Archive for the 'poetry' Category

Haiku Enlightenment, by Gabriel Rosenstock.

December 4, 2009

On Wednesday, December 2, 2009, on YogaHeart Radio, CDKU, 88.1FM in Halifax, Nova Scotia, we read from Gabriel Rosenstock’s new book Haiku Enlightenment.

We had a lot of fun with the reading, enjoying spontaneous laughs and bursts of joy. Clyde, our guest on the show, had never heard a haiku. He was blown away, as you’ll hear:

yogaheart_20091202.13.30-15.30_haiku.mp3

Listen to the entire radio show here:
yogaheart_20091202.13.30-15.30.mp3

Haiku Enlightenment
by Gabriel Rosenstock

Read an excerpt from Haiku Enlightement
Read another excerpt from Haiku Enlightenment

Order from Amazon.com

a haiku

December 2, 2009

a seagull’s shadow
flashes onto a white wall
a crow in the room

Walt Whitman: Perfume and the Atmosphere – Form and Formlessness

November 29, 2008

Continued from Walt Whitman: Living the Paradox of Nonduality

Song of Myself continues. In the line preceding the lines that follow, Whitman was loafing, leaning, inviting his soul, observing a spear of summer grass. The sense was of solitude and focus. Now the next passage:

Houses and rooms are full of perfumes …. the shelves are crowded with perfumes,
I breathe the fragrance myself, and know it, and like it,
The distillation would intoxicate me also, but I shall not let it.

The atmosphere is not a perfume …. it has no taste of the distillation …. it is odorless,
It is for my mouth forever…. I am in love with it,
I will go to the bank by the wood and become undisguised and naked,
I am mad for it to be in contact with me.

From solitude to crowds, to the smells of life, humanity, and the world, Whitman likes it. He knows that if he lets his attention drop, he could be swallowed up by the concerns of man, worry, consumerism, desperation, and fear. He will not let that happen.

While he says he likes the perfume, he sings that it is the atmosphere that he loves. Forever he speaks from atmosphere itself, not from the crowd of perfumes. He speaks authentically, undisguised, naked. He is mad to know the atmosphere, to touch it and feel it touch him. Notice is now sent that this writing is not going to cater to the multitudes. This is not going to be a hack writing job that will find a place on a shelf with a thousand other perfumes. However, Song of Myself, too, is a perfume.

In the first lines of Song of Myself, Whitman revealed the paradox of nonduality, that we are the same – “Every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you” — and that everyone and every thing, every atom, is distinct and individual: “I lean and loafe at my ease….observing a spear of summer grass.”

We know and see how we are different. Each one of us, each and every thing is a perfume on the shelf. That’s the world. How easy is it to see we are all the same at the very same time that we are different?

Now Whitman is going deeper into the claim that we are the same. Our sameness is the atmosphere. To know the atmosphere is to know the nondual nature of reality. We hear talk of gurus stripping us of our egos, of standing naked before the truth, of shedding the veil that hides the truth. Whitman knows that to contact the atmosphere is to be natural, in nature — “by the bank of the wood,” where water meets soil, where man meets atmosphere — and “undisguised and naked.”

In the lines that follow, in case the reader hasn’t already realized it, Whitman declares the reader “shall possess the origin of all poems,” which is the atmosphere. The poems themselves are perfumes, each one different, each one arising from the same atmosphere, which now the reader, naked and undisguised in the mind, may come to know.

Perfume and atmosphere stand for form and formlessness, respectively. Song of Myself is the revelation that the perfume is the atmosphere, the atmosphere is the perfume, and that they are exactly each other. Joy and celebration are the natural emanations of this realization. Read the first few lines of Song of Myself and identify celebration, sameness, and distinct individuality:

I celebrate myself,
And what I assume you shall assume,
For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.

I loafe and invite my soul,
I lean and loafe at my ease….observing a spear of summer grass.

Yet Whitman says “The atmosphere is not a perfume.” He must make it clear that the perfume and the atmosphere are a duality in order for the atmosphere to be seen. Whitman must separate the water and the land. He must get the reader to see the two before seeing the one. He addresses contradiction later in Song of Myself in a famous passage beginning, “Do I contradict myself?”

Walt Whitman: Living the Paradox of Nonduality

November 27, 2008

whitman_walt_1
In Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass, he begins Song of Myself:

I celebrate myself,
And what I assume you shall assume,
For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.

I loafe and invite my soul,
I lean and loafe at my ease … observing a spear of summer grass.

These lines describe the paradox of nonduality and how to live.

The paradox is that while we are the same — “…what I assume you shall assume.” “…every atom belonging to to me as good belongs to you.” — everything is distinct: “observing a spear of summer grass.”

And how to live through the paradox? “…celebrate…” “…lean and loafe…” leaves-of-grass_mm

“I … invite my soul,” Whitman says. The soul is the paradox. It is who he is. Paradox is “myself.” “I celebrate myself.”

Read the second part of this treatment of Song of Myself.

Crib notes for understanding Nisargadatta

November 14, 2008

try, don’t try

need, no need

know, can’t know

only see

changeable, unchangeable

being, non-being

interest, no interest

keep quiet

questions, no questions

accept

know, don’t know

finite, infinite

no presence

being, non-being

unborn

cannot remember – never forgot

everything is unreal

silence

disappear

worldly, unworldly

understanding, cannot be understood

hold on, give up

something, nothing

destruction, indestructible

identification, identification gone

body identity, unborn

temporary, eternal

passing time

everything is, nothing is

reject, settle down

discard, have conviction

delay – fear

nothing is – true knowledge

Seen on the road

June 28, 2008

Spirituality

is like endless billboards

in the desert

announcing a desert

up ahead

without billboards

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