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I would rather say "the sun is always, seen or unseen, even in shadows and storm"
Sorry to mess with our poem.
No problem Jundo! All too true! I made a small edit for you keeping with the haiku form, and I hope it says this too. As you teach, I know the sun is always shining behind the clouds, and that even the clouds are a part of the Buddha sky.
Evening long breaths
Cicadas cheering up
Departure expected
Gasshō
stlah, Kaitan
I just heard that the word chan (zen) 禅 is the same to talk about cicadas in China in a formal way. That explains why cicadas apear often in Zen poetry. Is this true????
No problem Jundo! All too true! I made a small edit for you keeping with the haiku form, and I hope it says this too. As you teach, I know the sun is always shining behind the clouds, and that even the clouds are a part of the Buddha sky.
I just heard that the word chan (zen) 禅 is the same to talk about cicadas in China in a formal way. That explains why cicadas apear often in Zen poetry. Is this true????
Gasshō
stlah, Kaitan
Hmmm. Well, the kanji for Cicada literally means "Bug" (element on the left) and the same character as in Zen on the right: 蟬 (the older character for Zen is 禪), both pronounced Chán. So, you can see that there is something there.
Beyond that ... I think that the short life, following years of waiting in the ground ... and the hypnotic sound they omit ... all lend themselves to Zen lessons.
Hmmm. Well, the kanji for Cicada literally means "Bug" (element on the left) and the same character as in Zen on the right: 蟬 (the older character for Zen is 禪), both pronounced Chán. So, you can see that there is something there.
Beyond that ... I think that the short life, following years of waiting in the ground ... and the hypnotic sound they omit ... all lend themselves to Zen lessons.
Interesting, that is a wonderful story and great insight!
‘Zhi Liao’ 知了, also reminds me of 'Zhi Dao' 知道, which commonly translates to 'being aware' or literally 'knowing the path'
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