Teisho #1 from Term 2 of Taking Part in the Gathering 2021. Click here to listen to other talks from this event.
Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy with comment by Sensei Kynan Sutherland
13 June 2021
Teisho #1 from Term 2 of Taking Part in the Gathering 2021. Click here to listen to other talks from this event.
Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy with comment by Sensei Kynan Sutherland
13 June 2021
grass stem
bends with the wind –
back and forth
grass stem
bobs this way, that way
heady with seed
looking sideways
the forest raven’s eye –
sharp and alert
Teisho #5 from Term 1 of Taking Part in the Gathering 2021. Click here to listen to other talks from this event.
Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy
9 May 2021
Teisho #4 from Term 1 of Taking Part in the Gathering 2021. Click here to listen to other talks from this event.
Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy
25 April 2021
Teisho #3 from Term 1 of Taking Part in the Gathering 2021. Click here to listen to other talks from this event.
Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy
11 April 2021
Click on the recording below to listen to this talk now. We will upload a transcription when it becomes available. ()
This poem by Adam Zagajewski was offered by Roshi Susan as part of a teisho given for Taking Part in the Gathering.
Suddenly three angels appeared
right here by the bakery on St George Street.
Not another census bureau survey,
one tired man sighed.
No, the first angel said patiently,
we just wanted to see
what your lives have become,
the flavour of your days and why
your nights are marked by restlessness and fear.
That’s right, fear, a lovely, dreamy-eyed
woman replied; but I know why.
The labours of the human mind have faltered.
They seek help and support
they can’t find. Sir, just take a look
– she called the angel ‘Sir’! –
at Wittgenstein. Our sages
and leaders are melancholy madmen
and know even less than us
ordinary people (but she wasn’t
ordinary).
Then too, said one boy
who was learning to play the violin, evenings
are just an empty carton,
a casket minus mysteries,
while at dawn the cosmos seems as
parched and foreign as a TV screen.
And besides, those who love music for itself
are few and far between.
Others spoke up and their laments
surged into a swelling sonata of wrath.
If you gentlemen want to know the truth,
one tall student yelled – he’d
just lost his mother – we’ve had enough
of death and cruelty, persecution, disease,
and long spells of boredom still
as a serpent’s eye. We’ve got too little earth
and too much fire. We don’t know who we are.
We’re lost in the forest, and black stars
move lazily above us as if
they were only our dream.
But still, the second angel mumbled shyly,
there’s always a little joy, and even beauty
lies close at hand, beneath the bark
of every hour, in the quiet heart of concentration,
and another person hides in each of us –
universal, strong, invincible.
Wild roses sometimes hold the scent
of childhood, and on holidays young girls
go out walking just as they always have,
and there’s something timeless
in the way they wind their scarves.
Memory lives in the ocean, in galloping blood,
in black, burnt stones, in poems,
and in every quiet conversation.
The world is the same as it always was,
full of shadows and anticipation.
He would have gone on talking, but the crowd
was growing larger and waves
of mute rage spread
until at last the envoys rose lightly
into the air, whence, growing distant,
they gently repeated: peace be unto you,
peace to the living, the dead, the unborn.
The third angel alone said nothing,
for that was the angel of long silence.
Teisho #2 from Term 1 of Taking Part in the Gathering 2021. Click here to listen to other talks from this event.
Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy
28 March 2021
Click on the recording below to listen to this talk now. We will upload a transcription when it becomes available. ()
By ~ Theodore Roethke
In a dark time, the eye begins to see,
I meet my shadow in the deepening shade;
I hear my echo in the echoing wood—
A lord of nature weeping to a tree.
I live between the heron and the wren,
Beasts of the hill and serpents of the den.What’s madness but nobility of soul
At odds with circumstance? The day’s on fire!
I know the purity of pure despair,
My shadow pinned against a sweating wall.
That place among the rocks—is it a cave,
Or winding path? The edge is what I have.A steady storm of correspondences!
A night flowing with birds, a ragged moon,
And in broad day the midnight come again!
A man goes far to find out what he is—
Death of the self in a long, tearless night,
All natural shapes blazing unnatural light.Dark, dark my light, and darker my desire.
My soul, like some heat-maddened summer fly,
Keeps buzzing at the sill. Which I is I?
A fallen man, I climb out of my fear.
The mind enters itself, and God the mind,
And one is One, free in the tearing wind.
Teisho #1 from Term 1 of Taking Part in the Gathering 2021. Click here to listen to other talks from this event.
Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy
14 March 2021
Click on the recording below to listen to this talk now. We will upload a transcription when it becomes available. ()
Some end of year reading and listening for big and little people in our Black Lives Matter Link Library.
You can access the BLM link library directly at www.brightanddark.net/blmlinks or via the [CATEGORIES] menu above. You will land on featured items, but if you scroll through the dropdown menu you can view all items or select to view by topic or category: books, movies, articles etc
Contributions are welcome here or email curlytrees@gmail.com
Enjoy! () Oonagh
In this podcast botanist and member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, Robin Wall Kimmerer joins science’s ability to “polish the art of seeing” with her personal, civilizational lineage of listening to plant life and heeding the languages of the natural world. She’s an expert in moss — a bryologist — who describes mosses as the “coral reefs of the forest.” And she says that as our knowledge about plant life unfolds, human vocabulary and imaginations must adapt.
“In the English language, a human alone has distinction while all other living beings are lumped with the nonliving “its.” ”
In this essay published in Orion magazine, Robin Wall Kimmerer explores pronouns from the Potawatomi language that affirm our kinship with the natural world.
When We Say Black Lives Matter
“Little one, when we say Black Lives Matter,
we’re saying black people are wonderful-strong.
That we deserve to be treated with basic respect,
and that history’s done us wrong.“
In When We Say Black Lives Matter, a black child’s parents explain what the term Black Lives Matter means to them: in protest and song, in joy and in sorrow.
A vital and timely picture book from the prize-winning and bestselling Australian author Maxine Beneba Clarke
Cooee Mittigar: A story on Darug Songlines
“Cooee mittigar. Tread softly on our lands.
Know that this dreaming was here. Is still here.
Will be forever.”
Cooee Mittigar, meaning Come Here Friend, is an invitation to yana (walk), on Darug Country. In this stunning picture book, shortlisted for multiple awards, Darug creators Jasmine Seymour and Leanne Mulgo Watson tell a story on Darug Songlines, introducing children and adults-alike to Darug Nura (Country) and language.