Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Facuty Voices: Kelly Easton



On Emptiness
There is a zen koan about a visitor asking a monk about zen.  The monk pours the visitor a cup of tea until the cup is overflowing.  “It’s full!” the visitor says.  “Like this cup,” the monk says, “you are full of your own thoughts and obsessions.  I can only show you zen when your cup is empty.” 

The same is true with writing.  You sit and you wait.  Maybe you read a little, or look out the window.  In other words, you write out of silence, and staring into space, and total undistracted attention.  Great ideas come out of emptiness.
 


3 comments:

  1. Thanks, Kelly, for the excellent reminder. Off to sit and seek silence...

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  2. I love this, and I am reminded about the whole idea of looking into the empty spaces of our writing. There are those moments when a pause or a word on its own or a spare line— a real pulling back— serve up more than we imagined. I still use your Chaos Theory in classes, Kelly, to this day and continue to be in awe of the increased creativity received: papers received are stronger. I ask students to randomly select three words to add to a paper, and for some odd reason, focusing on this smaller tasks, frees them and allows creativity to surface.

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  3. Chaos works! I'm reminded of the word Keats used for this empty space: "Negative Capability."

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