15 November, 2011—on The Hypertexts—
Which reminds me of a gentle debunking I once received from a dear departed Buddhist friend of mine, Don Iocca. To my blithely professed embrace of suffering, desire, change, all those things one ought to wish to escape from—he responded, with a twinkle in his eye, by reminding me that suffering, change, desire, etc, had no need of my permission to act upon me. “Why not try,” he implied, “to do something more challenging than suffer change?” Ah, what a beautiful smile he had! Several years after his death I had a profound feeling that he was near me while I was circumnavigating the principal stupa of the Shwedagon Pagoda on my second visit to Rangoon, Burma. I sat right down on the warm tiles, beneath an adjacent banyan, and tried “to do something more challenging than suffer change.” But it was so terribly hot, even in the shade of the tree, and my discipline melted away.
(Read my conversation with poet Tom Merrill here, on The Hypertexts.)


don.
Posted by: jude | November 28, 2011 at 03:14 PM
beautiful memory.
Posted by: glennis | January 01, 2012 at 06:50 PM