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Don't mess with me just now. In preparation for an exploratory exam at the hospital today, I have been warned off food, drink and, well, just don't put anything in my mouth. It makes me crabby and, with wife and kids in Philadelphia for a tourist visit, there are fewer diversions, fewer things that would draw my attention away from the facts, fewer points of forgetful solace.
It's not just that I am mildly hungry. What really gets under my skin is that this smooth-sailing habit has been short-circuited. A habit like that isn't easy to break or to want to break. I guess it's about like any other habit -- I want what I want and like what I like -- but just now "food" is under the microscope.
Why must Zen students think that their daily life is somehow not Zen ... that's it's ordinary where Zen practice is (go ahead a whisper it!) extraordinary? That's a rhetorical question, but it is interesting.
Anyway, I have a couple of activities to fill the space between now an 1130a arrival at the hospital where they will look at my liver, spleen and possibly pancreas. I'll shower and do a little zazen ... and gripe. Time flies when you're having fun. :)
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" I'll shower and do a little zazen ... and gripe."
ReplyDeleteGriping is activity and the fun thing about it is its perfectly possible to do it in concert with other activities so that makes you a multi tasker.
For example, griping while sitting perfectly still in the shower while taking a shower.
Doing this effortlessly makes you the paragon of American zen.
Busy busy busy.
I tried doing nothing.
ReplyDeleteThat didn't work either. :)
Ah. Back to ordinary (vs extraordinary) zen (rhetoric) practice I see.
ReplyDeleteThere's no way around it That hospital visit is not going anywhere. Hope all is found within your innards to be quite ordinary.
Try going home.
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