A lovely quote from the Ox and Window by the 17th century Zen master Hakuin Ekaku, which came to me through Zen teacher David Rynick’s Blog. It has a delightful message, contrary to the rushing, achievement focus of most early January messages:This year, I am determined to be more unproductive. My goal is to do less and less – to move slower and slower until everything stops. I and the whole world will come to a sweet and silent stillness. And in this stillness, a great shout of joy will arise. We will all be free – free from the advice of ancient ages, free from the whining voices, free from the incessant objections of the responsible ones. In this new world, it will be abundantly clear that the bare branches of the winter trees are our teachers. In their daily dance of moving here and there, we will see once again the true meaning of our life. In the wind song of their being, we will hear God’s unmistakable voice. We will follow what appears before us – what had once been difficult will now unfold with ease.
Reblogged this on ram0ram note book.
Reblogged this on Bertha's Blog.
This is beautiful…. thank you Karl.
This certainly resonates with my being and with what my spirit is saying.
Reblogged this on Streams of Consciousness and commented:
This is so good and so well said.