Hello friends,
My yearly reading of Finnegan's Wake is coming up, and I have a thought; I may have mentioned this before, but I don't remember. Reading Joyce is, I think, like reading Dogen; while there is a message, it's something that cannot really be understood intellectually. Like sitting--the more you search for meaning, the further away it retreats. It's a book that can (for me) only be read for the sake of reading. Only understood by letting go of understanding. It also, being a circular book (the sentence of the last chapter is the first half of the first sentence of the first chapter), facilitates a realization of each word is both the first and the last, a beginning and an end, a constant departure and arrival.
All that to say, for me, the Joyce book is a good introduction to the "literary free-form jazz" that Dogen seems to be so fond of, if there are any out there that, like me, have difficulty with Shobogenzo or any of his other works.
Metta,
Saijun
EDIT: It appears that Ms. Chessie mentioned this back in November on a topic related to understanding Shobogenzo. My apologies for the duplicate post.
My yearly reading of Finnegan's Wake is coming up, and I have a thought; I may have mentioned this before, but I don't remember. Reading Joyce is, I think, like reading Dogen; while there is a message, it's something that cannot really be understood intellectually. Like sitting--the more you search for meaning, the further away it retreats. It's a book that can (for me) only be read for the sake of reading. Only understood by letting go of understanding. It also, being a circular book (the sentence of the last chapter is the first half of the first sentence of the first chapter), facilitates a realization of each word is both the first and the last, a beginning and an end, a constant departure and arrival.
All that to say, for me, the Joyce book is a good introduction to the "literary free-form jazz" that Dogen seems to be so fond of, if there are any out there that, like me, have difficulty with Shobogenzo or any of his other works.
Metta,
Saijun
EDIT: It appears that Ms. Chessie mentioned this back in November on a topic related to understanding Shobogenzo. My apologies for the duplicate post.
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