riotheclown: clowning (Default)
The Smashing Mirrors Buddha Dog Walker

Once she looked in the mirror and it said, “You’ll never kiss Leonard Cohen now”. She’d just gotten married and her husband was smoking a doobie with his best friend in the living room and she was crying in the bathroom. Her life was over because she’d tried it all and now she was done. She was like an appliance that met his required specs. He admitted that at first, he thought her lips were on the thin side, but now he thought they were okay.
Years later when she was in the hospital after a radical hysterectomy for cancer she had a small mirror that she used to draw her self-portrait. She would write notes for her children around the picture like “I love you” and “remember to look after each other”. The face she drew was not hers, it was of terror. It said “you’ll never see them grow up”.
He brought them only once to see her in hospital, the youngest, six months, sat next to her in the bed and gently touched her face; the other two kids crouched on the floor, fascinated by the rubber tube from under the sheet that was attached to a bag. They were fascinated when some urine went around the coiled tube into the bag.
“Dad said you’d have presents for us.”
When she got home she couldn’t find herself in her reflection. She’d look and only see a mask. Her husband would say, “When do I get my wife back?”
All her efforts to be the same failed. She felt held in the mouth of a monster and feared what she might do to escape from it. Then she found Soto Zen. Practising felt like constantly falling then getting up, or being so bored dust became elegantly diverting. Gradually she found she wasn't so afraid anymore.
On the pivotal day, tall windows splashed pools of light in the monastery. It seemed everything reflected positively her choice. She could feel with her bare feet the warmth left by the feet of the monks on the wooden floors as they silently hurried along the halls. There was a long mirror where she’d checked the folds of her robe. Looking at her reflection, dressed to take her postulate vows, she’d smiled.
Now, years later, her eyesight is poor and the mirror still berates her “you look like your mother with your fucking Irish face. Hey, Lenard Cohen is dead now, and soon you will be too but no one will remember you. Oh and EVERYBODY HATES YOU. The dog loves you but he`s an idiot.”
She glances in the mirror looking for any food stuck in her teeth then dresses and takes the dog for his walk. She remembers to pick up his poop. As she does this she recites quietly:
This is as the boundless sky,
A lotus flowering above the water,
Stainlessness is itself this mind,
In this awakening,
We stand exposed.
riotheclown: clowning (diva great life!)
"Sister Elaine">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ugsuQVCGS-Usisterpainting


Read more... )
I painted this one for her 90th birthday. She still sits regularly with the Toronto Zendo and this painting was presented to her at the party.
riotheclown: clowning (posture)
1185529_641692382516422_1863133331_n

In Hebrew, Ruah means breath as well as spirit

Housework and food were, for me, fraught with issues for most of my young womanhood.  It was not until I started to sit zazen and share in samu practice and orioki at Dainen'ji that the complexity of my conundrum hit me, fortunately at the same time I was struck by what a waste of time it was.

I also learned a few very practical things over the years:

1. Objects that relate to memories are great if they are not buried under a mountain of stuff that has become rotting garbage. If they really are important you give them "place". When they are no longer important you get rid of them (or take a photo and archive or donate to the Smithsonian or whatever...) but do not allow them to turn into garbage that you will need to bulldoze, or go ahead, BULLDOZE IT, but do it with intention and not because of the threat from the neighbours, or the city to evict you.

2. The less stuff you have the less of a deal cleaning becomes and the more satisfaction you have in the space. This is SO true.

3. Make the path were you walk. It has to make sense to your life.

4. Every morning make your bed until it is something you don't have to think about it. There is something deeply moving about acknowledging the place where we sleep. I learned this when I was gravely sick. Having a safe place to lay our heads is a wonderful thing. We make our beds to acknowledge that if we did not have this safe place to lay down our lives would be much more difficult. I realize there is a conflict between "not thinking about it" and "acknowledging it" but when I say "don't have to think about it" I mean in the sense of "oh shit I have to make the bed!" and instead acknowledging it as "gee this is a nice place to sleep  I am really glad I have such a nice bed/room to renew my energy in!" 

5. Limit the amount of time you spend with a timer if necessary or only a small space like a closet. Don't become obsessive If you get distracted and turn it into a never ending psychotic journey STOP! Go for a walk. Consider asking for help.

I have at times gotten really messed up and overwhelmed with cleaning. I have also gone to the opposite extreme and just lived with the mess threatening to swallow me. "Let it go." "just breathe" were good advice when I was overwhelmed with digging myself out of some really bad messes.

Perhaps this is not the day to do anything more but is in the fact the day when I should read a book...

Profile

riotheclown: clowning (Default)
riotheclown

April 2025

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930   

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 2nd, 2025 05:09 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios