walking mountain trail
hard frozen ground frozen brook
dog sniffs air sniffs ground --
everything draws in -- the cold
stumbles down pathway back home
walking mountain trail
hard frozen ground frozen brook
dog sniffs air sniffs ground --
everything draws in -- the cold
stumbles down pathway back home
He didn’t think the 2024 election was rigged.
His followers didn’t violently oppose the electoral vote count today.
Fake news recorded his prevailing votes by Congress.
God’s in his heaven and women have to have babies.
The felon president-to-be files suit after suit to obfuscate justice for his crimes.
And all is Right with the world.
Canada will not become America’s 51st state. But its leader is out.
There will be excruciatingly absurd executive orders and whipped puppy dog congressional ploys.
Monks and nuns will chant and pray heaven reveal itself in our midst.
Hell asserts it now has clearance to attend all meetings in Oval Office, House of Representatives, and Senate Floor.
God goes on vacation to a far away galaxy a long, long, distance from planet earth and the Milky Way.
Pizza parlors suspend making large pies and will focus only on antipasto.
Universities and education facilities will cease teaching fact and will offer degree concentrations on gaslighting and blanket denials.
Blackjack tables will begin payouts on any draws that exceed 21. It will be called the new economy and will apply only to followers of MAGA who sincerely believe they could have won had they been luckier.
Taxi drivers will demand $100 down payment upon entering cab if you are not wearing a red tie or a button reading “I’d let him touch me.”
UPS drivers will begin making left turns and miss their deadlines in the suburbs.
Dogs and cats will cease their friendliness with humans…unless the humans in their household begin to genuflect every time Fox News says the Majestic Holy Leader’s name.
…. … …
I’ve been reading Immanent: Inside The Pentagon’s Hunt For UFOs, by Luis Elizondo, 2024.
It cheers me to think that what is hidden will be disclosed.
Both anomalous threats and rightwing posturing pique will become clearer.
I watch the incoming administration with keen interest.
Any day now, any day now, we shall be released.
Yes.
We’ll look at this in prison this morning:
Dark Matter
by Jack Myers.
I’ve lived my life as if I were my wife
packing for a trip—I’ll need this and that
and I can’t possibly do without that!
But now I’m about
what can be done without.
I just need a thin valise.
There’s no place on earth
where I can’t unpack in a flash
down to a final spark of consciousness.
No place where I can’t enter
the joyless rapture
of almost remembering
I’ll need this and I’ll need that,
hoping to weigh less than silence,
lighter than light.
—From The Memory of Water, published by New Issues Press. Copyright © 2011 by Jack Myers.
Weary of these times
I do not plant bomb, nor shoot
Machine gun, nor assasssinate
Anyone, nor off myself — i will
However, eat sweets drink seltzer
And admire trees and mountains
And plan to have ashes scattered
Colum McCann is good company.
He, along with Richard Rohr, reminds me that my holiday season was different, again, this year.
My shikantaza recliner, the window altar, the silent house, the rising and the setting of the days, the ever-near and almost-gone breath that encircled room, body and movement of cosmos.
A new cosmology, new theology, new mythology. The ever-unfolding and enfolding story of source, engagement, manifestation, and recombination of this encircling being.
She was a fount of Irish knowledge, and Russian knowledge, and even Jewish knowledge at times, a Helicon indeed, with some Greek thrown in and a smidge of Latin. Thankfully she never had to see me in the diaper, the nappy, the winter gear, down by those Salley gardens my love and I did meet.
He tilts his coffee cup and sighs. Empty now, just a small rivulet making its way along the inside of the porcelain. All life slowed down to this. The drip. The drop. The snow white feet.
Slowly falling, falling slowly. Out the window now. Big white flurries against the glass. That was a story she loved so much too, snow general all over Ireland, Michael Furey singing at the window, poor Gabriel left alone, the descent of his last end.
He tilts the coffee cup one last time and allows the last drop to fall on the newspaper where he watches it slowly blot and spread. A bi gezunt, his mother would have said. She was always one for the ancient phrase. You have your health, what more do you want?
(—from novel, Thirteen Ways of Looking, by Calum McCann, 2015)
And Rohr:
Father Richard Rohr summarizes a pattern of five stages of change that have taken place in religious and cultural institutions. He calls these stages the “Five M’s”: human, movement, machine, monument, and memory.It seems that many great things in history start with a single human being. If a person says something full of life that names reality well, the message often moves to the second stage of becoming a movement. That’s the period of greatest energy. The church is at its greatest vitality as the “Jesus Movement,” and the institution is merely the vehicle for that movement. No single person can ever control the movement itself through any theology, doctrine, or dogma. We cannot control the blowing of the Spirit. The movement stage is always very exciting, creative, and also risky.
It’s risky because God’s movement in history is larger than any denomination, any culture, or any tradition’s ability to verbalize it. We feel out of control in this stage, and yet why would anybody want it to be anything less? Would we respect and love a God that we could control? Would we really respect a church that presumed it could predict and contain God’s actions? I don’t think so, yet that’s what so much immature religion seems to want—control over God by worshiping and talking about God “correctly.” So, we move rather quickly out and beyond the risky movement stage to the machine stage. This is predictable and understandable, even if unfortunate in some ways.
The institutional or machine stage of a movement will necessarily be a less-alive manifestation. This isn’t bad, although it’s always surprising for those who see church as an end in itself instead of merely a vehicle for the original vision. When we don’t realize a machine’s limited capacities, we try to make it into something more than it is. We make it a monument, a closed system operating inside of its own, often self-serving, logic. By then, it’s very hard to take risks for God or for gospel values.
Eventually this monument and its maintenance and self-preservation become ends in themselves. It’s easy just to step on board and worship at a monument without ever knowing why or longing for God ourselves. There’s no hint of knowing that we are chosen and beloved by God, who invites us to an inner journey. In this state, religion is merely an excuse to remain unconscious, holding on to a memory of something that must once have been a great adventure. I’m afraid that Christianity is no longer life itself, but actually a substitute for life or, worse, an avoidance of life. The secret is to know how to keep in touch with the human and movement stages without being naïve about the necessity of some machines and the inevitability of those who love monuments. We must also be honest; all of us love monuments when they are monuments to our human, our movement, or our machine.
(--The Vitality of Movements, Sunday January 5, 2025, C.A.C.
I'm staying with the human, and the movement which moves -- inner to outer, within to without, resonance to absurdum.
I first studied the Theater of the Absurd in 1964 reading and attending a conference on same at St John's College in NY . An English professor at Callicoon pointed me to it. The juxtaposition of classical language studies with the Franciscans and the insights of Martin Esslin on Absurdity remains a Do-si-do that still spins my consciousness these sixty-one years later.
For now, I'm healthy enough to sustain the centripedal and centrifugal force of this go-round.
What more do I want?
. . .
Ran out, turned back
turned again in the road
Squirrel, runs under my tire
And thump, it, sadly, killed
No need to break your bones.
Nor to worry which way to go.
What is at your feet should suffice.
Sticks and Stones: Another Story About The Buddha
(--by Jack Myers)
A young man set out on a life-long journey to discover
the secret of how best to live. Collecting sticks along the
way
he traded them as kindling in return for a morsel of food
and some advice on how to best live.
He collected baskets of stones, and to people’s delight,
arranged them into graceful gardens of silence,
asking only for food and advice on how best to live.
Wherever he went, he traded in what wasn’t wanted
for what went wanting, a stick for fire, a stone for prayer,
while the things men said about the lives they lived,
which led in all directions, allowed him to live many
lives.
He learned that each man regretted the prospect of death,
and thus, regretting how he lived, lived distressed by that
dilemma.
And because the paths they tread were paved with
complaints
no one could see how the young Buddha lived,
by feeding sticks and stones to hunger.
--Poetry (October 1997)
If someone discards decency, pick it up.
If love is abandoned, take it in.
If wisdom is ignored, say hello.
We can live this way, learn from what has been tossed away, become grateful for what is found.
feeding livestock
sunflower seeds
cold morning
birds fly in
fly out
this aerial farm
A theater piece in lower house with agonizing antagonists steely-jawed unwilling to cast their measly three votes for Geppetto’s boy on first vote for speaker of the house, third in line in presidential succession. Then time froze. Nothing moves. An hour passes.
Then mirabile dictu, the master’s voice, deus ex machina crawls through the ether up the east coast from paradise, saying to two of the holdouts— “this is my toady son, and you are vile nobodies, vote for him now or I will castrate you and toss you into the boiling sea.”
And going forward, it was done, and there was cheer and much rejoicing in the land of delusion and defilement.
The spiritual light shines alone,
Far transcending the senses
And their fields;
The essential substance is exposed,
Real and eternal.
It is not contained in written words.
The nature of mind has no defilement;
It is basically perfect and complete in itself.
Just get rid of delusive attachments,
And merge with realization of thusness.
—Pai-chang (720–814) dailyzen
Dawn light gives shape to bare branches and treetop line looking east.
The holiday season was spent reading, walking from front room to wohnkūche and back to feed cats and refill water bottle. Sitting in armchair at large window with brass cross hanging from hundred twenty five year old ceiling beam. Watching dawn morning star, dusk evening star and daylight birds, as trucks and cars traverse Barnestown road.
A shikantaza tilting compact recliner beside windowsill's altar where Buddha and Christ, Madonna and Child, original tree stump and single candle, complete the oratory of sona in situ — (sound in its original place), primum verbum in primo loco — (the first word in the first place).
Sacred word falls silently into what is being born.
All creation longs for true appearance.
Do you see that mirror reflection?
Enter there!
In prison this morning we talked about there being no outside,
Only inside moving its edge further and further
(Ok, an admission, there is an outside)
It's what remains after love has exhausted itself
Source generates expanding energy
Movement is what God is
Hence there is nothing
Outside God
consonance (n.). late 14c., "pleasing combination of sounds, harmony," from Old French consonance (12c.) "consonance, rhyme" and directly from Latin consonantia "harmony, agreement," from consonantem (nominative consonans) "agreeing in sound," present participle of consonare "to sound together, sound aloud" (see consonant (adj.)). From early 15c. as "agreement among persons as to facts or opinions." Meaning "accord or agreement of sounds in words or syllables" is from 1580s. (--online etymological dictionary)
67 says watch pulse
heart emojis flashing
I am technologically alive
light incense in chapel/zendo
buddha and kuanyin watch,
cross and virgin stay stoic
the big rain has stopped
cabin porch wet
rusted bell gives itself sound
Once I wanted to know --
now only to word breath
one consonant at a timeIt is time for practice
Looking into what is here
Quietly, silently
If you love anything
Practice, practice, practice
Reveal what is true, here
It’s after midnight
It must be now new year’s
No, that was 24 hrs ago
When New Year’s Eve ended
No, really, then today is…
Yes today is the 2nd
Then… i missed it?
Yes you did, miss it
Such a shame, i might have
Celebrated, made noise, sat zazen
Silly, silly me, i missed it
Yes you missed it
No going back, i suppose
No, no going back
Well then, onward, no time
To waste, we must prepare
For next year, next new year’s
I’ll be ready for it, just you see
I cannot settle on a book. The one on Deutsche Bank is too lugubrious in criminality and complicity to worldwide used viscous engine oil personality our next president.
The novel about a maine town crime does what many attempted reads do for me, remind me of arbitrariness of details to leave in or take out.
The lady poet inserting into gentleman poet’s life felt too self absorbed and self referential.
I settle on Colum McCann’s “Thirteen Ways of Looking.”
(Silly statements on a Wednesday evening. Like all opinions, extraneous.)
Such an odd feast, Mary, Mother of God.
I admit to liking that God has a mother,
However poorly, at times, in the gospel,
Jesus’ comments brushed passed her —
But more than that, the prospect that
The Creator had a mother, retroactive or
Rethought as it might have been, Mom,
Creating the Creator, speaking Logos
Into matter and language, nursing boo-boos,
Suckling the goo-goo intake of breast milk
la nostra mamma — our mother, hidden, humble,
Let down by eight billion offspring, and the
ancestry of so many more who never called her
On weekends
Mary
Thank you
I’ve forgotten
Your face.
1.
Reading about Lowell and Hochman
Meeting at Russian Tea Room
He is leaving his wife, he tells her
Walking, says he wants to marry her
He reads her “Brooklyn Bridge” on it
After Crane goes off stern into depths
2.
Watching DaVinci on PBS, the genius
Of it, how art breaks through, as
Lowell might compose a line of
Poetry out of mania and alcohol —
Book-worming on Marlborough his
Paean of West Street distress
3.
It is New Year’s Day, strawberry &
Blueberry pancakes, eggs and sausage
coffee brewed and
chocolate donut
from moody's diner
good enough start
to new year
cat on lap
dog
on
rug
Pouring rain
Ensō dog takes
two steps out
barn door, looks
back, decides
he can wait