Showing posts with label quotes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quotes. Show all posts

10/23/2009

shadows and silence

  
  





11 shadows of a tree






a long silence
between your words -
autumn deepens







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green color code #767c6b "color of mountain doves"
山鳩色 (やまばといろ)




The trees, the flowers, the plants grow in silence.
The stars, the sun, the moon move in silence.
Silence gives us a new perspective.


Mother Teresa



autumn sunshine -
the sound of this shadow
on the wall


the sound of these
leaves on the temple wall -
autumn solitude




11 shadows of a tree


Thanks to Mother Teresa!


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A friend asked:
why not drop 'these' from L1 and move 'leaves" into it's place?

Well, here is my answer:

the sound of leaves
on the temple wall -
autumn solitude


the sound of these
leaves on the temple wall -
autumn solitude


Maybe you feel the difference yourself?

The sound of leaves, the sound of water ... quite a well used phrase in haiku ...
:o) ... maybe overused ...

Since it was not the sound of leaves (or rather maybe branches with leaves, for that matter) hitting the wall, but as is shown in the photo,
it was the sound of shadows, I want the reader to pause
these ... what ? simply leaves? only shadows? anything else ?

these leaves ... I can hear these leaves rustle in the wind, as the tree stands if front of the wall

leaves on the temple wall ... now they are only shadows, not the sound ...


So I choose the version I did.
HH


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8/22/2009

being myself

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In an age where there is much talk
about "being yourself,"
I reserve to myself the right
to forget about being myself,
since in any case
there is very little chance
of my being anybody else.



Thomas Merton
"Day of a Stranger,"
Thomas Merton Reader, p. 431






being myself
writing my own
haiku



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8/10/2009

beauty

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"It is the beauty within us
that makes it possible for us
to recognize the beauty
around us."


(Joan Chittister)

source : Spirituality-Practice / facebook




to see beauty
in the little things -
haiku life



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7/29/2009

dust and Buddha

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CLICK for original link to this poem
Ryokan sweeping leaves




Having just moved into a new temple, a young Zen monk was filled with energy and dedication and surpassed all the other monks in his zeal for cleaning.
During work practice, he was an absolute tornado, running throughout the rooms and hallways, sweeping and polishing and dusting everything in sight.

One day his teacher asked him, "What are you doing?"
The monk beamed a large smile in the direction of his teacher and said, "I am working hard to clear away the dust of delusion, and to reveal the shining face of Buddha which is beneath it."

His teacher said to him,
"Please don't ever forget.
The dust is also the Buddha."


Sweeping Changes
Gary Thorp



Daibutsu - Big Buddha in Kamakura



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6/06/2009

Be who you are

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Be who you are and say what you feel
because those who mind don't matter
and those who matter don't mind.


Dr. Seuss



. . . CLICK here for Photos !




People who do not need to please
are irresistible because they radiate wholeness,
a rare delicacy in a world of hungry hearts.


Alan Cohen





write your haiku
as you find them ...
no need to please




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6/03/2009

loss and change

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Loss is nothing else but change,
and change is nature's delight.

Marcus Aurelius



You do not suffer because things are impermanent.
You suffer because things are impermanent
and you think they are permanent.


Thich Nhat Hanh




something lost
something gained
write a haiku


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5/22/2009

garden of the mind

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A person's mind may be likened to a garden,
which may be intelligently cultivated
or allowed to run wild;
but whether cultivated or neglected,
it must, and will, bring forth.
If no useful seeds are put into it,
then an abundance of useless weed-seeds will fall therein,
and will continue to produce their kind.

Just as gardeners cultivate their plots,
keeping them free from weeds,
and growing the flowers and fruits which they require,
so may a person tend the garden of his or her mind,
weeding out all the wrong, useless, and impure thoughts,
and cultivating toward perfection the flowers and fruits of right, useful, and pure thoughts.
By pursuing this process, a person sooner or later discovers
that he or she is the master-gardener of his or her soul,
the director of his or her life.


James Allen



CLICK for the MIND


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3/27/2009

think good thoughts

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To think bad thoughts is really
the easiest thing in the world.
If you leave your mind to itself
it will spiral down into ever increasing unhappiness.

To think good thoughts, however, requires effort.
This is one of the things
that discipline - training - is about.



James Clavell, in his novel "Shogun"



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Gabi Greve
My Favorite Quotes to Enjoy with Haiku




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3/24/2009

chickpeas and bread

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CLICK for more sufi stories


The poor Mullah Nasreddin was reduced to living on a diet of chickpeas and bread,
while his neighbor dined on fancy delicacies

provided by the King himself.

One day his neighbor said to Nasreddin:
"If you were truly wise you would learn to flatter the King

and obey his every whim like I do.
Then you would not have to live on chickpeas and bread."

Nasreddin answered,
"And if you would learn to live on chickpeas and bread like I do,
then you would not have to flatter the King
and obey his every whim."


Traditional Sufi Story


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How about to live on a diet
of one haiku a day ?





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1/29/2009

separate day

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Begin at once to live
And count each separate day
As a separate life.


— Seneca




a separate haiku
for each separate day
... yes we can




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1/23/2009

QUOTE ... what if ...

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One way to open your eyes is to ask yourself,
"What if I had never seen this before?
What if I knew i would never see it again?"



Rachel Carson




This is a good advise
to ask yourself
before writing a haiku !


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1/17/2009

Dalai Lama

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Compassion is not religious business,
it is human business;
it is not luxury,
it is essential
for our own peace and mental stability;
it is essential for human survival.


quote :  Dalai Lama





compassion
on the haiku way ...
way to go



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1/09/2009

I am NOW

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I was regretting the past and fearing the future.
Suddenly God was speaking. "My name is 'I Am.'"
I waited. God continued.

"When you live in the past,
with its mistakes and regrets,
it is hard. I am not there. My name is not 'I was.'

"When you live in the future,
with its problems and fears,
it is hard. I am not there. My name is not 'I will be.'

"When you live in this moment, it is not hard.
I am here.
My name is 'I Am.'"



Helen Mellicost




I am Here
I am Now
I write Haiku


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11/10/2008

Do not expect perfection

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Don’t expect perfection and things to go
the way you want them to
when it comes to people, business,
your prospects, and your social life.

When things don’t go

according to your desires,
when the weather of life is foul,
be creative and consider
what may be the higher reasons
why this is happening and
why you must adjust.

Perhaps it’s to gain forbearance,
patience, inner strength, flexibility,
or the ability to withhold criticism
while serving as a loving model.


Michael Goddart




the weather of life
reaches you ...
your haiku life


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10/11/2008

take your time

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Don’t be fooled by the calendar.
There are only as many days in the year

as you make use of.
One person gets only a week’s value out of a year
while another person gets

a full year’s value out of a week.

Charles Richards




take your time ...
one week, one year
one haiku




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8/25/2008

normal day

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Normal day,
let me be aware of the treasure you are ...
Let me not pass you by in quest of
some rare and perfect tomorrow.


Mary Jean Iron

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normal day
normal life
normal haiku




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7/29/2008

really rejoice

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Courage begins when we can admit
that there is no life without some pain,
some frustration;
that there is no tragic accident
to which we are immune;
and that beyond the normal exercise of prudence
we can do nothing about it.

But courage goes on to see
that the triumph of life is not in pains avoided,
but in joys lived completely
in the moment of their happening.

Courage lies in never taking so much as a good meal
or a day of health and fair weather for granted.

It lies in learning to be aware
of our moments of happiness
as sharply as our moments of pain.

We need not be afraid to weep
when we have cause to weep,
so long as we can really rejoice
at every cause for rejoicing.

Victoria Lincoln




really rejoice
in the Here and Now ...
write a haiku




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7/24/2008

WKD - Miyazawa Kenji

[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
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暑さにも負けず遍路の道長き


atsusa ni mo
makezu henro no
michi nagaki



not even yielding
to the great heat ...
pilgrim on the road





Today I visited a temple in Yamaguchi ... online of course ...

. . . 龍蔵寺 . . . Ryuzo-Ji



My daily duty walk along our rural memorial pilgrimage of Shikoku was really HOT, 36 degrees in the shadow ... atsusa ni mo makezu ... kept ringing in my mind all the way ... :o)


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source : Tomikichiro Tokuriki 1902-1999


Miyazawa Kenji wrote this famous poem ...

ame ni mo makezu

ame ni mo makezu
kaze ni mo makezu
yuki ni mo natsu no atsusa ni mo makenu

jōbu na karada wo mochi
yoku wa naku
kesshite ikarazu
itsu mo shizuka ni waratte iru
ichi nichi ni genmai yon gō to
miso to sukoshi no yasai wo tabe
arayuru koto wo
jibun wo kanjō ni irezu ni
yoku mikiki shi wakari
soshite wasurezu
nohara no matsu no hayashi no kage no
chiisa na kayabuki no koya ni ite
higashi ni byōki no kodomo areba
itte kanbyō shite yari
nishi ni tsukareta haha areba
itte sono ine no taba wo oi
minami ni shinisō na hito areba
itte kowagaranakute mo ii to ii
kita ni kenka ya soshō ga areba
tsumaranai kara yamero to ii
hidori no toki wa namida wo nagashi
samusa no natsu wa oro-oro aruki

minna ni deku-no-bō to yobare
homerare mo sezu
ku ni mo sarezu
sō iu mono ni
watashi wa naritai



not losing to the rain
not losing to the wind
not losing to the snow or to the heat of the summer
with a strong body
unfettered by desire
never losing temper
cultivating a quiet joy
every day four bowls of brown rice
miso and some vegetables to eat
in everything
count yourself last and put others before you
watching and listening, and understanding
and never forgetting
in the shade of the woods of the pines of the fields
being in a little thatched hut
if there is a sick child to the east
going and nursing over them
if there is a tired mother to the west
going and shouldering her sheaf of rice
if there is someone near death to the south
going and saying there's no need to be afraid
if there is a quarrel or a suit to the north
telling them to leave off with such waste
when there's drought, shedding tears of sympathy
when the summer's cold, walk in concern and empathy
called a blockhead by everyone
without being praised
without being blamed
such a person
I want to become

© More in the WIKIPEDIA !




kokeshi with this poem

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Bending neither to the rain
Nor to the wind
Nor to snow nor to summer heat,
Firm in body, yet
Geoffrey Bownas and Anthony Thwaite,
The Penguin Book of Japanese Verse, 1964



Neither rain
nor wind
nor snow nor summer’s heat
will affect his robust body. . . .
Makoto Ueda,
Modern Japanese Writers and the Nature of Literature, 1982


Undaunted by the rain,
Undaunted by the wind,
Undaunted by the snow or the summer heat,
With a strong body

Donald Keene,
Dawn to the West, 1984


Strong in the rain
Strong in the wind
Strong against the summer heat and snow
He is healthy and robust

Roger Pulvers,
Kenji Miyazawa: Poems, 1997

source :  japanfocus.org

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CLICK for more photos

Kenji Miyazawa 宮沢 賢治, Miyazawa Kenji

27 August 1896 - 21 September 1933,
Hanamaki, Iwate, Japan
was a poet and author of children's literature in early Shōwa period Japan. He was also known as a devout Buddhist, vegetarian and social activist.

Miyazawa was born in what is now Hanamaki city, Iwate Prefecture as the eldest son of a wealthy pawnbroker. From an early age, he was disturbed by what he perceived to be the social inequity between his well-to-do family, who lived by lending money to the impoverished farmers in the area. In 1918, he graduated from Morioka Agriculture and Forestry College. He was a bright student, so his academic advisor wanted him as an assistant professor. However, differences with his father over religion (he converted to the more activist Nichiren sect), and his repugnance for the family pawnshop business (he yielded his inheritance to his younger brother), created much unhappiness in his early life, and in 1921, he departed Hanamaki for Tokyo.

In Tokyo, while staying with a friend, he was introduced to the works of poet Sakutarō Hagiwara, and was encouraged to start writing. After eight months in Tokyo, during which time he began to write children's stories, he returned to Hanamaki due to the illness and subsequent death of his younger sister.

He found employment as a teacher in agricultural science at Hanamaki Agricultural High School (花巻農学校). Saving his meagre salary, he was able to finance the publication of his first collection of children's stories and fairy tales (Chūmon no Ōi Ryōriten - 注文の多い料理店 - The Restaurant of Many Orders) and a portion of a collection of free-verse poems (Haru to Shura - 春と修羅 - Spring and Asura) in 1924. Although neither work was a commercial success, his writings came to the attention of poets Kotaro Takamura and Shimpei Kusano, who admired his writing greatly and introduced it to the literary world.

...

Miyazawa's works were influenced by contemporary trends of romanticism and the proletarian literature movement, but above all were influenced by his devotion to the Lotus Sutra in particular.
Miyazawa struggled with pleurisy for many years, and was often incapacitated for months at a time. He died in 1933 of pneumonia.

It may also be noted that Miyazawa had at least a passing interest in Esperanto. He loved his native province, and Ihatov (or Ihatovo), the name of the fictional location that appeared in his works, was constructed from the name Iwate (Ihate in the older spelling) in a manner similar to Esperanto.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



Gingatetsudō no Yoru
Night on the Galactic Railroad

1996 marked the 100th anniversary year of the birth of Kenji Miyazawa.



Miyazawa's mix of East and West begins with the names of the two young characters of the story: Jovanni (Giovanni) and Kanpanera (Campanella). The story takes place during the imaginary "Centaurus" Festival, a time when lanterns are lit to show deceased ancestors the way home. This imaginary festival occurs in August, and in the story, Miyazawa images children running and scampering, yelling that Centaurus is "dropping dew" [no doubt, a somewhat misplaced reference to the Perseids].

The Milky Way Train: Celebrating Kenji Miyazawa
By: Steve Renshaw and Saori Ihara, 1999


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Miyazawa Kenji wrote a famous book about a bear hunter

なめとこ山の熊 Nametoko yama no kuma
The bears of Nametoko Mountain




It's interesting, that business of the bears on Mt. Nametoko. Nametoko is a large mountain, and the Fuchizawa River starts somewhere inside it. On most days of the year, the mountain breathes in and breathes out cold mists and clouds. The peaks all around it, too, are like blackish green slugs or bald sea goblins..........

Read more here:
WKD : Bears as Kigo


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落し文宛名は風の又三郎
otoshibumi atena wa Kaze no Matasaburoo

a lost letter -
the address is
Kaze no Matasaburo


Satoo Hirokazu 佐藤博一

This needs some explanation.
otoshibumi is the name of the leaf-cut weevil. The pun in Japanese does not go well if I use the name of the animal for the first line.



quote
Kaze no Matasaburô - A Wind Boy
Miyazawa's collection of stories for children, published after his death in 1933, Kaze no Matasaburô contains six stories. This book is in fine binding with illustrations by Koana Ryûichi, and an introduction by Tsubota Jôji, who had already established his position in the world of children's literature. This book was recommended by the Ministry of Education and well read. With Kaze no Matasaburô, Miyazawa became famous as an author for children.

"Kaze no Matasaburô" is about a strange boy named Takada Saburô. On a windy day, he appears in an elementary school at a mountainside. He says he has come from Hokkaido with his father. His new classmates think he might be Matasaburô, a wind boy. He spent twelve days there, studying and playing with the village children. As wind blows when he does something, the boys come to believe he is really Matasaburô. Then, on a windy day, he is gone. Although it is an unfinished work, it is regarded as the best work of Miyazawa, as well as one of the masterpieces in the history of Japanese children's literature. It is widely read today.

Kaze no Matasaburô was dramatized by Gekidan Tôdô, and made into a movie in 1940. The song at the beginning of this story became very popular. A reprint of the original edition was published by Holp Shuppan in 1971.
source : www.iiclo.or.jp


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. Hagiwara Sakutaro 萩原朔太郎 .


I wrote the above haiku whilst researching for this

Shikoku Fudo Pilgrimage

Shikoku Henro Pilgrimage to 88 Temples


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[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
- #miyazawakenji -
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7/18/2008

new eyes

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The real voyage of discovery
consists not in seeking new landscapes
but in having new eyes.




Marcel Proust (1871-1922)

CLICK for more information


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How very true about the voyage of a haiku poet !



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5/30/2008

Ichigo Ichie

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Ichigo Ichie 一期一会

One Time, One Encounter


Many people are easily bored with routines such as sweeping the floor, making a bed, or preparing a meal. The motto in the Japanese tea ceremony schools is ichigo ichie which means "one time, one encounter." Though all the intricate movements of the tea ceremony can be repeated, they are never the same.

For the Japanese, each moment is unrepeatable and special in its own right. Those who want to live the spiritual life would be wise to adapt this motto and apply it to everything we do. Cleaning the floor today is different from the time we did it a few days ago. The light in the room may be different or the velocity of our sweeping motion.

With ichi-go ichi-e, boredom is vanquished.

.. quoted from .. www.spiritualityandpractice.com/








One Time
One Encounter
One Haiku



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................................. ichi go ichi e


one life, one meeting

one chance, one meeting

one moment in the endless flow of time

"Treasure every meeting, for it will never recur."

"Be grateful for this never-to-be-repeated moment."

"We only have one chance
to enjoy this present moment."






© しのパパ

More haiga are HERE !

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