Not exactly in the style of Wang Wei, but I wanted to share this one. I have long held the image of three stones stacked up in my sitting practice, it helps me to remain still, so when I was at sesshin the first time at Garrison Institute in New York, there were several of these images on the hiking trail on the bluff overlooking the Hudson River. What happened next, well...
Trail of the Buddha
Beside the walking path
Beyond the monastery,
Small river stones
Rounded smooth through the ages. Along the edge
Stacked in threes--
People here before made images of Buddha
As they walked the trail.
In stopping to admire, adding my own images,
My intent is thus to
Bring the stillness
Of the rocks to my zazen.
How might I compare, I ask,
With these stones whose very essence is
Stillness?
Yet as I am sitting, this ego tricks me, whispering
The “I” that I am,
Is quieter,
More still
Than all the others.
The error becomes so clear,
And the folly of it rends me to small river stones.
© C. Greer
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Thank you and poems
It was wonderful to have so many sangha members at our anniversary gathering. Thank you for coming out to the farm. Nyoi suggested we have more gatherings like this. What do you think?
I am posting some of my poems from the week in response to Rinsen's promptings. I'd love to hear how you receive them. Creative audience helps me immeasurably.
__________________________
as I lie in bed
a cool summer breeze
rustles the leaves
through the window
a gentle current
laps over me
one taste
I do not mind
growing old
_________________________
For Phil and Simon
a summer breeze
lifts the tips
of horse's tail
do you think
it could
be said
better?
the rain pounds
on the roof
impossible
to say it
wrong
why linger
in echo's
before you know it
the sun is out
the kids
are on
their bikes
after you know it
the sun is out
the kids
are on
their bikes
______________________
the blue sky waits
the blue water waits
for
the shivering boy
on the edge
of the diving board
small girls
drag their towels
along the wet edge
of the pool
crying out
jump jump jump
___________________
the thick fingers
of the tree trunk
disappear
into the ground
Gutei had one
Do'on has ten
she never lifts a finger
lazy lazy lazy
______________________
- Do'on Weik
I am posting some of my poems from the week in response to Rinsen's promptings. I'd love to hear how you receive them. Creative audience helps me immeasurably.
__________________________
as I lie in bed
a cool summer breeze
rustles the leaves
through the window
a gentle current
laps over me
one taste
I do not mind
growing old
_________________________
For Phil and Simon
a summer breeze
lifts the tips
of horse's tail
do you think
it could
be said
better?
the rain pounds
on the roof
impossible
to say it
wrong
why linger
in echo's
before you know it
the sun is out
the kids
are on
their bikes
after you know it
the sun is out
the kids
are on
their bikes
______________________
the blue sky waits
the blue water waits
for
the shivering boy
on the edge
of the diving board
small girls
drag their towels
along the wet edge
of the pool
crying out
jump jump jump
___________________
the thick fingers
of the tree trunk
disappear
into the ground
Gutei had one
Do'on has ten
she never lifts a finger
lazy lazy lazy
______________________
- Do'on Weik
Friday, June 27, 2008
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Sunday, June 8, 2008
Saturday, June 7, 2008
Hui-Neng: The Platform Sutra (part 2 of 3)
Jay Rinsen Chikyo Weik leads a retreat workshop at the Toledo Zen Center on March 16, 2008. "Good friends, how then are meditation and wisdom alike? They are like the lamp and the light it gives forth. If there is a lamp, there is light; if there is no lamp, there is no light. The lamp is the substance of light; the light is the function of the lamp. Thus, although they have two names, in substance they are not two. Meditation and wisdom are also like this." — Hui-Neng
Listen in Here.
Listen in Here.
Monday, June 2, 2008
Sunday, June 1, 2008
Hui-Neng: The Platform Sutra (part 1 of 3)
Jay Chikyo Rinsen Weik leads a retreat workshop at the Toledo Zen Center on March 16, 2008. "Oftentimes in spiritual teaching, there is a great attempt to deny any kind of shadow, or any kind of difficulty, and it's important to acknowledge it.... It makes the teachings more alive and full and complete and real, but also real honest and very direct. The historical context has a direct influence on what these teachings are, and that's important to know and to acknowledge and to understand."
This podcast is available on itunes or at www.thedrinkinggourd.org
This podcast is available on itunes or at www.thedrinkinggourd.org
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