Saturday, November 29, 2014
Maya – Illusion and Attachment
Maya – Illusion and Attachment
When praise comes by, then know that scorn is next.
When scorn arrives, do not, by that, be vexed.
As winds may blow from east and then from west,
So also, chasing worst, there comes the best.
But you could quibble, “No, it isn’t so.
Of woe and sorrow, I have more and more.”
You might be right. The winds that blow, of chance,
Bring clouds and sun, within the cosmic dance.
And those, who’re lucky, they may bask in sun
For quite awhile, with share and more of fun,
While others may be drenched, through years and years,
And shiver as they shed, forlorn, their tears.
The Stoics, Buddhists, Jains, they all agree –
From woe undue, by this, we could be free –
On circumstance, put no or little weight –
Let praises go – and scorn, as so much freight.
It’s easier said than done, as all may know.
How many mortals, such forbearance show,
Both outwardly and also deep within,
When beaten down with woe and human sin?
How many more have puffed themselves with pride
And on achievements or on praises ride...
And when their small balloons, perchance, are burst,
How much, for what they’ve lost, they strive and thirst…
“Observe,” it’s said, “the world – without, within.
Observe the pleasure and the pain you’re in.
See fear arise – and anger, greed and lust,
And see these then subside, as all things must.
“Observe the breath, and let it gently flow.
As you exhale, so let your worries go –
Your fears and cravings are like ripples. They
Will dance across the pond and fade away.”
And all of this is well and good. And yet,
When caught in tempests strong – or in the net,
We struggle, struggle, even when we’re free,
For on this freedom we might not agree.
We cling to pleasure and we cling to pain.
And from this clinging, these arise again.
We crave the pleasure but we fear its loss.
We fear the pain – and in our angst, we toss.
The ones we love – and all we might have built,
We’ll leave them all – with peace of mind or guilt.
And some may leave before or after. Naught
Remains – and yet we're still, in dreamings, caught.
There’s woe of circumstance and then there’s woe
That we create or worsen. “Let that go.”
Is what the seers, in their wisdom, said.
Enough! Let’s practice, now, the things we've read.
For one could write and write, and one could read –
But mount again upon the usual steed.
To practice what I teach, I now should knuckle
Down to do, and at my preaching chuckle.
Upon our mortal paths, we each must go,
But none of us is here alone in woe.
Compassion is a thing that all might feel –
But truly learn, when caught beneath the wheel.
2014 November 29th, Sat.
Brooklyn, New York
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