Just This, Part 1

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    The theme for today is "Just This".

    Whatever our culture
    we live with and are motivated by many images
    myths, hunches, rumors
    of wholeness:

    the Garden of Eden, enlightenment, a real or Buddha-mind;
    ideals of "progress" and a better future;
    the notion of knowing one's "self" more completely.

    These are reminders
    the remembrance of possibilities

    We have conflicting,  valid life needs
    for structure, safety
    for freedom, boundlessness.

    The actual experience
    is a broken wholeness
    and if we ascribe to a philosophy
    of "being with what is"
    it is to be with this ongoing state
    of implicit, ungraspable wholeness
    where life is both full and broken
    being and becoming
    at the same time.

    Why do we talk about it?

    The mind alone
    by itself
    (if that were possible)
    doesn't seem capable of putting
    Humpty Dumpty back together again
    but does play a role

    Suggesting opportunities for practice,
    and for coordinating and developing
    multiple ways of knowing

    that are "larger",
    relatively more complete
    than mind alone
    though It may not be philosophically certifiable
    as "transcendence" in any absolute sense.

    This what we have to work with
    an existential fact
    and it's really "not bad"

    this experience
    in the greater present moment.

    Two of the most famous zen-inspired poems
    by Matsuo Basho
    are about "this":

    Though in Kyoto
    I long for Kyoto
    at the song of a cuckoo

    and

    Ancient pond
    A frog jumps in:
    Ker-plop!

    The "Kyoto" poem
    shows a "nostalgia"
    a longing to go "home"
    to the real present that is already here
    and a fine observation of its nearness
    and at the same time, elusiveness
    that "normalizes" this very common experience.

    The "Frog" poem
    is regarded as representing an enlightenment experience

    and in both of these events
    it is an ordinary event
    perceived, not thought about:
    the sound of the frog and the sound of the cuckoo

    that are more than "triggers" for an experience
    not symbols for something
    or reminders
    but the "just this" itself
    not just the sounds,
    but the whole world interpermeating them.

    In their ordinariness
    their role in the poem
    is to stand in for
    or rather remind us
    that the "just this"
    is not anything special
    and doesn't need to be
    but comes along with the whole.

    How was it, though
    that Basho had these experiences
    and what was their nature?

    What happened
    such that he got close to "just this"?

    He had spent his life
    with an orientation to "just this"
    and not just as an idea,
    not as any kind of deduction.

    Practice
    had prepared him
    had changed his "brain"
    his way of being with and in the world.

    He was a person with refined sensibilities,
    an artist
    a poet
    a meditator
    who loved to go on long journeys
    that were pilgrimages
    traveling, with eyes wide open
    actively and sensitively immersed
    in natural settings.

    That's his story
    and his practice
    and it has some interesting points

    but it creates a puzzle:
    we might learn from it
    but don't want to (and could not) emulate it.

    A little thinking might be useful here:
    What's the significance for my own life?
    What can we make of his story?

    For me,
    some "take away" points are
    sustained attention and practice,
    life as art,
    deep engagement with "what is",
    immersion in the "ordinary"
    and "just this".

    What's your situation,
    your practice?
    (as in, the practice of You)

    What's your "just this"?

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