Arts: This Dewdrop World

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  • Heiso
    Member
    • Jan 2019
    • 832

    Arts: This Dewdrop World

    I recently re-read Issa's famous dewdrop haiku and while I previously liked it, something really hit me this latest reading:

    This dewdrop world –
    Is a dewdrop world,
    And yet, and yet…


    At first I found it incredibly haunting that he seems to be saying that despite our practice and all our Buddhist teachings, there are times where our sorrow is just too much and overwhelms us.

    But then I read it as that while Buddhism gives us all these practices and answers, we aren't made of stone and it is healthy to feel and express emotion. As Jundo sometimes says, when it's time to cry, we cry.

    Gassho,

    Heiso

    StLah
    Last edited by Jundo; 10-30-2021, 02:37 PM.
  • Kokuu
    Treeleaf Priest
    • Nov 2012
    • 6836

    #2
    Thank you, Heiso! I find it affects me similarly.

    Even though The Diamond Sutra proclaims "Like a tiny drop of dew... so is all conditioned existence to be seen.", I think we all know how real emotions can feel.

    Issa experienced a huge amount of loss in his life and wrote this poem after the death of his daughter, having already lost his first child, a son, shortly after his birth.

    His third child also died, followed by his wife, Kiku, a few years later, prompting this haiku:

    Ikinokori
    ikinokoritaru
    samusa kana


    outliving them,
    outliving them all,
    ah, the cold!


    Gassho
    Kokuu
    -sattoday/lah-

    Comment

    • JimInBC
      Member
      • Jan 2021
      • 125

      #3
      Thank you for sharing that, Heiso. It is beautiful and has always made my heart both open and weep.

      Deep bows.

      Gassho, Jim
      ST/LaH

      Sent from my SM-T510 using Tapatalk
      No matter how much zazen we do, poor people do not become wealthy, and poverty does not become something easy to endure.
      Kōshō Uchiyama, Opening the Hand of Thought

      Comment

      • Shokai
        Treeleaf Priest
        • Mar 2009
        • 6392

        #4
        合掌,生開
        gassho, Shokai

        仁道 生開 / Jindo Shokai

        "Open to life in a benevolent way"

        https://sarushinzendo.wordpress.com/

        Comment

        • Seikan
          Member
          • Apr 2020
          • 712

          #5
          Thank you Heiso for sharing this along with your reflection. I'm always fascinated by how we react to poems when we first encounter them compared to how they resonate with us when we revisit them again and again. Even in the shortest poem, there is something new to be found every time we read them.

          Gassho,
          Seikan

          -stlah-
          聖簡 Seikan (Sacred Simplicity)

          Comment

          • Tosei
            Member
            • Jul 2020
            • 204

            #6
            Gassho

            sat
            東西 - Tōsei - East West
            there is only what is, and it is all miraculous

            Comment

            • Tai Shi
              Member
              • Oct 2014
              • 3386

              #7
              So vanishing as I grow older, soon I will join Issa, ash left in museum near my good fried, my sponsor shall my love live longer, my ash to remember, ah-- Issa where did humankind place your remains, mine but twinkling in sky, flash of galaxy, I wait there in my mind twenty years or less, Issa you lived life of poetry; my life of Pearls, life seamless web of woman and man with one to live after. Issa, be forever in your lines passed from generation to generation.
              Gassho
              sat/ lah
              Tai Shi
              Peaceful, Tai Shi. Ubasoku; calm, supportive, for positive poetry 優婆塞 台 婆

              Comment

              • Kokuu
                Treeleaf Priest
                • Nov 2012
                • 6836

                #8
                I suddenly remembered a haiku written by my friend Alan Summers:

                tonight’s world of dew
                if a moment Issa’s shade
                would walk beside me


                Gassho
                Kokuu

                Comment

                • Bion
                  Treeleaf Unsui
                  • Aug 2020
                  • 4176

                  #9
                  It’s interesting how one’s general view on life taints certain things, because I perceived less of that “grief” in the haiku and more of a grounding into our very palpable reality, which is not only sorrow. I see in those lines a reflection of existence in its most subjective way. The world is fleeting, ephemeral, temporary, like dewdrops that arise from conditions and naturally become absorbed into everything else, but while the drop still hangs from the tip of the blade of grass, it is present, real, heavy or light, unique, big or small...

                  [emoji1374] SatToday lah
                  "Stepping back with open hands, is thoroughly comprehending life and death. Immediately you can sparkle and respond to the world." - Hongzhi

                  Comment

                  • aprapti
                    Member
                    • Jun 2017
                    • 889

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Kokuu
                    I suddenly remembered a haiku written by my friend Alan Summers:

                    tonight’s world of dew
                    if a moment Issa’s shade
                    would walk beside me


                    Gassho
                    Kokuu
                    thanks, Kokuu..



                    aprapti

                    sat

                    hobo kore dojo / 歩歩是道場 / step, step, there is my place of practice

                    Aprāpti (अप्राप्ति) non-attainment

                    Comment

                    • Tai Shi
                      Member
                      • Oct 2014
                      • 3386

                      #11
                      She cannot see, I weep,
                      Weep in spring, she sees
                      My bones, dew into dust.

                      Gassho
                      sat/ lah
                      Tai Shi
                      Peaceful, Tai Shi. Ubasoku; calm, supportive, for positive poetry 優婆塞 台 婆

                      Comment

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