Yes, I nodded to myself sagely, yes, indeed. The Prajna (the true
nature of reality) is simple, yet complex.
Unfortunately, my initial sartori quickly faded into an endless
blur of either obscure of oblique alliterative analogies that my
feeble brain could not absorb. I felt like a fisherman without rod,
reel, or even river.
Soon my thoughts drifted to the hurried rucksack I'd prepared in
the scant time Yogi Luu has provided. I had only been able to grab
one album, Catskills by Kittycraft The album is a poem to
itself and the cozy spot it occupies under the covers in the bedroom
of sampled music. This album makes me close my eyes in the bright
sunshine and rock my hips under my voluminous orange robe.
Sweetly voiced and adroitly produced, Catskills comes in slowly
but lingers for a long time, mostly thanks to the time-release hypnotic
qualities of the keyboards and beats... I found myself particularly
drawn to the darker, heavier songs such as the title track, and
the sing-along multilayered uptempo tracks such as How Long Can
This Go On.
After the first few listens the sun started to go down. In my state
I could feel the creeping hum of nature as it transitioned from
late sun to early dark. The buzzing of flies and bees gave way to
the crackles of delicious, sweet scented cannabis being burned in
a large glass bong I had managed to conceal in my robe on my way
out the door. Smoke drifted out to join the sunset and Peace was
upon me.
I put Sony Digital Headphones back on, and the warm throb of Kittycraft
gently nursed me back inside the sartori.
The next morning I emerged, mind clear, approaching total nothingness.
Master Luu greeted me with a terse nod, but as I bowed to him I
could feel his approval. He knew I was down with Buddha, and that
Zen was the center of my Hara (belly or gut, a monk's spiritual
center). "Even a Good thing, isn't as good as nothing"
I quoted. Master Luu had never before smiled in my presence.
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