Hermit Wisdom — E-Book

A New eBook – Just click on the Hermit Wisdom link below.

 

Hermit Wisdom Now Available

Hermit Wisdom

The book is a series of prayerful meditations. Please feel free to download it for your practice. It is sure to have flaws in it…and yet, it still has wisdom.

Editor’s Choice…

Nothing Is Perfect, Everything Is Just Right

I can think the “truth” of this saying. Knowing it is very different. I drove a man with renal cancer to a doctor’s appointment and it was hard to understand how his suffering is just right. The U.S. is considering bombing Syria and Syria allegedly used chemical weapons. How is this just right? One who is awakened sees with the eyes of the Beloved. To see the Beloved in everything is just right.

It is in a PDF format and works well with the Kindle App. Also on iPhone, iPad and Windows PC with the Kindle App. Feel free to print it out and share it with others.

May you and all beings benefit from the merit of this practice.

Trends

Butterf

 

I read this morning that the early Christian church took on the laws and structures of the Roman state.

It was when persecutions of Christians ceased and mandatory affiliation as a Christian became the norm.

It was an ancient trend.

Trends are nothing new, groups form and share what is attractive or
fashionable and trends take hold. There were, however, apparently some who felt the new structures, the new religious regime although widespread was not
favorable for spiritual awakening. In Christian terms, it might be said it was
not favorable for knowing God. It was a trend, a style of life that was in
vogue but may not have been helpful in spiritual awakening.

Where are we?

Our spiritual work is not a trend, although Zen seemed to offer a flashy
alternative for those who wanted to be in a chic spiritual practice.

The “church” whatever that might mean today, continues to struggle with ancient laws and structures of a Roman state. To affiliate with a particular denomination or religious dogma is not the norm today. Neither is popular from a worldly perspective to study the Dharma unless it is hip deep into psychology and brain science. These new interests may be all the rage in Buddhist and Christian circles but they do not serve the spiritual seeker, and they may not be a favorable environment for spiritual liberation.

The ego-self is happy to be in a dalliance with modern ideas.

In such an affair the ego remains strong, frivolous and the center of our lives. As long as the ego-self holds a central position our ability to know the Dharma is blocked.

What is the environment that matches an inner longing to awaken for you?

Is it to continue where you are, as you are?

Or is there a sense of seeking that is not quenched by the material world of psychology, science or even religious laws and dogma?

It seems there may be a sense of foolishness that conflicts with an inner sense of purpose and we get stuck on this ledge. It is on this ledge we battle and may live out the short life we have been given in an inner skirmish between the ego and the Dharma.

We don’t want to be seen as fools but we do want to know our purpose. The ego continuously bangs the door shouting, “You fool!” when we consider devotion to the Dharma as our purpose.

Devotion of this sort requires guts and a keen sense of inner loyalty to this
devotion. This type of devotion is not understood by the material world.

Where is your allegiance?

This work demands a greater honesty than psychological analysis, where defenses are reworked and rebuilt in more “appropriate” and “healthy” ways.  A mask of defenses is still a mask and it disguises and blocks knowing the Truth.

As human beings, we tend to relate to everything as “mine” and this masquerade although often acceptable in the material world is a death mask in the spiritual realm.

Let me give a little example.

When we are alone, feeling blue or lonely we tend to want to find a way to get rid of this feeling. We hunt for things to make this feeling go away.

The dispelling of the feeling often takes the form of what can I do to feel better? Call a friend? Do something? The sense of “me” is central. This is the human condition and is normative in the material world.

What about “me?”
How do I look after “me?”

If we seek help from the material world, we will get directions on how to get what we need or how to get what we want so we won’t feel “lonely” or “blue.” We can barely imagine another way, a way that looks for the Dharma of the feeling, of the moment, of what is actually going on in a given circumstance. It is similar to being in the darkness, when we are in the darkness we hunt for a light switch to end the darkness. What if we remained with the feeling, facing whatever it is as God’s voice, the voice of the Dharma rather than reacting to an inner impulse to escape the feeling?

What if we met it, met the feeling as part of our interior landscape without rationalization or even reason, but just to meet it. It requires an allegiance and devotion to seeing everything, the whole panorama of inner experience as the voices and sights of Dharma and letting go of the topography as “MINE.”  It means accepting whatever is happening, wherever we are, as our life. This inner geography is our spiritual life with God whether we see it or not. It requires relinquishing fantasy for something to be better.

This practice is an expedition of leaving “ME and MINE” and crossing into the unfamiliar spiritual geography of solitude, silence and wholehearted engagement with the diversity of the Dharma, the assortments of God.

begin-the-day-copy-copy

The Way Through

Gate by Patricia Wright
Gate by Patricia Wright

A Way Through

Life seems simpler if we blot out awareness of its mystery, but such a life is an impoverished one. There is a dimension to ourselves, the most essential dimension, which it is folly to ignore. Patricia Wright’s Gate is a delicate image of this. She shows us the complexities of a normal existence – lines in confusion, with hints of gridded order behind, to which we are not privy. As we move to the center, the lines grow ever more clotted and chaotic: who can understand the meaning of events that make up our conscious experience – in relationships, in business, or whatever? But the swirls of events are the context wherein is held the gate. It is a real but shadowy presence, a way through, a possibility. If we allow silence to open up within, we shall see the gate and be free to open it. Sister Wendy Beckett, Meditations on Silence.

The decision to end the Sunday meditation at A Single Thread is both clear and fitting for this new dimension of practice. It is, however, not a decision to stop practice but to embrace it in the middle of the swirls of change where the gate to liberation is in a frame of silence, solitude, sitting, and study; it is a Way Through in the middle of the complexity of our lives.

No one is able to do the work for another. The Way Through is …a real but shadowy presence which requires that we do the work to see the gate and go through.

Looking Beyond the Profane

 

Looking into Reality
Looking into Reality

 

 

 

We may own things, we may do things — without suffering as long as we do not rely on the profane world as real. It’s like a fun house. Made of crazy mirrors showing distorted shapes.

Undertow

Empty Waves Zhong Fen li Bao yu Di, ©2016

Submerged in the rippling water,

My toes gently sink into the sand.

I step into the next wave,

And feel a strong pull as it recedes.

A riptide can be dangerous,

But it is I who make it so.

My fear of disappearing,

Of leaving all behind,

Keeps me from the joy of the deep water.

I cling to the shoreline,

To what I imagine it offers.

Let me possess the calm and faith

To go instead with what I know.

To go out willingly with the riptide,

To swim in the swells of deep waters.

Zhong Fen li Bao yu Di 2016

Comment on “Undertow”

During a recent retreat, I asked my teacher for help in understanding what emptiness is. She requested that I write about it, which I did. Then she sent me this.

” The experience of emptiness is enlightenment..to want nothing..to know nothing..have nothing. Completely empty even words cannot express. All hindrances are gone.”

I wrote back that I did not understand, but would reflect upon her words. I stopped trying to understand the words. Instead, I tried to “feel” my response to them. In doing so, I recalled vacationing in the Outer Banks as a young man…the feeling of swimming in the ocean…being on the edge of rip tides…of swimming in very deep waters. Her words about emptiness brought back many feelings associated with those experiences. I then wrote this poem.

Zhong Fen li Bao yu Di
June 3, 2016

 

 

 

Retreat February 10th – March 27th

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Photo Credit: “Getting Ready ” by Jiaoyuan Qian Yue 2015

The holy Way for the Spiritual Refugee

A Single Thread is pleased to offer an online retreat, “The holy Way for Spiritual Refugees.” It begins on

February 10th and ends on March 27th. This retreat is a contemplative Zen practice. It is open to anyone who seeks to trust the Way by purifying all the tendencies to fabricate.

In order to taste the benefits of the Dharma we need to commit time and effort to be silent, solitary and still. The basic work is to study the self delusion in good measure with the teachings of Dharma.

“… the kingdom of heaven is like a merchant seeking beautiful pearls, who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold all that he had and bought it.”

There is a cost! When we trust our fortune, when we persevere, we climb to higher ground where everything is clear.

Through effort, vigilance, restraint, and self-control, the wise person can become an island no flood will overwhelm. The Dhammapada2:25

The commitment is much like starting a fire by rubbing sticks together. We rub our mind against the Dharma in order for a spark to form and light to illuminate. We must be vigilant and restrain our sensual desires to run off after anything else; we must use our self-control to persevere in the work. We don’t waste time. We practice continuously.

The teachings of the Dharma all have the same sound. It is the sound of the high bird that waits for us to hear and practice the Way to cease from suffering.

The Dharma is not packaged, processed or possessed. It is as great as the blue sky and as flowing as the vast ocean. It flows across barriers and leaves no trace. It is all one cloth. www.asinglethread.net/all-one-cloth/

 


If you are interested in the retreat, please use the link on the HOME page to send us an e-mail. Thank you.

Practice Right in the Mess

backyard_shed small

We often want our life to look like something we have fabricated in our mind rather than what actually shows up. In order to relinquish these devilish fabrications we practice right in the middle of the mess.