Categories
2020 Term 2 Black Lives Matter Online Zen Group Roshi Susan Murphy Sand Talk Talks Teachers

‘Non-linear time is non-linear mind: Caught in the net of the law’

Talk #3 from Term 2 of our Online Zen Group for 2020. Click here for other talks in this series.

Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy
12 July 2020

whitebait ah
their black eyes open
in the net of the law

Bassho

Click here to download a transcription of this talk. (PDF) ()

zen open circle · Non-linear time is non-linear mind: Caught in the net of the lore
Categories
2020 Term 2 Black Lives Matter Online Zen Group Sand Talk

BLM Link Library Update

Hello Sangha,

The Bla(c)k Lives Matter Link Library grew from the idea to gather together in one place all the references to books, articles, films, poetry, etc that have been arising from our discussions around Aboriginal and Black Lives Matter, anti-racism, colonisation, etc. 

Every few weeks I’ll feature a few new items here, in case you are wondering what to read next 🙂

You can access the BLM link library directly at www.brightanddark.net/blmlinks or via the [THEMES] menu above. 

If you would like to contribute a link for the library you can send the suggestions here or you can email them to me directly at curlytrees@gmail.com

Happy Reading 😉

()

Oonagh

New this week:

Living on Stolen Land (2020) by Ambelin Kwaymullina

A well timed look at our colonial-settler ‘present’, “Living on Stolen Land’ pulls apart the myths at the heart of our nationhood, and challenges Australia to come to terms with its own past and its place within and on ‘Indigenous Countries’. This title speaks to many First Nations’ truths; stolen lands, sovereignties, time, decolonisation, First Nations perspectives, systemic bias and other constructs that inform our present discussions and ever-expanding understanding. This title is a timely, thought-provoking and accessible read.

Song Spirals: Sharing women’s wisdom of Country through song lines (2019) by the Gay’wu Group of Women

A rare opportunity to connect with the living tradition of women’s songlines, as recounted by Yolngu women from far north Australia, the Gay’wu Group of Women. These ancient narratives of landscape have often been described as a means of navigating across vast distances without a map, but they are much, much more than this. Songspirals are sung by Aboriginal people to awaken Country, to make and remake the life-giving connections between people and place. Songspirals are radically different ways of understanding the relationship people can have with the landscape

Talking Sideways: Stories and Conversations from Finnish Springs (2019) by Reg Dodd & Malcolm McKinnon

‘That’s the way it is with us mob. We were brought up to talk kind of sideways. That’s the respectful, true Aboriginal way.’ Reg Dodd grew up at Finniss Springs, on striking desert country bordering South Australia’s Lake Eyre. In this book, Dodd reflects on his upbringing in a cross-cultural environment that defied social conventions of the time and writes candidly about the tensions surrounding power, authority and Indigenous knowledge that have defined the recent decades of this resource-rich area.

Fire Front: First Nations poetry and power today (2020) a Poetry collection curated by Alison Whittaker

This important anthology showcases Australia’s most-respected First Nations poets alongside some rising stars. Featured poets include Oodgeroo Noonuccal, Ruby Langford Ginibi, Ellen van Neerven, Tony Birch, Claire G. Coleman, Evelyn Araluen, Jack Davis, Kevin Gilbert, Lionel Fogarty, Sam Wagan Watson, Ali Cobby Eckermann, Archie Roach and Alexis Wright, Bruce Pascoe, Ali Cobby Eckermann, Chelsea Bond, Evelyn Araluen and Steven Oliver – a testament to the renaissance of First Nations poetry happening in Australia right now.

little bit long time (2017) by Ali Cobby Eckermann

Ali Cobby Eckermann is a nunga poet and writer from the Northern Territory, now living in the ‘intervention-free’ South Australian village of Koolunga. Her poetry charts a long journey to reconnect with her Yankunytjatjara family.

Deep Time Dreaming: Uncovering Ancient Australia (2017) by Billy Griffiths

This multi award-winning book is a journey through time, seeking to understand the extraordinary deep history of the Australian continent, investigating a twin revolution: the reassertion of Aboriginal identity in the second half of the twentieth century, and the uncovering of the traces of ancient Australia. It explores what it means to live in a place of great antiquity, with its complex questions of ownership and belonging.

Story about Feeling (1989) Bill Neidjie & Keith Taylor

Bill Neidjie, b.1911, grew up on his Father’s traditional country in the Northern Territory where he was immersed in Aboriginal culture, law, language, song, and ceremony.  This book is a profound and deeply philosophical reflection on all aspects of this life, and the next, told in the oral tradition, gently moving between subjects that are rooted in both spiritual and environmental realms. Includes reproductions of bark paintings and artworks.

Yorro Yorro: Original Creation and the Renewal of Nature (2015) David Mowaljarlai

Aboriginal Elder David Mowaljarlai and photographer Jutta Malnic rekindle a story that constitutes the oldest collective memory of humankind. Yorro Yorro tells of Wandjina creation spirits and their ‘crossing over’ into ancestral beings and then eventually into human form.

Categories
Sand Talk

Sand Talk Study Group Guidelines

~ by Roshi Susan Murphy and Sensei Kynan Sutherland

Here are some guidelines to help deepen our practice as part of the Sand Talk Study Group.

  • This Sand Talk Study Group is a place for yarning. Yarning is the natural-feeling way to discover and affirm the intimacy of “us-two”. By speaking openly, honestly and from the heart, we reveal each other and ourselves to each other and open the Way. There is no “me” without “you” in any good yarn, just the life of “us-two”. This flowing conversation, intrinsic to Zen and Sand Talk alike, restores the seamless web of connection to country. This is true not simply for people, but for “the bushes and grasses and the many beings of the world.”
  • It’s important not to hold back in yarning. As Tyson Yunkaporta says, “Egos always get in the way of a good yarn.” So without holding back or pushing yourself forward, listen and respond energetically to what is most alive in you, in full confidence that what you share will be heard and considered with respect and gratitude.
  • A good yarn is good fun. As Tyson Yunkaporta says, “If people are laughing, they are learning.” Laughter cuts right through the isolated self to discover “us-two”. So while (and because) this is a serious exploration, let’s not forget to play and be creative. This is very much the spirit of Zen, which along with Tyson affirms that, “True learning is a joy because it is an act of creation.’  And we’ll need a sense of humour if we’re to sustain and inspire meaningful change over the long term
  • Cheeky stories, jokes and Zen koans have an upside-down wisdom that releases the energy of activism and transformation. We’re not here to “understand” Tyson Yunkaporta’s book, but to feel the living sparks that sting us back into life. Be alert to these sparks, no matter how small – they are far more powerful and necessary than any linear consumption of the book, and can ignite great personal and social change.
  • No one is “boss” of a yarn. Everyone contributes just as they are, with all that they are. Questions of privilege, ignorance, short-sightedness etc will naturally arise in the context of a book that asks us to decolonise our minds, and can be examined, not in a spirit of competition, but in an environment of trust and growth. After all, we’re here to discover the roominess of how much we don’t know, beyond the constraints of how much we think we  know – and to know each other. By sharing our joys, difficulties and revelations we form subtle and lasting bonds. Everybody’s unique contribution both directly and indirectly grows the ecosystem we call “sangha relations.”
  • To deepen the yarning, we consciously move into smaller groups. These ‘break-out rooms’ are small campfires along a riverbank, where we gather to speak openly and intimately in the context of our Zen practice to discover how it meets and lights up and deepens with indigenous wisdom, and how indigenous wisdom opens the way of ‘When you know the place where you are, practice begins’. We not only share our thoughts around these campfires but our lives. The groupings will be different each time, so that our conversation is more and more thoroughly interwoven over time. Knowledge is then a shared, distributed and interconnected matter held by the sangha without any sense of “possession”.
  • When we come back to the main group at the end of our session (last 10 minutes), feel for any sparking prompts to our ongoing conversation – a question or image or learning that feels so alive and pressing that it must  be shared with the group. These will be rich and fertile areas for us to explore down the track. They may be urgent, troubling, provocative, or strangely quiet, almost silent intimations of something important. Bring them up – they are the seeds of great intellectual and societal change. 
  • To walk this way demands that we all take seriously the “custodial mind” of “care for country”. Custodial mind is the responsibility we feel to turn creatively with our circumstances instead of fighting against them. As Tyson Yunkaporta says, “Creation is in a constant state of motion, and we must move with it as the custodial species or we will damage the system and doom ourselves.” By attending to our shared place of practice (which includes the online space as much as the particular country in which we are learning how to belong), and offering ourselves completely, we begin to walk the “songline of the Way.”
Categories
2020 Term 2 Black Lives Matter Images Online Zen Group Sand Talk

Generations

Photo from Meg.
Categories
2020 Term 2 Black Lives Matter Online Zen Group Sand Talk Tools

Introducing our new ‘Bla(c)k Lives Matter Links’

We now have a place on Bright & Dark where you can find links to key resources about…

  • Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Peoples
  • Anti-Racism
  • Allyship
  • Campaigns & Petitions
  • Colonialism and Decolonisation
  • Indigenous knowledge systems
  • White supremacy/fragility
  • And beyond…

The page can be found at www.brightanddark.net/blmlinks. Or via the [THEMES] menu above.

This page will evolve over time and we will use it as a place to feature key items that come up in our discussions.

A special thanks and deep bow to Oonagh who has volunteered to be the caretaker for this page for us. ()

Categories
2020 Term 2 Images Sand Talk

Old friends… sunning themselves.

Photo from Meg.
Categories
2020 Term 2 Black Lives Matter Online Zen Group Poetry Sand Talk Words

Squares and Circles

~ By Ali Cobby Eckermann. From her book: ‘little bit long time’ (Picardo Press)

I was born yankunytjatjara my mother is yankunytjatjara her mother was yankunytjatjara my family is yankunytjatjara I have learnt many things from my family elders I hace grown to recognise that life travels in circles aboriginal culture has taught me this

When I was born I was not allowed to live with my family I grew up in the white man’s world

We lived in a square house we picked fruit and vegetables from a neat fenced square plot
we kept animals in square paddocks we ate at a square table we sat on square chairs
I slept in a square bed

I looked at myself in a square mirror and did not know who I was

One day I met my mother

I began to travel I visited places that I had already been but this time I sat down with family

We gathered together by big round campfires we ate bush tucker feasting on round ants and berries we ate meat from animals that live in round burrows we slept in circles on beaches around our fires we sat in the dirt on our land that belongs to a big round planet we watched the moon grow to a magnificent yellow circle that was our time

I have learnt two different ways now I am thankful for this that is part of my Life Circle

My heart is Round ready to echo the music of my family but the Square within me remains

The Square stops me in my entirety.

Categories
Sand Talk Study Group

Study Group #2

“You have to show patience and respect, come in from the side, sit a while and wait to be invited in.”

Tyson Yunkaporta, Sand Talk (pg.29)

Coming from the side


We look forward to coming together for our Study Group #2 where we will continue our exploration of Tyson Yunkaporta’s Sand Talk.

Here are some questions to help open our discussion this week. Please take these as a starting point and feel welcome to raise your own questions or ideas.

  • What is your experience of ‘us-two’?
  • How have you experienced ‘coming from the side’ in your own life?
  • How might ‘us-two’ and ‘coming from the side’ help us to deepen our exploration of ‘You are welcome here’?
  • How are you experiencing and exploring the movements between occupying and inhabiting; owning and belonging?

Remember you can always add your contributions to this discussion in the comments below.

When: Sunday 5th July 2020, 4-5:15 pm AEST via zoom (please see your email for ZOOM details).

What we will do: Each fortnight we will continue our exploration of Sand Talk.

Schedule: Our time/space together will flow a little differently to the last gathering. We invite you to sit zazen before gathering online. This will help to provide a wide open space for our discussions.

3:20 – 3:50pm | Offline zazen in place
3:50 – 4:00pm | Online space opens (cup of tea welcome!)
4:00 – 5:10pm | Main Gathering
5:10 – 5:20pm | Closing & Notices
5:20 – 5:35pm | Informal social time.

See you Sunday!

()

Karen & Deborah
Study Group Hosts

Categories
2020 Term 2 Black Lives Matter Online Zen Group Roshi Susan Murphy Sand Talk Talks Teachers

‘Coming from the side’

Talk #2 from Term 2 of our Online Zen Group for 2020. Click here for other talks in this series.

Teacher: Roshi Susan Murphy
28 June 2020

Click on the recording below to listen to this talk now. We will upload a transcription when it becomes available. ()

zen open circle · Coming from the side
Categories
Sand Talk Study Group

Study Group #1

Porcupine

We will come together on Sunday 21st June 2020 from 4 – 5:30pm AEST for our inaugural study group.

In preparation we invite you to read or re-read the first chapter of ‘Sand Talk’ by Tyson Yunkaporta: Porcupine. Click here if you want to read an online copy of the first chapter.

We will use the questions below as a place to start our meandering together:

  • What resonates with you in this chapter?
  • What makes you feel uncomfortable?

If you have thoughts to share before Sunday we invite you to comment on this post.

If you have any questions about the Study Group along the way please email gassho@zenopencircle.org.au

()

Karen & Deborah.