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Nonin Chowaney

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We shall not cease
     from exploration,
And the end of all
   our exploring,
Will be to arrive
   where we started,
And know the place
   for the first time.

                     -T.S. Eliot

Zen

Images and Text Copyright 2006 Nebraska Zen Center
All Rights Reserved

ZenPoetry by Nonin Chowaney


Poetry by Nonin Chowaney
 
Poetry for Nonin's Father


Mid-February Thaw (1979)

laid off
out of work
snow gone
temperature 55

free to wander
like han shan's
drifting boat
i scribble
in my journal
back against oak
remembering old friends
from long ago

wang wei
laughing and chattering
with some old coot
he met in the woods
forgetting to go home

ryokan
playing ball
with the village children

li po
out buying wine

the workaday world
drops away

grey squirrels skitter
on an oakstudded knoll

a dirt road
sun flashing in puddles

gnarled oak limbs twist
into a cool blue sky
last year's leaves
golden in the sun

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Unemployment Compensation (1980)

wednesday afternoon
everyone working

i stroll in the glen
along minnehaha creek
talking to the squirrels

scorned by those
"getting ahead"

as if there's somewhere
to get to

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Zen Hobo (1980)

for tony

he drives away in
a big rust-pitted
white station wagon
with a shot muffler
and eaten away
quarter panels

grinning

like he's driving
his own hearse

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March 21 (1981)

crow-hassan nature reserve

in a ditch
next to a dirt road
deer remains
skull, neckbone
two feet of spine

nearby, a leg
from the knee down

soft brown skin
a shiny black hoof

high in the trees
above the river
red-wing blackbirds
chirping, trilling

konk-a-reeeeee!

konk-a-reeeeee!

red and yellow epaulets
flashing among bare branches

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Lost in Thought (1981)

lost in thought
i missed it

that flock of small birds
i scared up

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Taking a Shit with my Ass Draped Over a Log (1981)

all the buddhas
sat like this

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Bus Haiku (1981)

three empty yellow buses
in a line
in front of the school

in my bus
chewing on a toothpick
rain runs down the window
                       ... ...


rain yesterday
rain today
alone in my bus


children run
around the corner
into the school
                       ... ...


two old women
huddle together
under an umbrella


cars on a rainy street
whishhhh!
whishhhhhhhh!
                       ... ...


wet sidewalk
wet bricks
flag flapping in the breeze

 

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Thinking of Home (1985)

wet cobblestones
speckled with autumn leaves

two thousand miles away

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Catching the Sun (1986)

tassajara

up the boulder-strewn
creek bed

past ancient moss-covered
rockfaces

climbing this winter damp
mountain canyon
out of bone-piercing cold
to catch the sun
and finally rest, warming
on a lichen-spattered rock

high above the monastery
far below
a red-tailed hawk
settles on a live oak
watches, waits
then wings away

there is nowhere
to get to
only the path
to follow

wispy contrail
high above

reminder of the life
i left

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End (1986)

tassajara

melancholy day
training period's end

after seeing friends off
to the city
i climb the knoll
to suzuki-roshi's monument
offer incense, bow
and stand for a moment

this patch-robed life
that leads nowhere
heavy on my heart

sunlight filters
through live oak
light breeze tosses
blue and white altar irises

nothing to do
but bow once more
and go

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Give it Up (1986)

give it up, lou
the thought processes

the endless attempts
to puzzle it all out

give it up
and come home

cross your legs
and sit in peace

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Above the Temple (1987)

shogo-ji

cedar spires
rock walls

a distant waterfall

in america
i admired paintings
of steep, humped mountains
like these

now, walking up the creek
i am in the midst
of "a thousand peaks
and myriad ravines"

water spills over
massive boulders into
deep green pools

in cool, sunless corners
tree roots snake over
mossy rocks laced
with vines and creepers

each time i come here
i climb farther upstream
closer to the source

but there's no path
this high in the mountains
the way is rugged
and steep

i stop and sit
on a rock
in the middle
of the stream

water tumbles
moss creeps

sky clouds
boulders sit

like zen monks

as sky dances
on rippled water

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Fading Away (1990)

for dainin katagiri

walking in the mountains
in the spring
outside kyoto

up a two-track
covered with a mix of
brown cedar boughs
and fresh green shoots

i pull out my journal
and a paper falls out

your name is on it,
written to place
on the altar
the night you died

jikai dainin daiosho

my first teacher
the master i always
went back to,
right to the end

i strike a match

paper flares and
curls into ash

smoke rises into
overhanging branches
and fades away

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The Swans (1991)

body calmed
mind also calmed

for they are
not two

nor do they reside
in any one place

the mind/body
does not begin
or end anywhere

for it begins
and ends
everywhere

like
the swan
and her cygnets

motionless

by the side
of a deep, still pond

they rise
enter
and swim away

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Poems for Nonin's Father

 

For my Father (1983)

my father, long dead
sits on a camp stool
on the banks of the seneca river
fishing for bullheads
at twilight

he puffs on a cigarette
flicks his fingers skyward
smoke dances into the summer night
fades away

not easy to write this
memory like water
running thru my fingers

ready to board a plane
at syracuse airport
i look back
watch him walk away
baggy pants, black trenchcoat
small, lifeworn
sending his son back to college

how much is his life and
how much my sadness?
the world's passing
suffering, pain

my father still sits
on the camp stool
on the banks of the seneca river
fishing for bullheads
at twilight

he puffs on a cigarette
flicks his fingers skyward
smoke dances into the summer night
fades away

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My Father, Once Again (1997)

you died twenty-five years ago
yet still come in dreams

you show up one night                                       
in an unknown house
sitting in a chair
hat pulled low
face hidden

but it's you
no mistake

and though somewhat
mysterious

and distant

have a life
somewhere

far away

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Good with His Hands (1997)

my father was
good with his hands

he and my uncles
could coax garages
out of second-hand lumber,
build each other's houses
remodel bathrooms
build boats in their backyards

my dad kept trying to
get me to help him
to teach me
but i wouldn't

i was only interested in
baseball and music
and, later, girls

after years of music jobs, college,
graduate school, and teaching
i went to welding school
and finally learned
to work with my hands

later, i learned other things,
how to hang sheet rock, tape, and paint
to pound nails and handle tools

now, proud of my work
remodeling the temple kitchen

i sneer at men who can't,
or won't, work with their hands

like my dad used to sneer at me

and realize that i am finally
my father's son

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Driving Home (1998)

driving home tonight
with my father
from fishing
at the long bridge
in Cayuga

i am twelve years old

an unmarked blacktop 
stretches out of the
headlights' yellow glow
into the darkness

i am safe

my father's hands
are on the wheel

a cigarette rests
between stubby fingers
nails bitten to the nub

i can barely see his face
in the faint glow
of dashboard lights

there is a red light
near the top
of the speedometer

forty-five years
i have remembered
these things

driving home
with my father
from fishing
on a warm summer night

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You Look Good (1999)

i dreamt of my father
last night

first time in years

we hugged
(imagine that!)

then walked
side by side

i asked him
if he'd lost weight

“you look good,”
i said

as we walked
arms around shoulders

down a long
dirt road

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