By: Shodo
Comments: 1
First, on this summer solstice day, a poem from Gary Snyder. “After a Mohawk prayer,” he says.
Gratitude to Mother Earth, sailing through
night and day –
and to her soil; rich, rare and
sweet
in our minds so be it.
Gratitude to Plants, the sun-facing, light-changing
leaf and fine root-hairs;
standing still through wind and
rain; their dance is In the
flowering spiral grain
in our minds so be it.
Gratitude to Air, bearing the soaring Swift and
silent Owl at dawn. Breath of
our song
clear spirit breeze
in our minds so be it.
Gratitude to Wild Beings, our brothers (and sisters),
teaching secrets, freedoms, and
ways; who share with us their
milk; self-complete, brave and
aware
in our minds so be it.
Gratitude to Water: clouds, lakes, rivers,
glaciers, holding or releasing;
streaming through all our bodies
salty seas.
in our minds so be it.
Gratitude to the Sun: blinding, pulsing light
through trunks of trees, through
mists, warming caves where
bears and snakes sleep – he who
wakes us –
in our minds so be it.
Gratitude to the Great Sky
who holds billions of stars – and
goes yet
beyond that – beyond all powers
and thoughts
and is yet within us –
Grandfather Space.
The Mind is his Wife.
so be it.
It’s still possible to register for the June sesshin, June 28-30, or the July sesshin, July 26-28, Friday evening through Sunday afternoon. More sesshin dates here.
Three-hour sits are 2-5 pm on the day of the potluck. July 21, August 18, September 15, October 20, November 17, December 22.
Land care retreat August 9-11, please register early. We expect a large group and will be preparing particularly with the July 20 work day.
Looking ahead – women’s retreat in Indiana, October 11-13.
are changing slightly to include an optional monthly work retreat. This is a direct result of how much we liked the Land Care Retreat. Here’s the deal:
You know who you are. We now have enough regular donations to cover the internet fee plus a little.
There’s been some planting. Three apple and three pair trees, two Korean nut pines and one sweet black cherry (looking a little weak, I need to learn). Donated rhubarb is looking great, five plants. Strawberries just started to produce. Tomato plants – Cherokee Purple – look healthy. Some other annuals are just starting – while the renters’ garden is close to producing already! I’ve just harvested the first milkweed for eating; milkweed is abundant so we can harvest freely. Mints and catnip are also abundant, and flowers. Eileen, a gardener, has just arrived for the summer, and I look forward to showing her things and growing food and beauty together.
Instead of recounting the latest horrors, I want to offer another way to meet the world. A Facebook friend sent me his new website. It has a whole page of people’s faces, people he considers heroes for their level of commitment and love – along with links to their writings or speaking or stories. Let us remember that there are people like this, in every time including the worst. We can be people like this. I invite you to read their stories, and see how you are like them.
“Greed, anger, and ignorance rise endlessly. Cut off the mind-road.”
It’s anger that tempts me the most. It has effects on the body. Tense jaw, tense shoulders, fists, stomach. Loss of appetite. Effects on life: putting the worst interpretation on events and on people – falling into blaming. But what’s actually happening? The world as we know it is falling apart – and it needed to fall apart. It still hurts. The man in the White House is a symptom of the collapse of a social system that was never sustainable. It’s not the individuals who are the problem.
Life doesn’t work when obsessed by anger, or distracted by shiny objects, or just denying the problems. So there are some kinds of mental/emotional first aid. Take three breaths with attention. Look deeply, even lose yourself in a flower or grasses or insects, whatever life is available. Put your hands into the soil. Go to the woods or the waters. Play with a small child. Have some social time. On a longer time frame, get your life into a sustainable routine, with enough sleep, nutritious food, exercise, people, and not too much electronics or sugar or alcohol.
And then – stay stable, keep doing those things. Calming, or samatha, in Buddhist terms, is the ground for everything else. It’s followed by insight (vipassana) and action or morality. (Morality also comes first, actually, and then it grows naturally out of the calm, insightful place.) This is all hard when disasters are everywhere.
Stay calm, continue self-care, and respond to what is needed – what calls to you most urgently. There’s no shortage. Rather than trying to do everything, find something you can do well. And do it. Meditation, understanding, action.
Blessings and Love to you all,
Shodo
So grateful for this post. I would not have a fraction of the courage of the people on that website, but I am trying to get into a routine and calm the mind.