More from Shunryu Suzuki on listening: When you listen to someone, you should give up all your preconceived ideas and your subjective opinions; you should just listen to him, just observe what his way is. We put very little emphasis on right and wrong, good and bad. We just see things as they are with him, and accept them. This is how we communicate with each other. Usually when you listen to some statement, you hear it as a kind of echo of yourself. You are actually listening to your own opinion. If it agrees with your opinion you may …
I’ve been reading Shunryu Suzuki’s classic Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind (famous for the quote “in the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities, but in the expert’s there are few.”) There are some fabulous teachings in the book, which I will blog here over the next few days. This is about the three types of creation: There are perhaps three kinds of creation. The first is to be aware of ourselves after we finish zazen [Zen sitting meditation]. When we sit we are nothing, we do not even realize what we are; we just sit. But when we stand up, we …
The Big Bang was actually a Big Hiss, according to this article in the New Scientist. I have heard a Midewiwin teaching that said that the first sound heard in the universe was the sound of the Creator’s rattle. Here’s the sound (0.5 Mb.wav).
My friend John Engle has posted a story about using Open Space at a small liberal arts college near Chicago. What is remarkable about the story is that it opens up a new way to use Open Space Technology for decision making. You can read the story in .pdf format at John’s site
My dad has a blog where he shares News from Clarksburg, a small village in Ontario’s Beaver Valley. He doesn’t post often, but when he does he posts these little stories that capture so much more than they purport to: These two trees are on the route into Clarksburg village that Maggie (the golden retriever) and I walk in the mornings to fetch the Globe and Mail. About four years ago I noticed a young Mountain Ash growing in the crotch of a branch of the Maple about five metres above the ground. I suppose a squirrel or bird must …