"Here is a man who is turning the
emptiness of space into a sheet of paper, the waves of the ocean into an
inkwell and Mount Sumeru into a
brush."
- Hoyen of Gosozen,
12th century
A Zen view of how to
write advises that our "artless art" must flow out of the
subconscious. Doing is not doing. Technical knowledge does not
provide enough. Practice and relenting to the process make it
happen.
We write and write until we've created
our own rules If we move out of our own way, writing spurts and
splashes in the stream of rain or water.
Like a muscle, the more we write, the
more we gain strength and momentum. Fortunately, with age our writing
muscles become stronger regardless of the aging process on other body
parts.
If we pay attention to our "every
day mind" and moments in movement, we will happen upon ways to
express our emotions and thoughts. Awareness makes us alert to all
possibilities. What just zoomed by? How does that connect to the
aroma of coffee in the morning? What does sleep feel like when
tired? How does satisfaction taste? What if. . . and then what?
How can the write art become
purposeless? Aimless? If we attempt to intellectualize it, we've
lost the moment. We need to write. It's that simple.
The highest motive in life is to be like
water. It fights nothing or no one. It flows from and back to its source and in
the flowing smooths and wears away all resistance. - Lao Tzu
The Taoist water metaphor fits the
writer's life. Go with the flow. Trickle or rush around
obstacles. Gush! Exert and deluge. Yielding will overwhelm all.
Writers need the surprise that delights
when swimming in words. Let it happen. . .just write.
Take a day without a goal. Write to
float, swim or splash in words without a destination.
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