, p. 100)


...   ...   ...


Visitor Comments


When you speak (pray) to God~Ultimate Reality, never cease to listen for the answer coming back. You are all capable of hearing (or otherwise realizing) this answer upon truly listening. You will be amazed at what you are told. Eventually when you learn your true place in the scheme of things you will have a degree of control over your reality by virtue of understanding its true nature. This will enable you to follow your planned path of life in a more peaceful and accepting manner. You will have learned that life is verily a dream and God is the dreamer, dreaming you.
- active-mystic


One who strives for the best above all else will one day learn that all he has strived for has in the end rotted away. When he realizes this he is disgusted that he hasn't spend more time with his family or had more fun. Then he is astounded that he can still do all these things. So he does. The moral of the story is, love and be loved in return, lay your heart out on the line for a gamble. When you can learn to do this then life will be happy.
- puzzled, but clearer


When you seek and find the child within, you will be most profoundly disturbed by the horror of your upbringing. You will marvel at the beauty of your innate self and, in time you will become lord and servant of yourself.
- Rodney


I have noticed that quite a few of the interpretations of these sayings which seem to make sense include a reference to the Gospel of Thomas itself. Applying this idea to this saying, I get: Let one who seeks the meaning of the Gospel of Thomas not stop seeking until one finds. When one finds, one will be disturbed. When one is disturbed, one will marvel, and will reign over all.
- Ruthie


The minds of men have been temporarily lost from God (the "fall"), but when we seek to rejoin from that which we think we separated from (the Mind of God)Jesus tells us to persevere, and that by doing so we will come to see that the world that we thought was real isn't (an initially disturbing, troubling event for us), but as we reunite with God we will be truely amazed, and being One once again with All That Is we will "rule" All That Is.
- A Brother


Continue in your quest until you find. When you find [succeed] you will be changed [reborn] and see everything differently. A technical injunction
- Thief37


There is an old saying in science that "The more I know, the more I learn I don't know." The Gospel writer is telling us that Jesus understood eternity in this way. Seek an answer, don't give up; you will find one. However, when you do, you will be astonished to learn that the answer you seek is not an end in and of itself; it only leads you to ten more questions; seek those answers; for each answer there is ten more questions and on and on and on. Eventually, you will get it--there is no end to questions, to life, to God. To know this truly inspires wonder.
- Crimson731


Rhizoid is correct. Also as you seek to destroy the ego, realizations of how the world is and how many people are blind to truth will be "disturbed" then as you further seek you understand the nature of duality then you reign.
- bravenewmind


Never stop seeking because you will find the answers, but the answers will trouble you because they will show you the illusions under which you have conducted your life in the past. Once the veil lifts off your eyes you will begin to see the wonder of the universe and be angry that so many things had been hidden from us by individuals in the past who destroyed the keys. But the messages still resound loudly to anyone who wishes to listen. And then you will reign over the world because the world is an illusion.
- daisy


When the seeker has at last attained unto a better understanding of God, he will be troubled. What he finds in God will not be what he had been expecting, what he had been taught to look for. By seeking for God on his own he found the truth, and from that truth comes power, and, at least according to the Greek texts, to spiritual peace.
- Kevin


Answer: Jesus meant that you must be persistent in your meditation, fasting, and prayer. You then stumble into experiences that are beyond explanation with words. Jesus does not speak to the higher states of consciousness that present themselves with such diligent persistent work. Jesus speaks to the astounded surprises, etched with question and disbelief. How continued persistence study and practice brings eventual communion with your spiritual essence. Continued work leads to your discovering spiritual essence is inside you, outside you, and all around you. That you are spiritually connected with everything. The end portion of this statement of "Reign over everything, universe" was a misunderstanding that Jesus had of achieving the Unity consciousness with his inner spiritual essence. Without a teacher to point out that unity consciousness was not being god and that he was still a physical being experiencing this astounding state. He misunderstood this state. Everyone back then was expecting the messiah and this unity consciousness under these Jewish expectations would certainly bewilder and confuse Jesus as to who he really was.
- AG


When you understand the truth about why you experience your own existence, you become astonished because you realize that death is not absolute. At the same time you become disturbed because the truth also threatens the preconceptions of your ego. When you transcend these preconceptions, liberation of the spirit occurs.
- Rhizoid



https://www.earlychristianwritings.com/thomas/gospelthomas2.html