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Thread: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo

  1. #1

    AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo




    ZEN IS AS SIMPLE AS PIE!

    Let's say that reality is a juicy pie, a pie so rich and great that it holds all this world and all worlds, all of life, the particles and the stars, whatever was or will be ... baked within. It is a pie of countless ingredients, endless spices and flavors, both the sweet and sour, plain and bitter ... sometimes happiness and sometimes tears.

    You are born, and you feel like you're a guy eating pie in life's diner ... an 'ordinary Joe' sentient being encountering and experiencing that pie on your own tongue. You feel like, in life, there's the subjective experience of 'you' and 'your mouth' ... and then there's everything not, namely, that pie you are digging into. You are not the pie, you feel, and instead just a guy eating pie.

    But, really, you're just pie too, through and through!

    Oh, the human mind draws divisions ... separating what's experienced as "you" on this side of the tongue from all that's touched on the other side. But need you slice the pie that way? What's more, stick a slice of "you" under a microscope and, it's quickly apparent, you're made of the very same stuff ... the same atoms and molecules, apples and flour and dough ... as everywhere else in the known pie. Perhaps the mix in you is a touch different from the mix elsewhere ... a few more raisins, a little more carbon, a little less salt or a little less sodium. But you're obviously pie as pie can be ... made out of the same batter, stirred in nature's kitchen, heated billions of years in stellar ovens, spun out of the 'Big Bang Bakeshop' with the rest.

    And what's really amazing is that you seem to be pie come alive (as weird as that sounds)! You seem to be pie that's come alive and is ... enjoying pie!

    But when I say "enjoying pie", well, that's a bit misleading ... because it doesn't always go down easy, and sometimes barely can be swallowed at all. Oh, it has its lovely and light parts, but also tastes and textures that do not please at all. We try to eat around the ugly and heavy parts ... stick to the things we like ... yet that's not always possible. Some of life just gets forced down the throat.

    Ya see, you see and feel that "you" are (to your little eyes which cannot see the 'Big Pie Picture') not the pie or, at best (sometimes you can see this much) you feel like just one piece of the pie ... and your piece is incessantly judging and appraising, running toward or away from, all the other "not you" pieces of pie that your piece encounters ... sorting those other pieces into slices of life you like and slices you don't. What's more, your bit of pie ... the bitefull that is your bit ... has a complex relationship with the other bits and bitefulls which it sometimes finds loving and sometimes hateful, which bitefulls it must daily encounter and mingle with. Sometimes the relationship is harmonious, but other times there is conflict. Frequently you and the others "go together" ... and frequently tastes and flavors clash. You do not like to clash, and are often unhappy about the rest. "If I had written the recipe," you may say to yourself, "I'd have done so quite differently, leaving those other pieces and flavors out!"



    But this world, this body, this universe seems such a finely balanced symphony of ingredients that ... but a small change here or there ... there might be no pie at all. Or, perhaps, just flat and lifeless gloppy goo. A touch too much (or too little) gravity as baking powder, a sun and stars too hot like an oven (or too cold or long in the 'ice age' freezer), a cooking time too short for the evolution of life, or (taking an even slightly different turn of events) a history of this cosmos or this planet much other than what was ... and, while there might be something on the table, it certainly would not be the product here which we are now tasting and ... just as vitally for our purposes ... "us" here to be the lucky ones to taste it!

    We depend, right now, on the recipe being pretty much just as it has been. There seems, perhaps, some possible reason to the madness of this mix. Were we to travel back in time to change it ... adjusting the timer or temperature on the stove, the history of events, removing the tragedy and keeping only the comedy like adding sugar by the ton ... we do so only at the risk of the whole crust collapsing or the fertile yeast never having risen with life, our lives.

    Thus, a much better course is just to see yourself ... not merely as a separate taster of the pie quite apart from what is tasted ... nor even as merely a single, small piece of pie mixing and matching with other pieces for better or worse ... but as wholly and only The Very Pie Pie-ing. One's True Pie.

    (we can usually taste only the first perspective about ourself, maybe the second, rarely the third. Zen practice allows all to be tasted at once.)

    For you are the Pie ... and not just a slice, but pie from top to bottom, pie pie-ing with every bite. You are the pie in the most intimate and wonderful sense ... pie that is Pie that is savoring pie. Therefore, in the way of Zazen, we rediscover our True Confection.

    You are radically, intimately, wholey and truly the Pie right now ... and the Pie is you and always has been ... as much as you are radically, intimately you ... as much as the tongue in your own mouth, the fingers which hold the fork, the eye which sees the golden crust, the brain which tastes that taste, the stomach which digests it all ... were they to become suddenly alive and self-sentient (hey, in a world where pies come alive, anything is possible!) ... would see themselves as singly who they each are, but also would just be wholly and intimately 'you' (an eye that sometimes might go on strike, arguing with you that it is its own man and it doesn't get paid enough). Through and through, Ordinary Joe. When tongue is tasting, when fingertip is feeling, when eye is seeing, when brain is experiencing ... it is just you, dear Joe, tasting, feeling, seeing and experiencing (you are the one eating pie). And, likewise, when you taste and touch and experience pie ... it is just Pie tasting, touching and experiencing pie via its tongues, hands, eyes and brains which ... wonder of wonders ... all got baked in a Pie and temporarily lent to you and me and some other joes to move and wiggle around.

    Living Pie that's living pie!

    Now ... you and me and all the rest are (when seen from one simultaneously true perspective on who we are) pieces which can sometimes conflict with other pieces. THUS, if there are no pieces ... then there is no conflict ... no pieces of pie to fight over... no unfulfilled hunger and craving reaching for its share ... so immediately enough for everybody! In a moment of Shikantaza, there are not two ... judgments dropped, aversions and attractions gone, hunger sated and cravings fulfilled as 'nothing to attain', divisions of this vs. that, me and you tossed away. There is One Piece, One Peace. The collisions of tastes and ingredients are harmonized. All is of One Taste!

    All is One Taste!

    (and it is precisely for that reason that we should not stay there, nor seek something as tasteless and unmoving as a frozen pie) ... for One Taste, if truly meaning 'just one monotonous taste', would take all the flavor out of life. Thus, Shikantaza is also the One taste that is all tastes, the 'Taste' that's okay and 'at one' with whatever tastes comes along taste ... (not some One Taste just limited to one bland taste, to the exclusion of other tastes).

    What this Buddhist practice allows you to do is ... Have your cake ( or pie) and eat it too! For, rising from the cushion like a luscious steam rising from hot pie fresh out of the oven ... you learn that the One Taste is the Whole Pie, and the Whole Pie is also the 100,000 flavors and ingredients it contains. In other words, you can still know the One Pie, Whole and Unbroken ... and yourself as precisely that Pie from head to toe ... AND the Pie (Pie with a "Big P") as its individual slices and ingedients and myriad flavors ... AND each separate mouthful and changing taste as wholly and holy special and to be treasured on its own ... AS EACH AND ALL, ALL ALONG, ONE AND THE SAME PIE!

    There is only One Pie, and that Pie is All and every varied, ever changing mouthful.

    You thus know, for the first time, a world of this and that ... and the roundness of the boundless pie dish that holds all. Aversions and attractions as necessary for ordinary life ... and aversions and attractions fully tossed away, all at once. Fears and regret, hopes for how the pie will turn out, dreams that it will win the baking prize at the County Fair as found in ordinary life ... now tasted through simultaneous knowing that the Pie/pie has no compare and rises with no place to get to, nothing to attain ... the Pie ever and always complete and whole from the first. Both perspectives on 'pie-ness' known as one ... like two tastes of a single mouthful of pie.

    We have found our Original Pie ... and now are free to eat with gusto (though in moderation and with balance, of course ... in consideration of the waistline and healthy living). We now more readily accept what ever comes with the next forkful ... cherries or lemons, sugar or salt ... for we know that it is just the Total Taste, and nothing should be left out ... or life would be as bland and unnourishing as a diet of plain crackers.

    Let the Pie just be the Pie just be the pie

    Oh ... and a few last points:

    Who is the baker? Is there a baker?

    What is the purpose of any baker's baking this pie, assuming any purpose at all?

    The Buddha was not too concerned with such questions, teaching rather a formula to allow us to "pie" without suffering. He had little to say (and maybe knew even less) about where the ingredients came from, how they got popped into nature's oven, let alone by whom or why. He was more about eating the pie on one's own fork, in one's own mouth, without worrying too much how it all got there. The Buddha's "you are the peace of pie" did not express much concern for what the pie was, its particular recipe or whether it was produced by nature or nurture ... for "you are the peace of pie" whatever and however the case. These questions, the Buddha seemed to say, do not really matter ...

    For if there was a baker ... be the pie well, consume in moderation and share with your fellow diners.

    And if there was no baker ... be the pie well, consume in moderation and share with your fellow diners.


    But neither did the Buddha rule out a baker (or a bakery), a cookbook, or an agenda to it all. The issue was just not central to the Teachings that he himself was cooking up, to wit, "be the peace of pie" whatever the case. There is nothing to stop Buddhists from considering the question of the "Baker" ... and believing in a "Baker" or choosing not too ... so long as doing so does not interfere with the central message: to wit, "the peace of pie" just as it is, when we stop judging, clinging or pushing it away.

    Now, if you ask me, it is perhaps possible that this infinitely convoluted universe, this so finely balanced (even if not always to our taste) world, this 'could not have been much different without our losing the very narrow recipe we needed to be born' mix, could maybe have cooked itself up, or perhaps just happened blindly to pop out of nature's oven all ready to serve ... and just at the time and place for us (you and me and not somebody else) to be here eating it ...

    But I don't believe it so ...

    ... for it turned out too well by my eyes (if not always as I would have written the menu were I its author). It is sweet in the right places to allow sentient life, not sweet in the right narrow places so as not to prevent such life, and in the proportions and places to let our lives (in particular) be ... though surely not always in the places we might like to see. That leaves me to believe that something's cooking, something is afoot in the kitchen and there is a "reason" for the raisins. I feel like I have peaked in the kitchen and seen obvious signs of the pastry chef at work.

    But ... and here is the thing ... one way or another, a baker is never clearly seen from the dining room. The cooks (if there are cooks) ... whatever the cause ... seem to stay in the kitchen. The pie comes out, we savor the work ... and the cooks (whoever or whatever is cooking, blind nature or Allah or a guy name "Stanley the Baker") are hidden behind the swinging doors.

    Yet, too, the whole mystery is not too mysterious after all ... and satisfying answers can be known, as real as cherry filling on one's own tongue ...

    For knowing the baker's name and street address (if the baker has a name and place to go home to when the work is done ... knowing if Stanley exists or not) has little to do with savoring the pie that something or someone seems to have gone to all that trouble to make for us (and a lot of trouble it sure seems was involved ... billions of years worth at least, assuming pies don't just pop out of the oven by themselves!). Whatever the reality of the kitchen and the baking, trying to know the baker's name, shirt size, favorite sports team ... is not ... the way to "know" best the baker as baker. The most effective and immediate way to "know" the baker as baker is to know the baked handiwork ... to indulge in the baker's pie, now placed before us on a plate we call "just this moment". This pie holds the master's genius and heart. The baker is found right here. To run from the table and try to get into the kitchen, thereby to ignore the pie in search of the chef ... is both to ignore the pie and not "find" the chef' or the chef's real gift. It might be described as the greatest insult to the craftsman to seek to run away from his "creation" in search of Truth elsewhere!

    If there is a chef and a place of creation ... it is not "over there" or someplace else ... but right in front of you, ready for you to dig in ... and you too

    So, Instead, let's just express gratitude for the meal ... imperfect as it may seem at times. Thank you, Stanley! (i might have used a little less salt ... but ya did good).

    The Pie is Truth!

    Therefore ... even if the kitchen is empty, and there never were a cook ... know the Pie (in moderation)

    And if the kitchen holds a secret, and the cook you wish to know ... know the Pie (in moderation) and the secret will explode on your own palate.

    (I think that will tell ya more about the chef ... more precious information ... than even knowing his phone number and dog's name)

    It is not "pie in the sky when you die" ... but right here, right now.

    Whatever its purpose should there be one (and my tongue tells me there is) ... whatever the ultimate recipe (our best scientists, like diligent dietitians, are still trying to figure that out) ... the best course seems to be to do what we seem to be here to do, namely, to DIG IN! GOOD EATING!

    What's more (and this is a vital part of the story) ... the baking is not done, and still ongoing with each moment ... with every act, word or thought by each of us, constantly changing the pie and the recipe for the future ... every compassionate act, adding a drop of compassion to the mix ... every hateful word adding a touch of sourness to the whole. In fact, we too are contributing cooks of what this life-world-self Pie will become from now on, and future flavors ... sweet or bitter ... based on our actions stirring the Karmic mix right now. So ... cook your life with care! What this life-world-self pie becomes from this moment out is, more than we usually are aware ... very greatly up to us as we stir things up.

    It is a living, breathing constantly changing pie ... ever fresh and new.

    Master Dogen said of a painted picture of a rice cake (what passed for pie in those days) ...

    The entire universe with all of its events is only a painted picture of a rice cake. People and all beings arise there and Awakened Ones and Ancestors Wake Up and become what they are through it. So, if there is no "painted rice cake" there is no way to "satisfy hunger." Without this painting of "hunger" how can you meet the True Person? ... You should practice this whole world as a "painted rice cake."

    Zen is simple as pie.

    Gassho, J (writing this made me hungry ... i wonder if we have any pie?)
    Last edited by Jundo; 09-12-2014 at 02:38 AM.

  2. #2

    Re: SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo

    Thanks very much, Jundo.
    Gassho.

  3. #3

    Re: SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo

    Thanks Jundo.

    gassho
    Greg

    Attached files

  4. #4

    Re: SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo

    Therefore, in the way of Zazen, we rediscover our True Confection.
    Thank you
    _()_
    Peter

  5. #5

    Re: SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo

    Darn you Jundo! Pie is definitely one of those things on the NO! NO! list given to me by my doctor, and now you've got me salivating for a piece of pie. I will have to know the pie by its lucious odor, and that will be enough. :roll:

    Gassho,

    Seishin Kyrill

  6. #6

    Re: SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo

    MMMMMMMM, I love pie!

  7. #7

    Re: SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Hey guys ... I have been working all day, tinkering with my pie recipe on this essay.

    I hope you will read it and share my pie. Heck, read it again, coming back for seconds, if you've already dipped in.

    I hope you find it to your liking ... not too dry, fluffy, flakey or sugary.


    Gassho, Jundo (of the big sweet tooth)

  8. #8

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Quote Originally Posted by Jundo
    But neither did the Buddha rule out a baker (or a bakery), a cookbook, or an agenda to it all. The issue was just not central to the Teachings that he himself was cooking up, to wit, "be the peace of pie" whatever the case. There is nothing to stop Buddhists from considering the question of the "Baker" ... and believing in a "Baker" or choosing not too ... so long as doing so does not interfere with the central message: to wit, "the peace of pie" just as it is, when we stop judging, clinging or pushing it away.
    As long as the Baker is subject to anicca, yes?

  9. #9

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Thank you for this Jundo.

    Gassho,
    CoreyW

  10. #10

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Thank you for the recipe Jundo! :wink:

    By the way, can you tell us a bit more about the quote from Dogen in the end of your essay? Never heard it!
    Anyway, thank you again!

    gassho,
    Jinyu

  11. #11

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Hi Luis,

    Gabyo: Take one big bite, the painted cake is also very tasty in Dogen's poetic and realistic vision!

    http://www.wwzc.org/translations/gabyo.htm

    or


    http://www.thezensite.com/ZenTeachings/ ... 9gabyo.pdf


    gassho and not too much whiped cream please!!! :wink:


    gassho


    Taigu

  12. #12

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Thanks Jundo - I'm going to forward this to my mum, who knows it all in some way anyway, but who asks me technical questions that I keep falling over. And who (naturally) bakes the best pies...

    gassho,
    Monkton

  13. #13

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Thank you for the tasty links Taigu! :lol:

    gassho,
    Luis/Jinyu

  14. #14

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Thank you, it is a very inspiring post..in more ways than one as I know think I am off to baking, and enjoying fully, a pie (in the oven as in life)

  15. #15

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Thank you Jundo.
    Many good thoughts and perspectives.
    Gassho ~ Dave.

  16. #16

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    “If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe.” - Carl Sagan

    Thanks for all the Pie Jundo.

    Gassho NIgel

  17. #17

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Aren't we the "baker?" How can the baker be separate from the pie that is all?

    Fun post, Jundo. I am going to save it for my collection, thank you!

    Gassho and many pies.

  18. #18

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    What with pies and rice cakes, words, thoughts, sensations... a question arises, have I understood ?
    Whether at the beginning, the middle or at the end of the path what is real is "experience" ?
    whether I understand or not, what is real is experience (of understanding or not understanding)?
    Does experience = already there ?

    I think I need another taste of this pie,

    gassho,

    Sylvie

  19. #19

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    I don't have a clue who baked this tasty pie but it is delicious. If I should one day run across the baker I will tell him so and if not just continue to savor it. Perhaps knowing the baker through eating his pie is the best way of truly understanding the baker and that's enough. Perhaps not, we'll just have to wait and see ... Thanks Jundo, and if you don't mind, I'll take a piece of this pie for the road. Your effort is deeply appreciated. Gassho zak

  20. #20

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    I once baked an onion pie and no one really appreciated it like i did. Right now i have pie in my face and its going to take some time to understand why i made this mess and how to clean it up properly. I guess thats why we have something called practice.

    /Rich

  21. #21

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Thank you!!!

    Gassho, Daniel.

  22. #22

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Thanks, Jundo! Your effort and enthusiasm are always appreciated.

    Gassho, Jikyo

  23. #23

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    One piece
    One peace
    One taste

    I loved it. Thank you Jundo

    Gassho

  24. #24

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Thanks very much for this, Jundo. My favorite pie is the cherry pie made with tart cherries. The blend is beautiful, but I forget to apply it to life. It's sometimes too easy to start drowning in the 'tart/sour' part, or to get carried away with the sweet part--I need to stay in touch with the whole so that I don't become splintered into the parts. Gassho, Ann

  25. #25

    Re: AS SIMPLE AS PIE -- by Jundo (who asks you to read it!)

    Thanks again Jundo. Sometimes we need to reheat the pie.

  26. #26

  27. #27
    Yugen
    Guest
    Sometimes eating the pie cold, just as it is, can be wonderful too. I love apple pie for breakfast!

    Gassho
    Yugen

  28. #28
    I hadn't read this teaching and I found it wonderful.

    Thank you, Jundo. I loved this pie.

    Gassho,

    Kyonin

    Quote Originally Posted by Jundo View Post
    Hey guys ... I have been working all day, tinkering with my pie recipe on this essay.

    I hope you will read it and share my pie. Heck, read it again, coming back for seconds, if you've already dipped in.

    I hope you find it to your liking ... not too dry, fluffy, flakey or sugary.


    Gassho, Jundo (of the big sweet tooth)
    Hondō Kyōnin
    奔道 協忍

  29. #29
    Thanks Jundo, I really enjoyed this pie! It's still oven fresh after 2 years!

    _/\_
    Ade

  30. #30
    Mp
    Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by adrianbkelly View Post
    Thanks Jundo, I really enjoyed this pie! It's still oven fresh after 2 years!

    _/\_
    Ade
    Nice ... Good, pure, and wholesome pie ... without all the added preservatives.

    Gassho
    Michael

  31. #31
    Thanks to John for pulling this old pie out of the freezer! However, I think this monk says it better with an orange ...

    http://www.treeleaf.org/forums/showt...ll=1#post89855

    Gassho, J
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

  32. #32
    What an awesome comparison!

    However, just one thing: I think that the whole pie is the (impersonal) baker...

    Gassho,

    Timo
    no thing needs to be added

  33. #33
    Thanks Jundo for this message, in the last few years I have sometimes forgotten that i am the pie, that my thoughts and deeds have created the pie and that no matter how the pie tastes at this very moment it is meant to be experienced and perhaps enjoyed. Thanks again for these reminders. Huh, my desk is the pie, so is this keyboard and monitor i see....where do they end and i begin? i do not end, and they do not begin, all is empty.
    Gassho, Shawn Jakudo Hinton
    It all begins when we say, “I”. Everything that follows is illusion.
    "Even to speak the word Buddha is dragging in the mud soaking wet; Even to say the word Zen is a total embarrassment."
    寂道

  34. #34
    Ha, this is great. Glad you brought our attention to this John. Thanks!

    Gassho,
    a

  35. #35
    Demystifying the teachings one slice(or rather Slice with a capital S) at a time!
    I always appreciate your style of teaching Jundo!
    Ho (Dharma)
    Yu (Hot Water)

  36. #36
    Quote Originally Posted by Jundo View Post
    Thanks to John for pulling this old pie out of the freezer!

    Gassho, J
    Agreed! I love when past jewels get dug up and shared again. Thank you John

    Gassho,
    Hoyu
    Ho (Dharma)
    Yu (Hot Water)

  37. #37
    Like the song in the movie "Michael";
    ♪ Pie, Pie, I love Pie ♫ ♪
    be the pie well, consume in moderation and share with your fellow diners.
    gassho (claps with deep appreciation to Jundo)

    Happy 2013 to all!
    Last edited by Shokai; 01-02-2013 at 01:05 PM.
    合掌,生開
    gassho, Shokai

    仁道 生開 / Jindo Shokai

    "Open to life in a benevolent way"

    https://sarushinzendo.wordpress.com/

  38. #38
    Thank you, Jundo, for the wounderful essay and to John for the prior post!

    Gassho, jeff

  39. #39
    Maresolaris
    Guest
    Thank you very much for this. To me, an eye opener and very enjoyable to read.

    Gassho
    _/|\_

    Maresolaris

  40. #40
    Dave
    Guest
    Thank you Jundo, I have heard it said that all pie is good pie. Gassho, Dave

  41. #41
    Quote Originally Posted by Dave View Post
    Thank you Jundo, I have heard it said that all pie is good pie. Gassho, Dave
    Well, some pie is bitter and gives you heartburn. At least, at my age.

    It is all in that movie ... "The Life of Pie" ...

    Gassho, J
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

  42. #42
    Jundo, I would say 'That's it in a Pie shell'.

    Thank you for an brilliant recipe...

    Gassho, Kent

  43. #43
    Kent! How are ya friend?

    Gassho, J
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

  44. #44
    True Person? ... You should practice this whole world as a "painted rice cake"
    Thank you, Gassho,
    Edward

  45. #45
    Kent! How are ya friend?
    I'm doing well, thank you!
    Your recipe is helping keep the crust to
    filling ratio just perfect.
    Gassho,
    Kent

  46. #46
    I first read this essay some weeks ago and keep coming back to it. Wonderful teaching. Thank you

  47. #47
    Many many thank you's for this piece Jundo!

    I read this just before my Zazen of the day. Half way through I had a 'vision' of Qui-Gon Jinn (Obi-Wan Kenobi's master for those unfamiliar with your Star Wars Jedi lore) telling me to 'Let the Pie flow through you'. Weird, but for me it was insightful, for the Pie, the Universe, does flow through 'me', the me that is only 'my' personal interpretation of the chunk of the Unipie/Pieverse where I stand, the flow of energy, atoms, photons, heat, everything. All is one.

    Trippy

    Gassho,
    Dylan

  48. #48
    I love this essay and thread. Everyone should check out Jundo's link above, too, under the monk with the oranges...where is that from, anyway?

    Gassho,
    Jakuden
    SatToday

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