Showing posts with label Fog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fog. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Walking Into Insights

"Every day, in the morning or evening, or both, take a walk in a safe and peaceful environment for less than an hour.  The can be a great fountain of youth.  Choose a place to walk that has no kind of disturbance.   Walking done in a work environment and when your mind is busy is different; it is not as nutritious as the walking you do for yourself in the morning or evening in a quiet, peaceful, and safe place."
-  Master Hua-Ching Ni, Entering the Tao, 1997, p. 135


"As I went walking
That ribbon of highway
I saw above me
The endless skyway
I saw below me
The lonesome valley
This land was made for you and me."
- Woody Guthrie, This Land is Your Land


Walking - Quotations. Edited by Michael P. Garofalo.

The Spirit of Gardening.  Edited by Michael P. Garofalo.


"Our philosophies must be rewritten to remove them from the domain of words and "ideas," and to plant their roots firmly in the earth."
- William Vogt


"If you look for the truth outside yourself,
It gets farther and farther away.
Today walking alone, I meet it everywhere I step.
It is the same as me, yet I am not it.
Only if you understand it in this way
Will you merge with the way things are."
- Tung-Shan




Tuesday, May 02, 2023

Suzuki Walks in the Fog

The Fireplace Records, Chapter 22


Suzuki Walks in the Fog


Shunryu Suzuki (1904-1971) lived in San Francisco for many years.  He was the Zen Master who was the founder of the Zen Centers in San Francisco and Carmel Valley.  Many of his students in California became influential Zen Buddhist teachers and authors.  

San Francisco often has heavy fog cover in the summer, and the Willamette Valley in Oregon has very heavy fog cover in the winter.  The Central Valleys of California can have very heavy Tule ground fog cover in the winter. Normally, clouds and rainfall come in the winter on the West Coast of the USA, and the summer's are dry and clear - a Mediterranean Climate.

Suzuki was a skillful teacher, working with a variety of students: monks and householders.  His Zen Centers also developed programs for end of life hospice care, AIDS help, food programs, retreats, Temple services, drug rehabilitation, monk training, etc.

A key to his success, besides in enlightened teaching and kindness, was his ability to be patient, stay the course, work day by day, be dedicated, and encourage others to persist in their spiritual practices.  Progress is patience, work, and letting go of attachments to "success" in your spiritual endeavors.  

"After you have practiced for awhile, you will realize that it is not possible to make rapid, extraordinary progress.  Even though you may try very hard, the progress you make is always little by little.  It is not like going out in a shower in which you know when you get wet.  In a fog, you do not know you are getting wet, but as you keep walking you get wet little by little.  If you mind has ideas of progress, you may say, "Oh, this pace is terrible!" But actually, it is not.  When you get wet in a fog it is very difficult to dry yourself.  So there is no need to worry about progress."
- Shunryu Suzuki, Zen Mind,
Beginner's Mind, p. 41


A Student’s Considerations:

Learning to play a musical instrument, cook, garden, or whatever, requires
   patience, practice, and steady slow progress.
Don't Rush so often.  Slow down.  Lower your pace.
Tortoise and Hare: Slow/Fast, Jogging/Sprinting.
Be careful of your commitments in terms of available time.
Take a walk, safely, in the dense fog - in a world erased.
Be committed and soak up the wisdom of the Masters!
Just Do It!  Don't worry about progress.
Persist, struggle forward, persevere like the sturdy Carp swimming upstream
   through a waterfall, passing through the Dragon's Gate, and then becoming
   a Royal Dragon. We have watched salmon migrating upstream to their
   Original Home, and facing their Great Death that gives life to others.  

 

Related Links, Resources, References

Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind. By Shunryu Suzuki. Shambhala, 1970, 2020 50th Anniversary Edition, 176 pages. VSCL, Paperback.  36 Essays/Chapters.

Koans:



Refer to my Cloud Hands Blog Posts on the topic of Koans/Dialogues.

The Daodejing by Laozi    Best? 

Pulling Onions  Over 1,043 One-line Sayings by Mike Garofalo

Chinese Chan Buddhist and Taoist Stories and Koans

Taoism

Buddhism

Fireplaces, Stoves, Campfires, Kitchens, Pots, Firewood

Chinese Art

Tai Chi Chuan and Qigong

Meditation Methods

Zen Koan Books I Use

Koan Database Project

Brief Spiritual Lessons Database Project: Subject Indexes


Subject Index to 1,001 Zen Buddhist Koans
(This is an ongoing project in the Spring of 2023)


Sparks: Brief Spiritual Lessons and Stories

Matches to Start a Kindling of Insight
May the Light from Your Inner Fireplace Help All Beings
Taoist, Chan Buddhist, Zen Buddhist, Philosophers
Catching Phrases, Inspiring Verses, Koans, Meditations
Indexing, Bibliography, Quotations, Notes, Resources
Research by Michael P. Garofalo

The Fireplace Records
By Michael P. Garofalo




Subject Index to 1,001 Zen Buddhist Koans

Saturday, September 11, 2021

Walking on a Foggy Day





Out walking on a foggy late autumn day.
In Red Bluff, CA, 2008.



"For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go."
- Robert Louis Stevenson, Travels with a Donkey



"For you, as well as I, can open fence doors and walk across America in your own special way. Then we can all discover who our neighbors are."
- Robert Sweetgall, Fitness Walking


"Pointing at the moon,
making a point-
her lovely fingers."
- Mike Garofalo, Above the Fog



“Common sense and good nature will do a lot to make the pilgrimage of life not too difficult”
- William Somerset Maugham



"The fog is rising."
- Emily Dickinson's last words 


Our first morning with fog today, 9/11/2021, in Vancouver, Washington.