Upaya Zen Center's Dharma Podcast

Clark Strand & Kaz Tanahashi & Natalie Goldberg & Joan Halifax: Five Hundred Years of Haiku (Part 6 of 6)

03.01.2019 - By Joan Halifax | Zen Buddhist Teacher Upaya AbbotPlay

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As we finish our Haiku weekend, Clark Strand, Sensei Kaz Tanahashi, Roshi Joan Halifax, and Natalie Goldberg share their own haiku and some haiku that they love. Clark reads several of author Richard Wright’s haiku including: In the falling snow, a laughing boy holds out his palms until they are white. Kaz reads his own poem he wrote during the retreat: One-third of Nat’s face expounds her stormy past of haiku. Roshi Joan recalls Kobin Chino Roshi’s life and reads his haiku including: When you shoot an arrow at yourself, make sure your aim is true. To write haiku, Natalie suggests, “Don’t be shy. Let yourself be dumb and not know. Writers are dumb, Zen students are dumb. Otherwise they wouldn’t become writers or Zen students. So really take your life seriously.”

For Series description, please visit Part 1.

To access the entire series, please click on the link below:

Upaya Podcast Series: Five Hundred Years of Haiku

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