On the sporadic nature of recent blog posts:


Who doesn’t get discouraged, or busy, or both? There’s solace in the fact that dormancy – the gathering in of energies and their conservation for an opportune moment – always breaks.





Tuesday, February 8, 2011

...There Is Nothing At All



“When the Dharma Body awakens completely,
There is nothing at all.
The source of our self-nature
Is the Buddha of innocent truth.
Mental and physical reactions come and go
Like clouds in the empty sky;
Greed, hatred, and ignorance appear and disappear
Like bubbles on the surface of the sea.”
(from Zhengdaoge/Shodoka)



“When the Dharma Body awakens completely/ There is nothing at all…”



Mycorrhizae, root hairs, ants, voles.
Birds, acorns, barberry fruits, and seeds in a matrix of excrement.
Winds used to carry North American pine pollen hundreds of miles out into the Atlantic Ocean, dumbfounding European sailors in clouds of gold.
Canopy leaves catch dust in the hot breeze, rains catch dust in vertical rivers, bark catches dust floods in channels, moss catches innumerable unkown Nile silts in luxuriant green deltas at the foot of the oak in the backyard.

Who is in control?
To carry yourself forward and experience myriad things is delusion. That myriad things come forth and experience themselves is awakening.
Looking out, there are birds and roots, dust and leaves and moss.
Looking around, what is there? Kaleidoscope center, still point among the shifting colors. Amazement.






The sailors lift their eyes from their tasks to see the backs of their hands, the rigging, and the sails, the sky and the clouds covered in gold. Their mouths hang open and their eyes widen, lost.

Monday, February 7, 2011

The Leisurely One

Pardon the hiatus but I was in Uruguay with my partner Kazim visiting family in January. 

   Two times a year my sangha, The Village Zendo, engages in Ango practice.  Hearkening back to the original rainy season retreats of the early Buddhist sangha, ango (meaning "peaceful dwelling") is a period of intensified daily practice.  We are currently in an Ango period, and the study text for this period is a long poem by the Chinese Zen master, Yongjia Xuanjue, called the Zhengdaoge (Shodoka in Japanese).  I have decided to read it stanza by stanza with an ear towards what it says about my farming practice, and will occasionally make posts on thoughts that arise

"There is the leisurely one,
Walking the Tao, beyond philosophy,
Not avoiding fantasy, not seeking truth.
The real nature of ignorance is the Buddha-nature itself;
The empty delusory body is the very body of the Dharma."



“There is the leisurely one…” What might it mean to farm leisurely? Hardly “gentleman farming,” rather a kind of poor man’s farming.
 
Chuangzi: So removed from civilization were they that they forgot how to speak.
Mumon: His speech is rough, his writing illegible.
 
To farm leisurely might mean farming
 
as if your life depended on it,
as if farming was your life,
as if life was nothing but farming.



As if:

In June Kazim and I pick deep red-purple serviceberries from the trees in Tappan Square in the pallid violet of twilight.

In the evening I pad out the back door and through the high grass to pick orange day-lily blossoms one day short of bursting open into a great steel bowl. Then I string them with needle and thread and hang them to dry for winter soups and stir-fries.

Hurrying ahead of the wave of frost, we work though the evening until even headlights aren’t enough, picking tomatoes and peppers, hanging the immature cayennes upside down so that they continue to ripen to red.

Cattails in spring, lamb’s quarters in summer, mushrooms in autumn.

Hang acorns in an onion bag in a toilet tank and with each flush slowly leach the tannins. Every week hang mint to dry for winter tea.

Save seeds at every opportunity. Seeds in pants pockets, shirt pockets, stuffed in backpack pouches. What were these again?

Read and dream and forget. Hatch plans.

Spend evenings chopping, washing, mixing, pickling.