Thursday, December 11, 2025
it was the character turning onto elm street from washington street that caught my attention
frag nicht, sonst müsste ich es dir erzählen
Body in bed, mind off into unrecognizable locations, spirit dwelling in different bodies.
You cannot convince me that I reside in a single place with one identity, or that you do, in one particular piece of geography, one linear time, one psychic narrative.
We are ubiquitous stories unraveling in multiple geographic arisings fashioned by innumerable longings and spiritual revelations.
Night sittingThe hermit doesn’t sleep at night:
In love with the blue of the vacant moon.
The cool of the breeze
That rustles the trees
Rustles him too.
Ching An (1841–1920)
if you ask me who I am I will tell you the truth.
I have only one request:
Don't ask!
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
each year on 10 december, anniversary of thomas merton’s death, we renew
Three promises:
Contemplation, Conversation, Correspondence.
...as held by Meetingbrook Dogen & Francis Hermitage“m.o.n.o.”(monastics of no other).
Contemplation is the promise of simplicity.
It is a gift of poverty inviting open waiting, receptive trust, attention, and watchful presence. It is a simple Being-With.
It is attentive presence.
Conversation is the promise of integrity.
It is a chaste and complete intention to listen and speak, lovingly and respectfully, with each and all made present to us. It is a wholeness of listening and speaking.
It is root silence.
Correspondence is the promise of faithful engagement.
It is responsible attention and intention offered obediently to the Source of all Being, to the Human Family, to Nature. It is a faithful engagement with all sentient beings, with this present world, with existence with all its needs & joys, sorrows & hope.
It is transparent service.
…………………………………………………………………
Meetingbrook Dogen & Francis Hermitage invites & welcomes individuals interested in the practice of these 3 promises in their life. Whether the interest is in conversing, praying, deepening, learning, or even holding these 3 promises, we invite you to enter the inquiry and stillness.
May the loving light and the compassionate peace of the Christ and the Bodhisattva accompany and support the efforts of each one.
………………………………………………………………..
Quotes:
1. We are going to have to create a new language of prayer. (Thomas Merton, Calcutta 1968)
2. When you go apart to be alone for prayer…see that nothing remains in your consciousness mind save a naked intent stretching out toward God. Leave it stripped of every particular idea about God (what he is like in himself or in his works) and keep only the awareness that he is as he is. Let him be thus, I pray you, and force him not to be otherwise. (Anonymous)
3. I long for a great lake of ale. / I long for the men of heaven in my house. / I long for cheerfulness in their drinking. / And I long for Jesus to be there among them. (Brigid, Celtic saint)
4. It is not by closing your eyes that you see your own nature. On the contrary, you must open your eyes wide and wake up to the real situation in the world to see completely your whole Dharma Treasure, your whole Dharma Body. The bombs, the hunger, the pursuit of wealth and power - these are not separate from your nature….You will suffer, but your pain will not come from your own worries and fears. You will suffer because of your kinship with all beings, because you have the compassion of an awakened one, a Bodhisattva. (Thich Nhat Hanh)
5. He who truly attains awakening knows that deliverance is to be found right where he is. There is no need to retire to the mountain cave. If he is a fisherman he becomes a real fisherman. If he is a butcher he becomes a real butcher. The farmer becomes a real farmer and the merchant a real merchant. He lives his daily life in awakened awareness. His every act from morning to night is his religion. (Sokei-an)
... ... ...
(First pronounced 10december1998)
thus come, thus gone
It seems like I get
confused sometimes
these days leading
up to Christmas/nativity
are not different from days
leading up to Good Friday/Easter
to be born is to die
to die is to be born
Христос воскрес!
Воистину воскрес!
Χριστός ανέστη!
Αληθώς ανέστη!
(Christ is risen!
He is truly risen!)
Ιδού, σας φέρνω χαρμόσυνα νέα.
Σήμερα γεννήθηκε για εσάς ένας σωτήρας.
Behold, I bring you good news:
Today a Savior has been born to you.
Who can separate these proclaiming words?
What knife can slice them apart?
That’s my confusion.
The attempt to cut one into two
The way misogynists and racists
push and pull and tear and sever
that which is whole and unified
complete and of a piece
I stop calling one thing something else
I look out over this grey afternoon
at what is born and dead, gone and come
a Tathāgata, thus come, thus gone
A Christos preceding existence or
manifestation -- the energy of eternal return
ultimate affirmation, yes and yes and yes
with every no a returning yes, MU! --things
as they are, being as it is, life and death
appearing and disappearing, a baby cries, we are
touched, a friend dies, we are touched --
rise up! don’t give up the ship! if you are
tired take a nap, if you are a dreaming dog
wag your tail, if it snows let it snow,
Нам дано быть в этом мире.
(Nam dano byt' v etom mire.)
(We are given the opportunity
to be in this world.)
hickory hill road, pennsylvania
I watch the birds
They come and go
Night snow on the feeder
I read Jo’s letter
31 years ago, it falls from box
She’d her first bone marrow transplant
It is found prose poetry, she combs
Daughter’s hair, who combs hers
Husband reads paper by fireplace
Then-child now lives down south
Jo and David are gone
Coffee cup down, kitchen empty
semi-ecstasy and aridity
“The life of a monk is a semi-ecstasy and forty years of aridity.” (Thomas Merton)
Road-plow goes by
Easting toward town
Thomas Merton died
Fifty-seven years ago
Twenty-seven years
To the day he was received
Into novitiate of Trappists;
A mysterious death in Bangkok —
Anyone who knows God is threat
To country and church
Our absent brother
Prayed for and to
All this time
As nothing passing
Tuesday, December 09, 2025
no practice is no enlightenment & vice versa
there are two footbridges
two brooks ten pet graves
as I walk incline of Ragged Mtn
it is so cold
fingers in gloves hurt
not even winter yet
I used to practice meditation
now I just sit just walk
just make coffee just write this
yes, yes i will, yes
Every life is in many days, day after day. We walk through ourselves, meeting robbers, ghosts, giants, old men, young men, wives, widows, brothers-in-love, but always meeting ourselves.” (James Joyce, Ulysses)
I’ll bite —
To answer your question
I don’t know
You asked
Where did he go?
I don’t know
You want me to
Tell you what I know
I don’t know
Do the dead
Carry on unburdened
I don’t know
Or a life within god
Or without god, alone
Here’s what I know
I don’t! —
G’wan, take a hike,
Leave me be, intimately
Monday, December 08, 2025
blow out the candle
happy bodhi-day to you
happy...
(birthday?)
no, bodhi-day
(wass-at?)
sigh,
let me enlighten you
mo chara aisteach
he left socks behind
and a hammer
he was buried today
near his ma and da
a candle burns
Bí i do shuaimhneas, a chara
when immaculate means unobstructed reposition, 8 december
Girl begins as no barrier
As open as open could be
Then filled with
No boundary itself
Wechsel zum Austausch mit der Leere
(Change to exchange with the void)
Mary
Mary
Mary
Conceived as the
Within
Without
Sunday, December 07, 2025
if you see god, give your best
I’m not going to Wash.DC, not me
Nope, not on your life, no way —
I’d rather stay home and wait
For news
Of demise
Or some other terminal celebration
I’ll just stay home
Immaculately concieved
Tathagata’s Bodhi-day
Departure of duplicity
Everyday mysticism
"تمويه" "tamwihi"
I'll read what is at hand
for instance, The Paris Review
"Camouflage", by Adania Shibli
translated from the Arabic
by Max Weiss. We wear disguises
It is during the pauses
between reading numbers
for the auditor at her desk
I open the tidy issue, Winter 2025
because it sits on cardboard box
next to chair, non-assiduously like
a lethargic cat you stroke because there
it gets dark early as days still shorten
the cold grips walls of old house
deer look to bed down on old leaves
dog on bed makes snoring sounds
the kufiyya on dashboard, then hiding
it from checkpoint soldiers, then waving
it at young boys throwing stones at car
his uncamouflaged head in a dangerous land
streetwise
the buddhists in Augusta cancel
zoom practice this morning
I logged on three times
figured they’d thrown me out
the way buddhists do when mad,
gave me wrong link, frowned on me
turns out there was illness, said email
after I watched myself and cat
in front room chair by large window
I like buddhists
they stay well within themselves
even when in public, no soliciting
in fact, they’re hard to pick out
in a crowd, unless one is playing
shakuhachi on sidewalk behind coin cup
Saturday, December 06, 2025
ceart go leor
“Whosoever is delighted in solitude is either a wild beast or a God.” (Aristotle)
did I tell you my name
you did
ok
do you remember what it is,
my name,
do you
no
ok
well, guess i'll be leaving
bye
thanks for
the coffee --
ok
ceart go leor
ok
rearranging my dusty room
Finding sweatshirts from years ago, dress shirts from long long ago, ties from decades ago. Two hundred socks, some that match.
Discouraging accumulation of a recluse.
I’ve forgotten why these things inhabit my room. I wear a different dress shirt every day. I don’t go anywhere, just downstairs, walk the narrow trail up Ragged Mtn. I can go a month and not repeat. They’re themselves ragged, wrinkled, worn out, and perfect for these days of haphazard memory.
I used to think I was a christian. I used to think I was a buddhist. Now I don’t think and find myself a buddhist christian without belief. I pray, I meditate, but without reference to anything other than the prayer and meditation.
Odd, isn’t it? Form has no function.
Dementia Is a New Way to Be Buddhist
Today my mum said she doesn’t remember
arriving at my house with a dishcloth,
doesn’t remember me telling her
my kitten stayed overnight at the vet,
that I’d be coming over to help with bills.
What she remembers is now.
She knows her memory is a ship
leaving port without permission,
her memory is a cloud she can’t hold.
When she asks, Why is everything so hard?
I say, I don’t think you’re the only one
asking that. When I say, I have trouble
with loss, she says, We are all leaving.
She adds: I know I won’t be around
much longer. So I ask her
what she’ll come back as? A pig, she says,
then laughs. I tell her I can’t imagine
seeing a pig and having to say,
Oh, there’s my mom! She smiles
and says, Then maybe I’ll return
as a hummingbird. Another conversation
in the present. Another conversation
I will remember alone.
Copyright © 2025 by Kelli Russell Agodon.
Never thought of myself as a cowboy. I aint, really.
But these days the lyrics of the country western song sound familiar, and feel even more familiar:
Mamas don't let your babies grow up to be cowboys
'Cause they'll never stay home and they're always alone
Even with someone they love
https://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/waylonjennings/mammasdontletyourbabiesgrowuptobecowboys.html
Growing up with “Gunsmoke” in the afternoons on the small tv in Brooklyn house I felt I lived just off the Main Street of Dodge. My gunbelt and sixshooter cap gun, stetson and boots, kept my solitude from varmints and outlaws wandering the sidewalks of Bensonhurst where horses were tied to railing out front.
Now I live between two mountains. Barn has horse stalls broken down with ancient strands of straw nuzzled between floor and wall.
Always alone.
What a curious idea!
Being alone.
As if even remotely possible.
bedankt sinterklaas
young deer with limp
wanders close to speeding white pickup
stares up and down road
walks into driveway and dooryard
nibbles on yew branches outside kitchen
old apple placed outside barn door by rowboat
attraverso l'oscurità
I don’t want to hear it.
Hear what?
That the default position
Is sin and evil.
And if it is?
That lies are the norm
That self-interest the fallback.
What would you prefer?
Tell me about goodness.
What about it?
Is God good?
Sure, God is good.
And?
We are not God.
Is God in this world?
Yes, God is in this world.
Where, when, how?
Only when God is through with you.
Through with me?
Breaking through with you
Into the world
As it is, attraverso l'oscurità
Through the darkness
Seeing through here
e adesso (and now)
mio padre mia madre, così com'è
I practice
Death
Falling asleep
At night
Napping during
Day
What dreams
May come
Heaven, the
As it is
Earth
Given
This, così com'è
Bread of quotidiá
Each breath,
Each moment a
Deliverance
From (through)
Yes, (even this)
evil
If we would
Have it
Be, (being,
been)
So …
(Ah, man!)
Friday, December 05, 2025
vivre, pourquoi pas
It is December,
of course,
time to be reading
Sartre, Camus,
and Heidegger
I’m not sure
i've gotten beyond
absurdity
the problem of suicide
of nothingness
whether in existential
philosophy, Zen Buddhism,
or the unfolding absurdity
of political discord and
narcissistic megalomania --
I choose philosophy --
the detritus of political
chicanery is much less
interesting than whether
to live (as Camus says) or die
tuning radio in parking lot
Oboes rather than words
(Those clashing symbols)
Ah, silky melodious sound
wieviel
Wieviel
You ask
How much
Keinviel
I say
Not much
We are talking
About love
Enough for sanity
Genug
Yes, enough
To continue on
dropping to 1 degree
It is cccold
Window frozen shut
Nextdoor they make snow
(How good)
The gift of shelter
Thursday, December 04, 2025
wishing i'd been there
1.
too many words
crowd the space
mind abandoned
2.
if you love me
teach me
what you see
3.
on snowy
frozen mountain
deer prints
as empty and thus infinitely interpenetrating
About the Avataṃsaka Sūtra, also known as the Buddhāvataṃsaka Sūtra:
The East Asian Buddhist view of the text is that it expresses the infinite universe as seen by a Buddha (the Dharmadhatu), who sees all phenomena as empty and thus infinitely interpenetrating, from the point of view of enlightenment.[22] This interpenetration is described in the Buddhāvataṃsakasūtra as the perception "that the fields full of assemblies, the beings and aeons which are as many as all the dust particles, are all present in every particle of dust."[24] Thus, a Buddha's view of reality is also said to be "inconceivable; no sentient being can fathom it".[24]
The following passage from the Buddhāvataṃsaka describes this holistic idea of universal interpenetration or interfusion which sees the total sum of all things as being contained in each individual phenomena:
Children of the Buddha, just as if there was a great sūtra, as extensive as the great universe, in which are written down all phenomena in the great universe. That is to say, in it is written about the phenomena in the great enclosing iron mountains, as extensively as the great enclosing iron mountains; it is written about the phenomena on earth, as extensively as the earth; it is written about the phenomena in the medium universe, as extensively as the medium universe; it is written about the phenomena in the small universe, as extensively as the small universe. In the same vein, all phenomena – be they of the four continents, or the great oceans, Sumeru mountains, the palaces of the gods in the heavens of the realm of desire, the palaces in the realm of form, and the palaces of the formless realm – are written down to an equal length. Even though this sūtra is as extensive as the great universe, it can be fully comprised within a single particle of dust. As it is with one particle, so it is with all particles of dust.[25]
This idea would later become central in East Asian Buddhist traditions like the Huayan school and Zen. --wikipedia
What is in one is what is in all.
If your practice leads you into the clear spaciousness of enlightenment, thank you!
If your depravity leads you into perverse and hostile antagonism to truth and the good, o merdè!
I cannot dwell alone. You dwell within me. There’s a crowd there. I look in the mirror. I see you.
I’m so upset with myself for running for president with no interest in the people of the country I’m meant to lead and serve.
I’m so confused as to why I shot those two people wearing camouflage on the street in D.C. last week.
I remember saving the young boy from running into traffic in India where a speeding truck bore down on him.
I prayed for the mother of a friend whose obituary appeared in the paper today. Of course I had died in that Portland hospital with her, our myocardial infarction catching everyone by surprise.
The Avatamsaka sutra also states that the wisdom of the Buddha (the Tathagata) is present everywhere in the universe, indeed, it is present within every living being. Thus, the sutra states (in chapter 32, Manifestation of the Tathagata):
Son of Buddha, the wisdom of Tathagata is present everywhere. Why? Son of Buddha, in the class of living beings there is no place where the wisdom of Tathagata is not present. Why is it that? The wisdom of Tathagata is not established due to grasping the discrimination/consciousness, because the omniscient wisdom, the self-existent wisdom and the non-obstructed wisdom perfectly appear in total disconnection with discrimination.[29]. --ibid
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddh%C4%81vata%E1%B9%83saka_S%C5%ABtra
One cat scratches at cellar door to get downstairs and out under porch. I let her down the stairs, put midday treats in their bowls. Give dog a biccie. Sip bitter coffee. Look out at gray day with snow clinging to branches.
Feel like the inside of a crypt.
Attending what everyone calls a transition.
Perhaps, more accurately, a fulmination.
journey of a thousand wings
Chickadee
Flies to feeder
Back to branch
Again and
Again
One seed at a time
God is not
Good is
God
Again and
Again I am
Leaving branch
closing ap(peal) to sanity
Yes
We have
No
(Bananas)
We have
No
(Bananas)
Today
Frightening
How
(Bananas) he
Is
I
Say
(Bananas)
Go. Away
Wednesday, December 03, 2025
intoxication of pernicious truths
I remember when I taught at university. There was a desire to think. Alongside the expectation that theories and facts, trends and history were part of the learning experience, thinking might have been a luxury left to the side while trying to convey the data of philosophy and familiarity with language and concepts.
There was a waterfall of possibility and a slender stream of time to foray the gushing offerings of the texts and barrage of potential tumbling toward that swept-away wisdom downstream.
A more skillful pedagogue might have been content with the limitations of time and speculation and focused more clearly on breaking open the names dates and theories nicely displayed in the table of contents.
Perhaps I inadvertently tried to make graduate students of newly arrived and neophyte to-be students of a required stepping stone course. Upper level courses had more elasticity and I was invited to that niche. I should have figured this out decades ago and angled toward Oxford or Cambridge to fully embrace the lecture and tutorial motif.
Philosophy, I might have said, is the conjunctive between Life and Death.
I would prefer to take up residence in such a connective, and deconstructed the "and" and recomposed a new sive/sive where life is a variant of death and death a mirror of life.
I think of so many friends who are no more, and I pity them. Yet they are not so much to be pitied, for they have solved every problem, beginning with the problem of death.
&
In the fact of being born there is such an absence of necessity that when you think about it a little more than usual, you are left—ignorant how to react—with a foolish grin.
&
Two kinds of mind: daylight and nocturnal. They have neither the same method nor the same morality. In broad daylight, you watch yourself; in the dark, you speak out. The salutary or awkward consequences of what he thinks matter little to the man who questions himself at hours when others are the prey of sleep. Hence he meditates upon the bad luck of being born without concern for the harm he can cause others or himself. After midnight begins the intoxication of pernicious truths.
&
As the years accumulate, we form an increasingly somber image of the future. Is this only to console ourselves for being excluded from it? Yes in appearance, no in fact, for the future has always been hideous, man being able to remedy his evils only by aggravating them, so that in each epoch existence is much more tolerable before the solution is found to the difficulties of the moment.
&
(--in The Trouble With Being Born, by E.M. Cioran, trans by Richard Howard)
The evils of the current day are aggravating the composure of our minds. Cioran might suppose that this aggravation is necessary preparation for any successful resolution of the evil we experience.
It is disturbing to consider that the flaring of evil is prelude to identification, encounter, and possible resolution into something less evil or even good.
Does the "O felix culpa" lend the notion that fault and resolution, that good and evil -- (like life and death) -- are directly up against one-another in a symbiotic dynamic of interaction?
Is there in Cioran's thought the implication that the very notion/act of "being born" is troublesome in that it introduces a faulty dualistic conception that there is some applicable distinction between being-born and being-not-born?
It also conjures an odd distinction between being-born and not-being-born. (Can "not-being" be born?) Can nothing come into being in a similar way that something comes into being?
This, from Forest City Zen:
When I was pretty new to Zen practice, I came across a quote, Unborn mind is Buddha mind. I was baffled at this term “unborn”. Subsequently, I've learned that whenever our interest is piqued by some Buddhist teaching, like Unborn mind is Buddha mind, it is a good idea to pay attention. This is our body's way of asking us to grow. At the time, however, I was confused. How could something be “unborn”? Was this some sort of baffling Zen koan? It kind of got under my skin. So, I decided to set out and try to find out and understand this expression. The expression was used and popularized by a 17th century Japanese Rinzai Zen teacher named Bankei who lived between 1622 and 1693.
Bankei describes the unborn mind in glowing terms,
What I call the “Unborn” is the Buddha-mind. This Buddha-mind is unborn, with a marvelous virtue of illuminative wisdom. In the Unborn, all things fall right into place and remain in perfect harmony.1
Bankei gives an idea of how the unborn mind functions with this quote,
The Unborn manifests itself in the thought, “I want to see” or “I want to hear” not being born … The reason I say it's in the “Unborn” that you see and hear in this way is because the mind doesn't give “birth” to any thought or inclination to see or hear.2
-- (from Unborn Mind, Kuden Paul Boyle, Forest City Zen Group)
It is intriguing to consider that we human beings are a sort of nexus between the seen and unseen world, where things can emerge, if you will, without fully entering this visible realm with independent existence, but, rather, participate in active engagement in this physical realm, straddling the seeming divide without inhabiting either realm, but only as co-responding echoes criss-crossing this or that without permanent residence or even graspable tangibility.
Those who claim there is no birth and no death seem odd to those of us for whom such a claim rings preposterous.
And yet (and yet) this existence we cultivate as a given fact, is, indeed, troublesome.
As such, Siddhartha Gautama, was given to such exploration that the truth of suffering, craving, seeing through, and actual ways of being in this (Maya?) world constituted his Four Noble Truths.
As such, Jesus of Nazareth, wandered through a fantastical narrative of transcending (life and) death that we are uncertain about whether death is real, whether resurrection is a thing, whether everyone who has "died" will transcend that belief and arise into a realm beyond our understanding or conception.
Heidegger said that language is the house of being.
And non-being?
How is it we dwell in these two expressions of phenomenal and spiritual reality, and still have such difficulty (trouble) navigating and negotiating them?
(I just sat with some Friends, the Quaker variety, at their Wednesday mid-week zoom.)
Practice, practice, practice!
moonrise over spinnaker trail Ragged Mtn (sh, 3dec25)
inherently complete
Chinul thought he was smart.
He looked around the 12th century and saw Francis in Italy and Dogen in Japan. His hometown was in Korea.
Said to himself: “Let’s just write something before dinner and call it quits."
Errant thoughts are fundamentally empty; the essence of mind is fundamentally pure.
You suddenly realize this essence is originally free from afflictions; the essence of knowledge is inherently complete, no different from Buddha.
To cultivate practice based on this is called the Zen of the highest vehicle, and it is also called the pure Zen of those who realize suchness.
So he did. Call it quits.
Finished his tea and trundled off to his reading chair.
He didn’t exactly realize suchness, but it was a nice idea to imagine what it would be like to realize suchness.
“The true nature of reality as it is” -- what an idea!
He got into bed, chuckling.
He was asleep in no time.
Pretty smart if you ask me.
the paperwork verifies it
I never wanted to be a saint
then, unexpectedly, I became a saint
I am in heaven after my death
holy and ensconced in beatific light
I don’t remember dying, I don’t
nor do I know what a saint is, I don’t
but here I am, a saint, with a certificate --
it says: "You are a saint, goodbye and good luck!"
Tuesday, December 02, 2025
noise and smoke
Nor do I write poetry.
Got to love the subtlety. We need more folks who don't write poetry. Poetry is dangerous and fraught with a belief in its importance.
In Praise of My Sister
(by Wisława Szymborska)
My sister doesn’t write poems.
and it’s unlikely that she’ll suddenly start writing poems.
She takes after her mother, who didn’t write poems,
and also her father, who likewise didn’t write poems.
I feel safe beneath my sister’s roof:
my sister’s husband would rather die than write poems.
And, even though this is starting to sound as repetitive as
Peter Piper,
the truth is, none of my relatives write poems.
My sister’s desk drawers don’t hold old poems,
and her handbag doesn’t hold new ones,
When my sister asks me over for lunch,
I know she doesn’t want to read me her poems.
Her soups are delicious without ulterior motives.
Her coffee doesn’t spill on manuscripts.
There are many families in which nobody writes poems,
but once it starts up it’s hard to quarantine.
Sometimes poetry cascades down through the generations,
creating fatal whirlpools where family love may founder.
My sister has tackled oral prose with some success.
but her entire written opus consists of postcards from
vacations
whose text is only the same promise every year:
when she gets back, she’ll have
so much
much
much to tell.
Rather, write as little as you can.
Bunch words in narrow places.
Let vanilla egg nog pour into glass.
Take haiku, for example. They're not artistic creation.
Haiku are immediate noted glimpses into what is real.
Don't let the sneaking syllables fool ya!
They'll fall asleep as soon as they lay down.
