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Gregor
08-02-2007, 11:46 AM
Long seeking it through others,
I was far from reaching it.
Now I go by myself;
I meet it everywhere.
It is just I myself,
And I am not itself.
Understanding this way,
I can be as I am.

by,

Tung-Shan

wills
08-03-2007, 12:54 PM
Very sweet. Thank you.

Gregor
08-03-2007, 01:42 PM
A master’s handiwork cannot be measured
But still priests wag their tongues explaining the “Way” and babbling about “Zen.”
This old monk has never cared for false piety
And my nose wrinkles at the dark smell of incense before the Buddha.

by Ikkyu

__________________________________________________ __

I like this one, its a good reminder for me!
-Greg

paige
08-04-2007, 04:55 AM
I like Ikkyu too - just recently picked up a book of his poetry:
Crow with No Mouth (http://www.amazon.com/Crow-No-Mouth-Fifteenth-Century/dp/1556591527)

I really like

we live in a cage of light an amazing cage
animals animals without end

Not that I know what it means! :wink:

Keishin
08-31-2007, 05:17 AM
With thoughts now, often
I go to open my mouth--
gone! like startled birds.

Keishin
09-01-2007, 11:37 PM
Out there on the ice
the game is playing the game:
nothing's quite like it!

Don Niederfrank
09-02-2007, 01:04 PM
I think I've posted this elsewhere here, but I really like it.
It's by Charles Simic, the poet laureate of the U.S.
I think it captures the simplicity of our sitting and the possible role of rituals, robes and rites.


STONE


Go inside a stone
That would be my way.
Let somebody else become a dove
Or gnash with a tiger's tooth.
I am happy to be a stone.

From the outside the stone is a riddle:
No one knows how to answer it.
Yet within, it must be cool and quiet
Even though a cow steps on it full weight,
Even though a child throws it in a river;
The stone sinks, slow, unperturbed
To the river bottom
Where the fishes come to knock on it
And listen.

I have seen sparks fly out
When two stones are rubbed,
So perhaps it is not dark inside after all;
Perhaps there is a moon shining
From somewhere, as though behind a hill--
Just enough light to make out
The strange writings, the star-charts
On the inner walls.

BruceS
09-05-2007, 12:52 PM
The other day after zazen, as my son slept I sat gazing at the most beautiful blue sky and big puffy white clouds, and I thought;

Sipping afternoon tea
Watching white clouds, blue sky
The clouds taste nice

I'm no poet and granted this thought was probably influenced by a lot of Thich Nhat Hanh, but it's what popped into my head. Today the sky's a bit grey. It'll probably still be grey after zazen, but that's ok. The clouds still taste the same. :)
Cheers,
Bruce

FeMonky
09-05-2007, 04:00 PM
TS Eliot's thesis on a Cat's Zazen!
from The Naming of Cats
"...But above and beyond there's still one name left over,
And that is the name that you never will guess;
The name that no human research can discover -
But THE CAT HIMSELF KNOWS, and will never confess.
When you notice a cat in profound meditation,
The reason, I tell you, is always the same:
His mind is engaged in a rapt contemplation
Of the thought, of the thought, of the thought of his name:
His ineffable effable
Effanineffable
Deep and inscrutable singular Name."

now if I can find a poem describing how a cat mindfully eats... Or I may have observe my Chloe and write one myself!

-Xander

will
09-06-2007, 12:12 AM
This is awesome guys. Good idea. Poetry corner.

This is from a teacher Ven. Shikai Osho from white wind zen sangha:

Green porcelain tiles
flecked red, gold.
yellow forsythia
caress azure sky

birds chatter and
under the walkway
old men and women
tango

their cigarettes whisper
of the twenties,
the susurrus of their cloth shoes
echo the rythms

Gregor
09-06-2007, 01:15 AM
Isn't this fun, Thanks to everybody for posting such great stuff.

If anyone listens to Writer's Almanac on NPR, you heard this one today, but it just floored me.

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Keys by Nancy Henry

When things got hard
I used to drive and keep on driving—
once to North Carolina
once to Arizona—
I'm through with all that now, I hope.
The last time was years ago.

But oh, how I would drive
and keep on driving!
The universe around me
all well in my control;
anything I wanted on the radio,
the air blasting hot or cold;
sobbing as loudly as I cared to sob,
screaming as loudly as I needed to scream.
I would live on apples and black coffee,
shower at truck stops,
sleep curled up
in the cozy back seat I loved.

The last time, I left at 3 a.m.
By New York state,
I stopped screaming;
by Tulsa
I stopped sobbing;
by the time I pulled into Flagstaff
I was thinking
about the Canyon,
I was so empty.
Thinking about the canyon
I was.

I sat on the rim at dawn,
let all the colors fill me.
It was cold. I saw my breath
like steam from a soup pot.
I saw small fossils in the gravel.
I saw how much world there was

how much darkness
could be swept out
by the sun.

will
09-06-2007, 01:47 AM
Thanks Greg.

Very transient. nice. yep.

will
09-08-2007, 12:06 AM
Do you recognize this one?

the fool on the hill
sees the sun going down
and the eyes in his head
see the world spinning round

:)

Fuken
09-08-2007, 03:04 PM
Shodoka: Song of Freedom

by Yoka daishi (Yongjia, d. 713)
translated by Yasuda Joshu roshi
and Anzan Hoshin roshi


Have you ever seen one of the Way?

Beyond action and beyond learning,
one is at ease,

not struggling against delusion
or grasping after the truth.

One sees the nature of ignorance
to be itself Essential Awareness,

and the illusion of one’s own body
is the Realm of Reality.

Completely realizing
the Realm of Reality to be objectless,

one finds oneself the source of all things
and one’s own nature to be Awake Awareness.

The five aggregates arise and decay like
aimless clouds,
the three distorted orientations come and go
like bubbles on water.

Realizing Suchness, neither self nor things exist;
in one moment cause and effect are liberated.

If anything I say is untrue
may my tongue be pulled out for countless eons.

In a single moment of direct awakening
to the Zen of Reality as a continuous presencing,
the six perfections and countless skillful means
are complete.

The six realms of existence are a dream,
in waking they are nowhere to be found.

No error, no happiness, no loss, no gain;
you won’t find these in the Actual Nature.

Having given up wiping dust from the mirror,
its brilliance is completely seen.

Who is it that thinks of
not–thinking and non–existence?
The Unborn is realized
within the born.

Can a wooden puppet attain Buddhahood
by its practice of not–thinking?

Without grasping at the four elements of this body,
drink and eat aligned with the Actual Nature.

Appearances are empty, all is impermanent;
this is the complete view of the Those Gone Into Thusness.

As a true monk I speak the truth.
If you don’t agree with me, let’s discuss it;

but remember that the Way of Awake Awareness
aims for the root
and is not tangled in branches and leaves.

The wish-fulfilling pearl is not recognized by beings
but here it is
within the matrix of Reality as a continual presencing.

The functioning of the six senses are neither
"is" nor "not,"
and come from luminosity neither
formed nor formless.

Clarifying the five kinds of vision
brings the five powers.

When you experience the truth
you are without speculation.

You can see your reflection in a mirror;
but can you grasp the moon
reflected in the water?

We always walk alone;
yet those who have attained all tread
the same Way of liberation.

Following this ancient Way, have a light heart.
Wild looking, bones hardened,
no one will notice you.

The poverty of a child of the Buddha is obvious,
but this poverty doesn’t include her Zen.

Patched robes show one’s poverty
but the mind of Zen is beyond all value.

This priceless jewel can be used without hesitation
in caring for beings and ripening potentials.

The three facets of Experiencing and four wisdoms are complete
in this treasure;
the six subtle perceptions and eight liberations are marks
from this seal.

Excellent students go right to the source.
Fair and poor are hesitant to reveal
and give up their soiled veils,
and are proud of their external struggling.

If folks argue and slander you, let them:
they are playing with fire, trying to burn the sky.

When I hear them, their words are drops of nectar
and show me that this moment is free from conception.

Abusive words are disguised blessings
and my abusers good teachers.

This mind has room for slander and abuse
and is itself unborn compassion and patience.

Penetrate both the Transmission and the teachings,
practice harmonization and radical insight with brilliance,
unclouded by notions of "voidness".

I am not alone in this attainment
which Buddhas numberless as grains of sand
have displayed.

I’ll freely speak the lion’s Roar of Reality
which strikes fear into the hearts of beasts.

As the elephant flees, forgetting his pride
the heavenly dragon listens silent and joyful.

In the past I’ve crossed mountains and rivers
searching for masters and teachings in Zen.

Now I know the path of Caoxi and
my realization is beyond birth and death.

Don’t lose your Zen whether walking or sitting,
be at ease in speech or silence, moving or staying,

Be calm even when facing a sword
and your clarity will never be poisoned.

Our teacher Sakyamuni met his teacher Dipamkara
only after practising patience through countless eons.

Birth and death follow each other ceaselessly.
Awaken directly to Unborn Reality

and be free from joy about fame
or sorrow over loss.

Stay in hermitages
in mountains and valleys amongst the pines.

Practice joyfully in vacant cabins.
Live free from complexity.

Understand Reality and your actions are without effort
unlike the actions of the usual person.

Charity given within conditions for heavenly reward
is like shooting arrows into the sky.

When its force is spent, the arrow falls
just as beings go up, then down.

The realm of conditionless action is not like that:
it is a direct leap into the realm of Those Gone Into Thusness.

Go to the root, leaving the branches.
It is like the bright moon reflected in a crystal.

Understand the jewel of liberation
and use it to benefit yourself and all others.

The moon rises over the river,
wind moves in the pines

all through the night. Purity. Calm.
What does this calm mean?

Vividly see the precepts of Essential Awareness
and the seal of the mind–ground.

Dew, fog, clouds, mists
are the true robes of our bodies.

The monk’s bowl that subdued dragons,
the staff that calmed fighting tigers
with the sound of its hanging rings

are not just relics from some old fable
but symbols of the Thus Come One’s precious Teachings.

Don’t seek truth or avoid delusion:
both are wholly empty, without form.

Neither empty nor formless,
this is the body of the Buddha.

The luminous mirror of Knowing reflects all shown it,
its vast brilliance pervades numberless worlds.

All that is, the ten thousand experiences,
arise as this luminosity beyond within or without.

Don’t grasp at "voidness" and ignore cause and effect;
such reckless confusion leads only to suffering.

Rejecting the truth and grasping at entities is
also a mistake,
it’s like jumping into a fire to avoid drowning.

To reject delusion and grasp at the truth
suits perfectly the mind of like and dislike.

Students who practice this way,
it’s like mistaking a thief as your own son.

Ignoring the treasure of Reality and losing the merit
to Awaken self and others
is due to the eighth, seventh and sixth consciousnesses.

With direct insight into these, practice Zen
and realise the Unborn with Radiant Intelligence.

Be strong and use the sword of insight.
It’s blade is sharp and bright as the vajra,

it severs confusion
and the pride of shining beings and demons.

The thunder of the Reality rolls:
beat the drum of the Teachings,

spread clouds of compassion
and loose the rain of nectar.

"Dragons" and "elephants" arise to benefit countless beings
and lead the five types of students through
the Three Aspects of the Teachings.

The milk from the Himalayas is pure and rich,
it makes the ghee that I enjoy.

One nature pervades all natures.
One thing holds all things.

One moon is reflected in all waters,
all these reflections are one moon.

The Realm of Reality of all Buddhas is my own nature,
my own nature is all the Thus Come Ones.

One stage of practice contains all stages,
without form, without thought or action.

In a finger snap eighty thousand doors are open
and three great eons vanish in an instant.

Names and categories and being without them
have nothing to do with Perfect Knowing.

It is without praise or blame,
It is without boundaries, like space.

It is wherever you stand.

It is free of struggle and searching.

It cannot be held or released.

Give up the search.
It is here.

Its silence speaks, its speech is silent.
Its great giving opens the door wide.

If you ask me what doctrine I teach
I’ll tell you it’s Vast Awareness.

No one can agree or disagree with this
and even the shining beings can only speculate.

Having practiced this for many years,
I have no choice but to tell you the truth.

"Raise the banner of the Teachings,
proclaim the teachings of the Lineage."

Such was the Buddha’s command to Caoxi.

In the Indian records, Mahakasyapa was the first
to receive and transmit the Lamp
and then down through twenty eight Ancestors.

Through the First Ancestor Bodhidharma
the Teachings of Reality came east to the Middle Kingdom,

through Six Ancestors who received the robe,
and then to countless who have realized the Way.

Truth does not stand alone, the false doesn’t exist alone.
When ideas of ‘being ‘ and ‘non–being’ vanish
all is empty.

The teachings about twenty emptinesses
are intended to disentangle you;
All are the display of this one body
of the Thus Come.

Mind arises with experiences as its objects.
Subject and object are dust on a mirror.

Free of dust, the mirror shines.
The Actual Nature is known
when mind and things do not arise.

In this Age of Ending and this sad world
suffering beings resist the truth.

The time of the Buddha is long gone and confusion is deep.
Delusion is strong, practice is weak,
fear and hatred increase.

Hearing the Direct Way of the Thus Come,
some regret not being able to smash it to pieces.

Craving gives rise to suffering.
Don’t blame others for your own actions.

If you don’t want to live in suffering
do not slander the Teachings turned by the Thus Come.

Only sandalwood
grows with sandalwood.

Lions rest in dark groves, wander alone and at ease
where no other birds or animals are found.

Lion cubs follow the elders
and even a three year old can give the roar.

A fox, even if he trails after the king of the Teachings,
can still only yelp in vain.

The radical Direct Teaching is beyond sentiment;
there is no room for doubt or hesitation.

This monk doesn’t say this to create divisions;
its just that you should know
about the trap of permanence and its opposite.

Right isn’t "right," wrong isn’t "wrong;"
yet an inch of deviation leads a thousand miles off.

A girl of the dragon people who didn’t stray from the source,
at once realized Buddha,
while Sunaksatra was reborn in the hells.

In my youth I collected knowledge,
reading the Discourses and commentaries.

I fell into name and form, which makes as much sense
as trying to count the sands on the ocean floor.

The Buddha was speaking about me when he said,
"What gain is there in counting another’s treasure?"

I realized how for many years I had gone astray
and wandered lost.

Due to crooked inclinations and wrong views
the Thus Come’s Direct Perfection is misunderstood.

Men of the Narrow Path practice without compassion,
worldly scholars have knowledge but no wisdom.

Foolish, with wrong interpretations,
they miss the pointing finger of the empty hand.

Mistaking the finger for the moon
their practice is confused
and they fabricate complexity with senses and objects.

When not one thing is seen, this
is the Realm of Reality as a Continual Presencing
and one is truly the Sovereign Seer.

Understand the truth, and all conditional hindrances
are nowhere to be found;
not knowing true emptiness you worry
about debits and credits.

This is like a starving man turning down a
feast for a king,
or someone ill refusing the physician’s prescription.

Practice Zen in this world of desires
like a lotus blossoming in the midst of flames.

Even Pradhanasura, although he broke the grave precepts
woke up to the Unborn and achieved his realization of the Buddha.

Having heard the Lion’s Roar, the fearless teaching,
what will become of those who obstinately waver?

Breaking their precepts, losing their wisdom,
they ignore the open door to the Thus Come.

Once two monks, one who had committed sexual misconduct,
the other had taken life,
were condemned by Upali’s flickering wisdom.

The great being Vimalakirti erased their doubts
like the sun melting frost and snow.

The inconceivable power to liberate beings
has activities numberless as the sands of the Ganges.

Making the four kinds of offerings,
even a thousand gold pieces would not be enough;

reducing bones and body to dust could not repay
words ensuring a leap over numberless eons.

This is the supreme Sovereign Reality,
the experience of countless Thus Come Ones.

Understanding what this precious jewel of mind is
I now transmit it to any who will receive it.

Seeing clearly, there is not one thing,
not man, not Buddha.

The worlds of the universe are like froth on the sea,
sages and wise men appear like lightening.

Even with a hot iron wheel burning on one’s head,
great realized-practice will not be stirred.

Even if demons can cool the sun and heat the moon,
they cannot obstruct the truth of these words.

When an elephant drawn carriage moves
can a praying mantis block its passing?

Elephants cannot fit into a rabbit’s tracks,
enlightenment cannot be circumscribed.

Don’t abuse the ultimate with narrow views.

If you are not yet clear, this Song gives the key.

will
09-09-2007, 01:21 AM
Thanks Jordan.

Gassho

BruceS
09-09-2007, 09:27 AM
This is my favourite teaching, The Song of Mahamudra. The great sage Tilopa is teaching Naropa. These are the ancestors of the Karma Kagyu lineage of Tibetan Buddhism. See if you can see the similarity to Shikantaza.


The Song of Mahamudra

Mahamudra is beyond all words
And symbols, but for you, Naropa,
Earnest and loyal, must this be said.


The Void needs no reliance,
Mahamudra rests on nought.
Without making an effort,
One can break the yoke
Thus gaining Liberation.


If one sees nought when staring into space,
If with the mind one then observes the mind,
One destroys distinctions
And reaches Buddhahood.


The clouds that wander through the sky
Have no roots, no home; nor do the distinctive
Thoughts floating through the mind.
Once the Self-mind is seen,
Discrimination stops.


In space shapes and colors form,
But neither by black nor white is space tinged.
From the Self-mind all things emerge, the mind
By virtues and by vices is not stained.


The darkness of ages cannot shroud
The glowing sun; the long kalpas
Of Samsara ne'er can hide
The Mind's brilliant light.


Though words are spoken to explain the Void,
The Void as such can never be expressed.
Though we say "the mind is a bright light,"
It is beyond all words and symbols.
Although the mind is void in essence,
All things it embraces and contains.


Do nought with the body but relax,
Shut firm the mouth and think of nought.
Empty your mind and think of nought.
Like a hollow bamboo
Rest at ease your body.
Giving not nor taking,
Put your mind at rest.
Mahamudra is like a mind that clings to nought.
Thus practicing, in time you will reach Buddhahood.


The practice of Mantra and Paramita,
Instruction in the Sutras and Precepts,
And teaching from the Schools and Scriptures will not bring
Realization of the Innate Truth.
For if the mind when filled with some desire
Should seek a goal, it only hides the Light.


He who keeps Tantric Precepts
Yet discriminates, betrays
The spirit of Samaya.
Cease all activity, abandon
All desire, let thoughts rise and fall
As they will like the ocean waves.
He who never harms the Non-abiding
Nor the Principle of Non-distinction,
Upholds the Tantric Precepts.


He who abandons craving
And clings not to this or that,
Perceives the real meaning
Given in the Scriptures.


In Mahamudra all one's sins are burned;
In Mahamudra one is released
From the prison of this world.
This is the Dharma's supreme torch.
Those who disbelieve it
Are fools who ever wallow
In misery and sorrow.


To strive for Liberation
One should rely on a Guru.
When your mind receives his blessing
Emancipation is at hand.


Alas, all things in this world are meaningless,
They are but sorrow's seeds.
Small teachings lead to acts;
One should only follow
Teachings that are great.


To transcend duality
Is the Kingly View;
To conquer distractions is
The Royal Practice;
The Path of No-practice
Is the Way of Buddhas;
He who treads that Path
Reaches Buddhahood.


Transient is this world;
Like phantoms and dreams,
Substance it has none.
Renounce it and forsake your kin,
Cut the strings of lust and hatred,
Meditate in woods and mountains.
If without effort you remain
Loosely in the "natural state,"
Soon Mahamudra you will win
And attain the Non-attainment.


Cut the root of a tree
And the leaves will wither;
Cut the root of your mind
And samsara falls.


The light of any lamp
Dispels in a moment
The darkness of long kalpas;
The strong light of the mind
In but a flash will burn
The veil of ignorance.


Whoever clings to mind sees not
The truth of what's Beyond the mind.
Whoever stives to practice Dharma
Finds not the truth of Beyond-practice.
To know what is Beyond both mind and practice,
One should cut cleanly through the root of mind
And stare naked. One should thus break away
From all distinctions and remain at ease.


One should not give or take
But remain natural,
For Mahamudra is beyond
All acceptance and rejection.
Since the Alaya is not born,
No one can obstruct or soil it;
Staying in the "Unborn" realm
All appearance will dissolve
Into the Dharmata, all self-will
And pride will vanish into nought.


The supreme Understanding transcends
All this and that. The supreme Action
Embraces great resourcefulness
Without attachment. The supreme
Accomplishment is to realize
Immanence without hope.


At first a yogi feels his mind
Is tumbling like a waterfall;
In mid-course, like the Ganges
It flows on slow and gentle;
In the end, it is a great
Vast ocean, where the Lights
Of Son and Mother merge in one.

Hans
09-09-2007, 12:06 PM
Hi guys!


Thanks for all the great posts.


Gassho,

Hans

Jundo
09-09-2007, 04:42 PM
Dear Bruce and Jordan,

Thank you very much for posting those translations of the Song of Freedom and the Mahamudra. Ah, they don't write stuff like they used to anymore!

I would like to underline just a few lines that echo some of what we have been talking about around here (of course, the way I put things is much less beautiful) ...


not struggling against delusion
or grasping after the truth.

One sees the nature of ignorance
to be itself Essential Awareness,

and the illusion of one’s own body
is the Realm of Reality.

Completely realizing
the Realm of Reality to be objectless,

one finds oneself the source of all things
and one’s own nature to be Awake Awareness. [Jundo]

--- [From the Mahamudra]:


Do nought with the body but relax,
Shut firm the mouth and think of nought.
Empty your mind and think of nought.
Like a hollow bamboo
Rest at ease your body.
Giving not nor taking,
Put your mind at rest.
Mahamudra is like a mind that clings to nought.
Thus practicing, in time you will reach Buddhahood.



...

Realizing Suchness, neither self nor things exist;
in one moment cause and effect are liberated.

If anything I say is untrue
may my tongue be pulled out for countless eons. [Jundo]

---

Don’t lose your Zen whether walking or sitting,
be at ease in speech or silence, moving or staying,

Be calm even when facing a sword
and your clarity will never be poisoned.

Such good stuff! Gassho, J

Fuken
09-09-2007, 06:32 PM
Jundo,
I think someone could make a lifetime examining the song of freedom.
Glad you appreciate it.

Gassho,
Jordan

Bansho
09-10-2007, 03:43 PM
Hi,

I’ve never really written any poetry, but this one sort of popped into my head while thinking about Nishijima Roshi’s analogy of a pearl on a razor’s edge for describing our freedom of choice in the present moment. Anyway, for what it’s worth...


A blade of grass in the wind,
a withered leaf on a tree.

Seemingly bound,
yet perfectly free.

A pearl on a razor’s edge –
no place to abide.

How, what, where, when?
Only you can decide.


Gassho
Kenneth

Keishin
09-10-2007, 03:54 PM
sitting with a cake
iced with brightly burning flames
one big breath and ..... pouf!

will
09-10-2007, 11:13 PM
Is that metaphorical Keishin or was it your birthday :)

Keishin
09-10-2007, 11:50 PM
yes, Will, yes indeed, 'tis true

will
09-11-2007, 01:56 AM
:)

Keishin
09-12-2007, 06:09 PM
changing on the fly
motion flows into motion
in pursuit of pucks

Urug
09-12-2007, 10:28 PM
Part Two XII

"Want the change. Be inspired by the flame
where everything shines as it disappears.
The artist, when sketching, loves nothing so much
as the curve of the body as it turns away.

What locks itself in sameness has congealed.
Is it safer to be gray and numb?
What turns hard becomes rigid
and is easily shattered.

Pour yourself out like a fountain.
Flow into the knowledge that what you are seeking
finishes often at the start, and, with ending, begins.

Every happiness is the child of a separation
it did not think it could survive. And Daphne, becoming a laurel,
dares you to become the wind."

by an other


Namaste...

Urug 8)

Keishin
09-12-2007, 10:53 PM
Hello Urug:
Just saw your poem--beautiful!!

will
09-15-2007, 11:36 PM
How do you know there is grass under the snow if it's unseen?

Or is it metaphorical?

:)

Keishin
09-21-2007, 05:16 PM
all one, yet boundaries?
now if it weren't for precepts
I'd never find them

will
10-10-2007, 11:20 AM
Run; Run;
With Nowhere to go...

http://www.soulcatcherstudio.com/images/artistpages/caponigro/Capon_SanSebNM.jpg
photo by:Paul Caponigro

Dainin
10-12-2007, 01:10 AM
This came to me while I was running awhile back.


A Runner's Haiku

Running three miles
For the first time
The trees give high-fives


Gassho,
Keith

Mr Walker
10-12-2007, 01:48 AM
Hiking in the Totsugawa Gorge (Gary Snyder)

pissing

watching

a waterfall

will
10-12-2007, 09:24 AM
Thanks guys.

Gassho

Jarkko
10-14-2007, 09:39 AM
This is one of my favorite poem

I do not cease swimming in the seas of love,
rising with the wave, then descending;
now the wave sustains me, and then I sink beneath it;
love bears me away where there is no longer any shore.
-Al Hallaj-

Gassho
Jarkko

Kelly M.
10-18-2007, 12:56 PM
Haiku:

Down on the Zafu
The world will reveal as one
Who does the breathing?

Keishin
10-18-2007, 01:16 PM
As for the precepts:
when do I truly mind mine
if I mind others'?

Kelly M.
10-19-2007, 12:53 AM
How is a haiku defined? I always thought it was 5 syllables, than 7, than 5. But I see many here and in other places that do not follow this structure.

Does a Haiku have set 'rules', or is it ultimately beyond set definitions?

Eika
10-19-2007, 02:04 AM
As for the precepts:
when do I truly mind mine
if I mind others'?

Is this yours Keishin?

I like it very much.

Thanks,
Bill

Kelly M.
10-19-2007, 02:28 AM
As for the precepts:
when do I truly mind mine
if I mind others'?

Is this yours Keishin?

I like it very much.

Thanks,
Bill

I second that. :)

Gassho,
Kelly

Keishin
10-19-2007, 06:45 AM
Why, thank you kindly--Kelly and Bill
Yes, I did write it.

There was another which arose at the same time:

I don't need others
to keep the precepts for me
after all, they're mine!

but of the two, I liked the first one better.

anyway, when the brain synapses get something out, it's pretty cool...rare, but that's what makes it so cool.

I am blown away by the wonderfully talented, creative, artistic folks here. A little might be rubbing off on me (I've only been doing haiku since blogging here).

gassho
keishin

Kelly M.
10-19-2007, 10:54 AM
'Aha'! Thanks HezB.

Gassho,
Kelly

Keishin
10-19-2007, 03:13 PM
Yes, thank you Harry, for the lesson in haiku. I'm telling you--if I stick around here long enough, I just might end up with an education!
Hello Kelly and others here:
I actually like to work with the 5, 7, 5 constraint. Getting a thought to fall within it is a bit of a challenge. English is awkward and doesn't easily lend itself to it--but that's precisely what I like about it. I like to discover the seed of the thought, just as it 'germinates.' To me, it is bonsai prose/poetry: small, yet complete.
Having the 5, 7, 5 form requires me to work with the thought a bit--when the lines find themselves, it's a little like putting a puzzle ring back together--taaa daaaa!
gassho
keishin

Kelly M.
10-19-2007, 09:52 PM
Yes, thank you Harry, for the lesson in haiku. I'm telling you--if I stick around here long enough, I just might end up with an education!
Hello Kelly and others here:
I actually like to work with the 5, 7, 5 constraint. Getting a thought to fall within it is a bit of a challenge. English is awkward and doesn't easily lend itself to it--but that's precisely what I like about it. I like to discover the seed of the thought, just as it 'germinates.' To me, it is bonsai prose/poetry: small, yet complete.
Having the 5, 7, 5 form requires me to work with the thought a bit--when the lines find themselves, it's a little like putting a puzzle ring back together--taaa daaaa!
gassho
keishin

I agree, I have a couple other Haiku, but they just don't seem complete yet, not until I reach the 5-7-5 outline. That is not to say I 'grasp' for such conformity, but I kind of like the challenge of complying with it.

I've never really been one for poetry, but recently Haiku have been popping into my head (or at least the seeds from which to grow a 'complete' haiku). These tiny poems fascinate me a bit. They say that a picture is worth a thousand words, and yet a handful of carefully constructed words can paint a vivid picture.

I also find that some of the haiku here, such as your last couple Keishin, remind me a little of Koan, which also intrigues me.

Gassho,
Kelly

Kevin
10-22-2007, 10:25 PM
The sky and I laugh
at the grass.
The grass and I laugh
at the sky.
The sky and the grass
laugh
at me.
In each case, I laugh
at myself.
In each case, I laugh
at nothing.

Keishin
01-01-2008, 04:22 PM
two thousand and eight
is three hundred sixty five
one by one by one....



happy everyday,every day, this new year!

Jun
01-19-2008, 01:31 AM
All phenomena are impermanent
our emotions bring pain
there is no inherent existence of things
there can be nothing to gain

Buddhism is beyond culture
but practised by many human beings
their traditions are the cup
that holds the true teachings

Look beyond the words
look beyond the robes
look beyond the rituals
Dharma is also a verb

Jun
01-19-2008, 01:39 AM
The mind is the Buddha,
the Buddha is the mind,
Beyond the mind there's no Buddha,
beyond the Buddha there's no mind.

From the Bloodstream sermon attributed to Bodaidaruma

Will could probably make a rather fly house-mix out of that! Hey Will?

will
01-19-2008, 01:55 AM
Thanks for the idea. 8)

Is Bodaidaruma: Bohdidharma in Japanese?

Gassho will

Jun
01-19-2008, 02:22 AM
Thanks for the idea. 8)

Is Bodaidaruma: Bohdidharma in Japanese?

Gassho will

Yep!

When you understand,
reality depends on you.
When you don't understand,
you depend on reality.
When reality depends on you,
that which isn't real becomes real.
When you depend on reality,
that which is real becomes false.
When reality depends on you,
everything is true.

From the wake-up sermon attributed to Bodaidaruma.

Jarkko
01-22-2008, 12:38 AM
In love, nothing exists between heart and heart.
Speech is born out of longing,
True description from the real taste.
The one who tastes, knows;
the one who explains, lies.
How can you describe the true form of Something
In whose presence you are blotted out?
And in whose being you still exist?
And who lives as a sign for your journey?

-Rabia al Basri-

Jarkko
01-22-2008, 01:31 AM
Few more..


The most important thing is to find out
what is the most important thing.
-Shunryu Suzuki-

Though I think not
To think about it,
I do think about it
And shed tears
Thinking about it.
-Ryokan-

will
02-26-2008, 04:37 AM
deleted

Janice
02-26-2008, 12:38 PM
The Buddha's Last Instruction

“Make of yourself a light,”
said the Buddha,
before he died.
I think of this every morning
as the east begins
to tear off its many clouds
of darkness, to send up the first
signal – a white fan
streaked with pink and violet,
even green.
An old man, he lay down
between two sala trees,
and he might have said anything,
knowing it was his final hour.
The light burns upward,
it thickens and settles over the fields.
Around him, the villagers gathered
and stretched forward to listen.
Even before the sun itself
hangs, disattached, in the blue air,
I am touched everywhere
by its ocean of yellow waves.
No doubt he thought of everything
that had happened in his difficult life.
And then I feel the sun itself
as it blazes over the hills,
like a million flowers on fire –
clearly I’m not needed,
yet I feel myself turning
into something of inexplicable value.
Slowly, beneath the branches,
he raised his head.
He looked into the faces of that frightened crowd.

~ Mary Oliver ~

will
02-27-2008, 02:29 AM
Just reading some of the poetry. Thanks again.

Gassho Will

will
02-27-2008, 03:06 AM
re-edited:

Dogen,
If we grasp it, it's gone.
Bodhidharma,
The universe is my name.
Brothers and sisters - trees,
Mother- the sound of hammer on nail.
Say trees, hammers and nails,
With eyes, ear, and nose.
With fingers, knees, hair, and toes.
And without, sap, bark and leaves-

Even this speaks in the breeze.

Gassho Will

will
02-27-2008, 03:45 AM
What are you cursing?
What are you hitting?
What are you loving?
Who is competing?
Where is this one?
Can you find them in the colors?
Why get angry at the Sun?
The moon doesn't care if your big or small,
So who is short and what is tall?

Gassho

Jenny
02-29-2008, 04:03 PM
In the stillness by the empty window,
I sit in formal zazen.
Navel and nose in alignment
Ears parallel with shoulders.
Moonlight floods the room.
The rain stops, and the eaves drip.
Perfect the moment.
In the vast emptiness
my understanding deepens.

Ryokan

Janice
03-03-2008, 01:08 AM
If there are mountains, I look at the mountains;
On rainy days I listen to the rain.
Spring, summer, autumn, winter.
Tomorrow too will be good.
Tonight too is good.

~ Taneda Santôka

will
04-15-2008, 11:14 PM
And this little bird I take under my wing,
To teach, to laugh, to be, and to sing,
As I Lift it's chin up, he flies on her own,
To teach, to live, to laugh, and disown.

W

Eika
04-16-2008, 12:18 AM
Nice, Will.

Thanks,
Bill

Fuken
05-15-2008, 12:29 AM
After Basho's famous frog haiku

after basho's frog haiku
the garden pond
speaks more volume

after basho's frog haiku
every splash at the pond
eddies to the centre of my heart

after basho's frog haiku
each sight of the amphibian
the echo of a splash

Basho who revolutionises the haiku world
and became an icon after this famous poem:

old pond
a frog jumps in
the sound of water

john tiong chunghoo