D.T. Suzuki's book, An Introduction to Zen Buddhism (first published in 1934) is considered a classic primer for Westerners desiring to learn a bit about this distinctly Eastern philosophy. Today's journal entry offers readers this excerpt from the chapter titled Practical Zen:
A Confucian scholar writes, "They seek the truth too far away from themselves, while it is right near them." The same thing may be said of Zen. We look for its secrets where they are most unlikely to be found, that is, in verbal abstractions and metaphysical subtleties, whereas the truth of Zen really lies in the concrete things of our daily life. A monk asked the master: "It is some time since I came to you to be instructed in the holy path of the Buddha, but you have never given me even an inkling of it. I pray you to be more sympathetic." To this the following answer was given: "What do you mean, my son? Every morning you salute me, and do I not return it? When you bring me a cup of tea, do I not accept it and enjoy drinking it? Besides this, what more instructions do you desire from me?"
Is this Zen? Is this the kind of life-experience Zen wants us to have? A Zen poet sings, "How wondrously strange, and how miraculous this! I draw water, I carry fuel."...
...Do these examples make the subject in hand any clearer or more intelligible than before? I can multiply such instances indefinitely, but those so far cited may suffice to show that Zen is after all not a very complicated affair, or a study requiring the highest faculty of abstraction and speculation. The truth and power of Zen consists in its very simplicity, directness and utmost practicalness. "Good morning; how are you today?" "Thank you, I am well" --here is Zen. "Please have a cup of tea" --this, again is full of Zen. When a hungry monk at work heard the dinner-gong he immediately dropped his work and showed himself in the dining-room. The master, seeing him, laughed heartily, for the monk had been acting Zen to its fullest extent. Nothing could be more natural; the one thing needful is just to open one's eye to the significance of it all.
It may perhaps be easier to "open one's eye to the significance of it all" living here on Manitoulin Island...(although certainly there are many living and working here who unwittingly nurture chaos in their day to day routines as much as the city-dwellers of Toronto)...yet, undeniably, there is an energy vibrating here that lends itself to experiencing that which is typically mundane as something much more extraordinary.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEivCgy4DpJYnRjYH6vZGB1NZwm4qEBiUmvkDue_C_Tg5UOjC3oZUKa0hPi4AK8RCnZBlSLaRGNyyFOigztWgfc47dbMZ_Y5f5z4sgOzTw5Ex1qvWt18AV7cJvQdtFS7grgSootEK1bmnZQ/s400/IMG_2940.jpg)
Surely, Ravenseyrie, with its exposure to the elements and remote ruggedness makes it virtually impossible to be anywhere but in the "now". Sharing this land with the primitive Sorraia and Sorraia Mustangs, the two domestic horses and three draft mules enhances the sense of belonging that we might not otherwise have--somehow the way they have integrated themselves into the landscape provides us a portal to recognizing the miraculous in everyday occurrences.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEibwjhPU2kLsxFBkFb_r8bngZsNAl9iKL1ik-oYXQbL57ur9tVRvn_V2ZbZJ4q4TFw0CdPfmqHOVhtt0il5NDdGxZxsWMB8uhN-eQFiRoguXlDDu19B38ITa83auMinnJzANPmXOhg_8KI/s400/IMG_2964.jpg)
One of the foundation mares of the Sorraia Mustang Preserve
Dam of the first half-Sorraia foal in Canada, Animado by the purebred Sorraia stallion, Altamiro
While many of you are seeing the emergence of early spring flowers, nourishing rains and transient mud, here at Ravenseyrie, we still have snow, ice and frigid temperatures (it was 3°F when we fed the herd breakfast this morning). So I am VERY grateful for the variety of enchantments that everyday occurrences here provide...such things keep a long hard winter from depressing the spirit.
Would you like to see a few of these extraordinary elements captured by the camera over the past few days?
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgCj127MfVEDtBTd-Gx3HPz_x3h2AkNdHFpp2-Gwx_bWBMR9x1wu6hm0LlZ5MJpKHuB2NN3JppMaFgb343kgnYXuswywTcMOx2tEoQc5RIUBQ1UKJXOvUBe0VGHJs7JZKi1NKpUjQZn2IA/s400/IMG_2932.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgtCHfco7qkokS7uulGWV8rjP4_8Xfd2zJ3o3zX48-_zZNeg6grch5Pj_jq6-rmsIS_hzYRfUwm9zYv-srVp3HQ14c639gf90ukSACglmhyphenhyphenQtP5Fv6hNxythKhmuVaqOl4Hb2rmJA2hqWM/s400/IMG_2936.jpg)
Or from the opposite side, looking down on it, maybe it looks more like a feline shape? (No doubt you cat fanciers will think so!)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgM2QhYEjReKGQIY_1L3m-RDUBsIlqj5Au69f1q8g-ZL2FTH8bEnP5tYhRncx_o63ZcwX0r46I0XrHE4zKN6uelfdvlXfuJSrJaX_zAFCY6vEvQLjiU67rhEUmFTv3_KuhKSm2bqhyJQZg/s400/IMG_2967.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrRiQsWvC9nfurLg3aFyH2NAqS8p3TeTukz8QUNM05ldjWiisMkrtg5cMQs-6nbI1sdEJib4lWeuZV6lJfipSDnRLv3dLhzZYGfMny-TLAUzUyKxHUK0ASv9GAp8njMU3jyduCkLPSEoQ/s400/IMG_2937.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_IXusJ7hsAY9LAsuxddUONXLeoz1tGpkcw5J9d7L7gIK9rsa7exvsHIE-252X7EkR9Q-4KISem7NlhzKRiCcHY5AeNFiQlWOGmLrMwb18BuXT5XHcvT_8jPLYRcJOR-UtFwo7oEr0HwY/s400/IMG_2938.jpg)
I thought I would also share this photo because it rather caught me by surprise. I took this photo of Ciente eating her breakfast hay, I initially believed she was sharing it with her son, Interessado. It wasn't until after uploading the photo to the computer I realized that it was Belina's filly, Fada, who was breakfasting with Ciente. It is unusual for these two gals to be hanging out together.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiT240a12UoDf6MlfGIVyZ6NUjbNRsuWssLEecz5790dvuHhGwx7gIoJgqj7i10a4-iPcDqxCnStAd36XDcfPFSlMnCOHu07qZLEvFhtUoVa5BipbGwT59zvEbOXd4Jo7qyKkzoHfWffdw/s400/IMG_2944.jpg)
On Monday, I was able to spend quite a bit of time among the herd grooming them and just generally going with the flow of their afternoon. Shelagh and Maeb found some unattended piles of hay and made themselves comfortable while I curried winter hair and detangled manes and tails.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhL2Bnua4Id1PepG5ag9PGK-G92zgS8pevV3ZNJ7EdC6AjOrF4kxNATvFVUCtU2y1B-dzCfeqlqdVZiR4ycOIKlBkFtFgV5D-ZSBMRfXRW_c3cGZJFEi5_XP_Hhio-LAbNypqokWqDGVLc/s400/IMG_2960.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjmukAJbrCRw8gUIPa198kOq8jPS-zJ_iw1DZc3e2shgSYjj1NfIbsbE9BAepkAslHiv6oG2HbIUPQxJyDuRpdxOOZyty6H1Mxv9aKwYgwKNpsW8FW1y35joNu4KiqNDaTr1M3SgmvjNU4/s400/IMG_2965.jpg)
When the mundane becomes extraordinary, such insights into the higher meaning of things are abundant in my world, and stretch my mind to new ideas, new ways of being...
American artist, Georgia O'Keeffe was a prolific letter writer (in addition to being an avante-gard painter) and her entire life to me seemed to be an exclamation of joy of the magic abundant in simple things. In a letter to Anita Pollitzer (in 1917 prior to O'Keeffe's fame) she wrote, "I discovered that by running against the wind with a bunch of pine branches in your hand you could have the pine trees singing right in your ears."
I'll bet you can see, now, how "the truth of Zen really lies in the concrete things of our daily life"...May you recognize and enjoy the mundane made extraordinary in your own lives.
(Oh! and thank you to Sue for dropping by with a comment in the last entry of Journal of Ravenseyrie--it was a pleasure to learn a former islander is following along with this journal. When you come back to visit, for sure you can stop and meet the horses, whom you must already feel as if you know well.)
2 comments:
Hi Lynne,
Spring is just a heartbeat away here. I can smell it in the air, and I can hear it in the beautiful songs of the birds. This morning there was actually some sunshine and everyone hurried outside to work in their garden or just enjoy the weather. When I see your photo’s I think I understand your thoughts. You could spent your time whishing for spring to arrive and totally miss all those small wonders right in front of you. That would be such a shame, because they are wonders, like the image in the pond, the “geese prints” in the snow and the color contrast of Doll and the sky. I do think Ravenseyrie is a magical place, which absolutely inspires to enjoy those little wonders. But it also inspires me, here on the other side of the ocean, to enjoy every little wonder I stumble across, cause even here in this small and overcrowded country there are plenty, you just have to know where to look. That dear Lynne, is what you taught me, thank you!
Annemiek, you always come up with the most heart-warming comments. Thank you for "getting" what my sometimes jumbled ramblings are meant to put across.
We are presently coming up above freezing during the day and dropping just below at night. This is "sugaring" weather and those who have the marvelous Sugar Maples in abundance are tapping trees and making that magical elixir Maple Syrup.
I've a few other signs of spring to share in the blog, in a new entry, maybe later today.
Thank you Annemiek, for your "across the ocean" friendship!
Post a Comment