Wednesday, 3 June 2020

WW: Western skunk cabbage

(The photo I shared two months ago, of Lysichiton americanus in flower, was taken in this same swamp. Now the flowers are gone, but the leaves remain. To put it mildly; the walking stick on the right is chest-high.)

Appearing also on My Corner of the World.

Thursday, 28 May 2020

Practice Kyôsaku

Le Jardin Zen

"Zen is not found in the understanding, it's found in the doing of it."

Gil Fronsdal

(Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons and a generous photographer.)

Thursday, 21 May 2020

Good Video: In the Footsteps of Wonhyo



Three weeks ago I wrote about the tendency in Western Zen to downplay the ongoing role of Korea in the development and direction of our religion. In that indictment I cited particularly the seminal importance, and extra-goryeonic obscurity, of Zen Ancestor Wonhyo – a Korean national hero who is only now receiving sustained Western attention.

And now I discover this video. Documenting a Wonhyo-themed pilgrimage through rural Korea by Tony MacGregor - Canadian writer for Seoul's English-language Korea Times - it's saturated with the kind of breathtaking imagery we often see in connexion with Japanese topics, but rarely Korean ones. Just the celebration of that nation's own spiritually-imbued landscape is worth the click, and makes for a very meditative visit.

The commentary is a little unfocused, and can get a bit precious in that way we Westerners have when we talk about Buddhism. But in some ways, that very wandering – mirroring Macgregor's literal ramble – is another reward, offering a wider vista on the subject. Particularly welcome is a brief account of tae guk kwon, that muscular Korean take on tai chi chuan that figured so highly in a memorable scene from Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter… and Spring.

Toward the film's end, another meander takes us to an impromptu teisho by Sudoksa Bangjang Seol Jong Sunim, which is simultaneously predictably conservative (his topic is finding a teacher) and, from a Confucian perspective, revolutionary. Since the same could be said of Wonhyo, MacGregor seems to be underscoring his hero's continuing influence on Sôn, or Korean Zen.

In any event, I greatly enjoyed this documentary and suspect others will as well. As a lesson on an important Ancestor; an exposition of Korea's too-long ignored Zen heritage; and a tranquil tour of its compelling countryside, it's time well-spent.


Wednesday, 20 May 2020

WW: COVID country

(Baseballs at my old high school, abandoned in the batting cage two months ago and left where they lay.)

Thursday, 14 May 2020

Street Level Zen: Strength

Weld of flash-butt welding

“The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken places.”

Ernest Hemingway

(Photo of welded saw blades courtesy of Wikimedia Commons and a generous photographer.)

Wednesday, 13 May 2020

WW: White daffodils


(A determined band of them, growing next to a railway in the middle of nowhere, for no clear reason.)