Cloisterwood

Cloisterwood is a hermitage for the mind. A place to go when there is no place to go. A place where only you have discovered the Way. Designed to share thoughts and images among those who seek peace, quiet and contemplation.

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Location: Fern Creek, Kentucky, United States

Tuesday, October 09, 2007



Empty and calm and devoid of self

Is the nature of all things.

No individual being In reality exists.

There is no end or beginning, Nor any middle course.

All is an illusion,As in a vision or a dream.

All beings in the world Are beyond the realm of words.

Their ultimate nature, pure and true,

Is like the infinity of space.


-Prajnaparamita

Monday, October 08, 2007

Listening to the Rain



click on photo to enlarge ...........................Photo by: Phil Miller

I came up here [to his hermitage] from the monastery last night, sloshing through the cornfield, said Vespers, and put some oatmeal on the Coleman stove for supper. It boiled over while I was listening to the rain and toasting a piece of bread at the log fire. The night became very dark. The rain surrounded the whole cabin with its enormous virginal myth, a whole world of meaning, of secrecy, of silence, of rumor. Think of it: all that speech pouring down, selling nothing, judging nobody, drenching the thick mulch of dead leaves, soaking the trees, filling the gullies and crannies of the wood with water, washing out the places where men have stripped the hillside! What a thing it is to sit absolutely alone, in the forest, at night, cherished by this wonderful, unintelligible, perfectly innocent speech, the most comforting speech in the world, the talk that rain makes by itself all over the ridges, and the talk of the watercourses everywhere in the hollows! Nobody started it, nobody is going to stop it. It will talk as long as it wants, this rain. As long as it talks I am going to listen.

Thomas Merton. "Rain and the Rhinocerous" in Raids on the Unspeakable. New York: New Directions Publishing Co., 1964: 9-10.