Wednesday, 10 July 2024
WW: Old City Hall
Thursday, 4 July 2024
The Way
Master Dongguo asked Zhuangzi, "This thing called the Way – where does it exist?"Zhuangzi said, "There's no place it doesn't exist."
"Come," said Master Dongguo, "you must be more specific!"
"It is in the ant."
"As low as that?"
"It is in the panic grass."
"But that's lower still!"
"It is in the tiles and shards."
"How can it be so low?"
"It is in the piss and shit."
(From Zhuangzi: Basic Writings, translated and with commentary by Burton Watson.)
(Photo courtesy of Donald Giannatti and Unsplash.com.)
Topics:
Burton Watson,
China,
Taoism,
The Rusty Ring Art Gallery,
Zhuangzi
Wednesday, 3 July 2024
WW: Native rhodendron
(Rhododendron macrophyllum, the Pacific rhododendron, is the state flower of Washington. In late spring it bursts out in the grey-green twilight of the North Coast jungle, where its pale pink blossoms seem to glow above the undergrowth. When my mom was in high school, kids in her small Puget Sound town used to cut truckloads of these from the forests along the bay, to fill the gym for prom.
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Appearing also on My Corner of the World.
Open in a new tab for greater impact.)
Appearing also on My Corner of the World.
Wednesday, 26 June 2024
Thursday, 20 June 2024
Poem: The Frog Sutra
Could they be sutras?
In the temple well
frogs chant
Kansetsu
(POV photo of well courtesy of Gary Meulemans and Unsplash.com.)
Topics:
frog,
haiku,
hermit practice,
herpetology,
Kansetsu,
poem,
sutra
Wednesday, 19 June 2024
Thursday, 13 June 2024
One-Armed Pathfinder Huike
Huike appears to fit the global definition of hermit, as his Wikipedia article says he was "considered enlightened but criticised for not having a teacher." He eventually filled this gap in his c.v. by convincing none other than Bodhidharma to take him as a student, though folklore says he had to amputate an arm as collateral. (Still cheaper than an American university.)
But if we assume that at least the part about becoming Bodhidharma's student is accurate, that makes Huike typical of the anti-scholasticism of early Chàn. Bodhidharma, Huike, Huineng, Layman Pang – this renewalist rebellion is lousy with hermits. Huike's own teachings, heavy on meditation, light on sutra study, underscore this theme.
Tellingly, upon his assumption of Bodhidharma's teaching duties, our ancestral literature tells us that another Buddhist teacher – i.e., a "certified authority" – sent an assassin to kill him, on suspicion of disciple-poaching. Thus are preserved two useful historical points: that Buddhism has always been a religion like any other – worldly, fallible, hypocritical – and the koanic notion of a Buddhist assassin. (Or near-assassin; in the end, Huike defused this bomb Buddha-fashion: by converting the hit man.)
These and other stories (including "Bodhidharma's Skin and Bones", perhaps the most foundational parable in Chàn/Zen) can be found in the concise and readable Wikipedia entry. If you're interested in Zen's origins, it's worth the visit.
(Huike Thinking, attributed to Shi Ke [石恪], courtesy of the Tokyo National Museum and Wikimedia Commons.)
Topics:
Bodhidharma,
Buddhism,
Chàn,
Huike,
Huineng,
Layman Pang,
The Rusty Ring Art Gallery,
Zen
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