Filmmaker Yoko Okumura turns the camera on her family, including the renowned Zen teacher Shohaku Okumura. Sweet. Sad. Human lives, lived. Twelve minutes. Read more
Filmmaker Yoko Okumura turns the camera on her family, including the renowned Zen teacher Shohaku Okumura. Sweet. Sad. Human lives, lived. Twelve minutes. Read more
It is the 28th of August. In the Christian calendar a lot of people are celebrating today as a feast for Augustine of Hippo, bishop and theologian. And, let’s be frank, while there is much about him that is attractive, his approach to the idea of an original sin and our humanity simply drips with Manichaeanism, and has been the source of much of Christianity’s more unhealthy attitudes about how we exist in the world. Let’s just say, he’s not... Read more
Christopher William Bradshaw Isherwood was born on this day in 1904 in Cheshire, England. He attended Cambridge, but left without a degree. He kicked around a bit, had a fitful attempt at studying medicine, and then moved to Berlin. Some of his experiences there would become the basis for his Berlin Stories, which would later be the basis for the film Cabaret. Eventually with his on and off again lover W. H. Auden he came to America, starting in New... Read more
I was bereft of subjects to share for today, and so fell back on my old standby in such situations, a brief walk through Wikipedia’s listings of events and births and deaths of any given day. There I noticed it was King Ludwig I of Bavaria’s birthday. And, briefly confusing him with Ludwig II, the so-called “dream king,” I started reading the Wikipedia biography. It didn’t take long to understand my error, but before I lost interest, I noticed the... Read more
I can’t believe Stephen Batchelor’s After Buddhism sat in my bedside pile of books for a full year. Having just finished it, I’m really sorry I waited so long. The book opens with two quotes. The first from the Buddha himself. “The dharma is clearly visible, immediate, inviting, uplifting, to be personally sensed by the wise.” Paired with it is one from the ninth century Chan master Linji. “The dharma of the buddhas has no special undertakings. Just act ordinarily,... Read more
But if you want a little more. The other day an old friend who is Zen teacher as well as a math professor said that on a scale of one to ten, Kubo and the Two Strings is a twelve. For a math professor to make that kind of comment raises an eyebrow. She added the film is “amazing.” And, she cautioned, “See it in 3D.” With that kind of endorsement, Jan and I felt this had to be our... Read more
George Herriman was born on this day in 1880. The Wikipedia article on him says his creation Krazy Kat was “more influential than popular.” And that’s probably so. But I adored the strip. And in the years since Herriman’s death his recognition as a major figure in the advancement of the comic has become a critical tidal wave. Modern cartoonists from Charles Schulz to Art Spiegelman, Robert Crumb and Bill Patterson have all acknowledged his influence. Herriman was a black... Read more
Just some random observations from a Zen life. Some come whole cloth from somewhere in the depths of my heart. Others I heard some or all of, but eventually they became my own. Take what you think is helpful. Leave the rest for someone else… 1. Look at your checkbook and you will know what your religion is. 2. Ideas always betray you. 3. Each of us is precious, all of us are connected; there are no exceptions. 4. Within... Read more
This picture is of my ordination cohort back in 1970 with our preceptor, the Reverend Houn Jiyu Kennett. I’m the kid in the second row on the far left, the one with the ears. Looking at it set me to thinking about various things. Age, you bet. And aging. The years that have flowed in between. And, about the strange directions my life has taken, and back then, what is it now forty-six years ago, how I can guarantee you... Read more
Arthur David Schloss was born on this day in 1889, in Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England. He assumed his mother’s maiden name, Waley, during the first world war. There appear to be two reasons for this. The presenting issue is nicely conveyed in an anecdote he once told about being followed by boy scouts and then reported to the police as a possible German spy. In this regard he and his family were following a pattern among many English of German... Read more