Good morning!
We are at the spring equinox, equal in day and night, heat and chill, equanimity in
the sun and the earth, in birth and death. It is called hi-gan (the other shore: 彼岸),
beyond the rough sea of turbulence and turbidity, the toil and moil of living. The
deceased are beyond earthly ego, and thus considered buddhas (仏 : hotoke).
People welcome them with gratitude to give them peace.
The pruned branches of cherry, magnolia, and other trees, taken inside, have started
blooming with the warm weather. Budding plants will bloom in warmth given some
time to grow. I cleaned our polluted pond with its strong stink caused by the buildup
of fallen leaves, lest our fish die. The triple tragedy of the East Japan Earthquake has
claimed more than twenty thousand lives with the accompanying tsunami and
nuclear disaster.
Erin kindly sent me the book Precious Life, which deals with this triple tragedy,
especially the nuclear disaster, and Buddhism, especially Zen. Company men called
the nuclear plants Manjushri and Samanthabhadra Bodhisattvas for their wisdom,
concentration, and compassion before the tragedy, but now they greatly regret
having done so. Karma machines are shallow-witted and short-committed.
Nuclear power was man-made for war weapons and money machines, and it has
polluted the pure planet with plutonium, the worst poison from Hades, damaging
genes forever in the human time scale. Gregory B. Jaczko, the former NRC chairman,
said that there is no safe nuclear power and that the only safe way is to stop it.
Otherwise, Dogen’s poem titled “Original Face” must be defiled.
Flowers in spring,
Cuckoo in summer,
The moon in autumn,
Snow in winter, clear and cool.
– Dogen (Way-origin)
Flowers in spring,
Cuckoo in summer,
The moon in autumn,
Fallout winter, dire and devastating.
– Doshu (Way-ending)
3/23/14