Below is a link to my first fiction publication, "Where Sky and River Meet." Enjoy.
Where Sky and River Meet « New Delta Review
Thursday, May 9, 2013
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Flowchart of Allen Ginsberg's Howl (Part III)
Check out my flowchart of Ginsberg's poem (click on the image or follow the link below):
http://9gag.com/gag/aKwQvXO
http://9gag.com/gag/aKwQvXO
Monday, April 15, 2013
Reading Gary Snyder and Nature; Attaining Zen.
From the Desk of Ashish Shrestha: Reading Gary Snyder and Nature; Attaining Zen.
"'Tis a good reader that makes a good book." — Ralph Waldo Emerson (Also in image: The Luckless Age by Steve Kistulentz). So, writers, let's read today.
GARY SNYDER is one of my favorite essayists. His views on Nature are much different, for me, than several of his friends from the Beats Generation. Kirby Olson writes, "A lot of people — Ginsberg, Kerouac had started to find these books [books on Zen]. Everybody was reading about this Zen and Gary [Snyder] was the only one who had figured out how to meditate [...]."(http://www.corpse.org/archives/issue_9/critiques/olson.htm).
Bellow is my blog-essay on why you should read his work, "Ancient Forests Of The Far West." Here is a link to the essay: Gary Snyder, Ancient Forests Of The Far West (Source: WordPress)
Bonus: Here is a link to my favorite poem by him: "Why Log Truck Drivers Rise Earlier Than Students of Zen"
Gary Snyder — Ancients Forest Of The Far West
"After the Clear-cut"
Perchance Gary Snyder’s idea of Nature tolls in
the advice his father gave him when he was just 10 years old. Snyder was
cutting a tree using a two-person saw with his father when the latter advised, “don’t
ride the saw […] don’t push, only pull.” The act of pushing, to me, implies
intrusion of Nature, perhaps ravishing it for monetary gains. On the other hand,
pulling implies taking in from Nature. Perhaps this is his philosophy. Handiwork
helps one in taking from Nature — its ancient, virginal (to each person)
knowledge.
Handiwork — enveloped in Nature, working with it
and in it — provides Snyder a feeling of being one with Nature — Zen, he calls
it. He recalls the harmonious saw-work with his father saying, “I loved the
clean swish and ring of the blade, the rhythm, the comradeship.” It is
interesting that while he is “in tune” with Nature, he is also seemingly
destroying it by cutting it down. This may seem paradoxical, however, perhaps he
is not destroying Nature but rather, unlike mass cutting and devastation caused
by money hungry companies, he is calculatingly cutting only a selective few
trees in order to “pull” from it its knowledge. Causing Nature discomfort is
far different than causing its extinction. His descriptions of his feeling in
cutting the tree, intriguingly, captures only the sounds made by the blade of
his saw and the curling of the wood, and not the sounds or even a hint of the
presence of any human being — except, of course, the advice of his father,
which also relates to Nature. Perhaps, therefore, the “comradeship” he mentions
is not with a person, but that with Nature.
Snyder does not just immerse himself in Nature,
but rather personifies it and, more so, feels it advises him. By doing so, he
is humbly accepting that Nature is larger, grander than a person. This is not
the belief of money hungry companies; they perhaps don’t even consider Nature
as a living organism, but rather just a means, an instrument of profit.
Snyder’s personification of Nature is
particularly interesting as it is a window into his mind, his source of
inspiration. He talks of having climbed a red cedar tree, which advised him
about Nature, showing him the “second-growth Douglas fir, western hemlock, and
cedar forest beyond the cow pasture.” The term “second-growth,” of course,
stands out as it emphasizes Snyder’s philosophy of sustainable and renewable interaction
with Nature, particularly in logging. “Second-growth” suggests a selective
cutting of trees, of old trees, while letting the younger trees stand erect and
grow tall, forming the second generation of trees. Scientifically, we know that
not all trees grow to the same height, since some trees absorb more light, and
in cases, even destroy and cannibalize on other trees. Snyder’s selective
logging helps in the growth of all trees — a more utilitarian idea, perhaps one
that allows all trees to grow fully.
Snyder further recalls waking up at 3 A.M. only
so he could break camp on a glacier and, thus, be able to witness the majestic
sight of Nature at sunrise. He says, “These are some of the esoteric delights
of mountaineering. To be immersed in ice and rock and cold and upper space is
to undergo an eery [sic], rigorous initiation and transformation.” The word that
stands out to me is “initiation.” It implies a ceremonial or ritualistic
welcome of him by Nature unto itself.
— Ashish Shrestha (ashesshrestha.blogspot.com)
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