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Quotes from Thomas Hoover

the only way to really understand the message is to stop trying to "understand" it.
~ Thomas Hoover
The right pace, neither slow nor fast, cannot get into the hand unless it comes from the heart.
~ Thomas Hoover
Whereas Buddhism believes it would be best if we could simply ignore the world, the source of our psychic pain, the Taoists wanted nothing so much as to have complete union with this same world.
~ Thomas Hoover
That end is an intuitive realization of a single great insight—that we and the world around are one, both part of a larger encompassing absolute. Our rational intellect merely obscures this truth, and consequently we must shut it off, if only for a moment. Rationality constrains our mind; intuition releases it.
~ Thomas Hoover
We have conceived a new idea, Inglish. We will send the ito
~ Thomas Hoover
The patina of age is a lesson that time is forever and that you, creature of an hour, would do well to know humility in the face of eternity.
~ Thomas Hoover
Perhaps the most noticeable principle of Zen art is its asymmetry; we search in vain for straight lines, even numbers, round circles. Furthermore, nothing ever seems to be centered. Our first impulse is to go into the work and straighten things up—which is precisely the effect the artist intended.
~ Thomas Hoover
There is nothing difficult about the Great Way But, avoid choosing! Only when you neither love nor hate, Does it appear in all clarity. Do not be anti- or pro- anything. The conflict of longing and loathing, This is the disease of the mind. Not knowing the profound meaning of things, We disturb our (original) peace of mind to no purpose.
~ Thomas Hoover
the ignorant and the simple minded, not knowing that the world is what is seen of Mind itself, cling to the multitudinousness of external objects, cling to the notions of being and non-being, oneness and otherness, bothness and not-bothness, existence and non-existence, eternity and non-eternity. . .
~ Thomas Hoover
Zen art makes one aware of the work of art itself.
~ Thomas Hoover
Extinguish desire and suffering goes with it.
~ Thomas Hoover
Those who know do not speak. Those who speak do not know.
~ Thomas Hoover
Only in a spontaneous utterance is there real, uncalculated evidence of enlightenment.)
~ Thomas Hoover
envisioned them in rocking chairs forty years down
~ Thomas Hoover
the things of this world are all a mental creation, since external phenomena are transient and only exist for us because of our perception. Consequently they are actually "created" by our mind (or, if you will, a more universal entity called Mind). Consequently they do not exist outside our mind and hence are a void. Yet the mind itself, which is the only thing real, is also a void since its thoughts cannot be located by the five senses.
~ Thomas Hoover
The original teachings of the Buddha are more a philosophy than a religion, for they admit no supreme god, nor do they propose any salvation other than that attainable through human diligence. The aim is temporal happiness, to be realized through asceticism—which was taught as a practical means of turning one's back on the world and its incumbent pain.
~ Thomas Hoover
These early Japanese had no religious doctrines other than respect for the natural world and the sanctity of family and community. There were no commandments to be followed, no concept of evil. Such moral teachings as existed were that nature contains nothing that can be considered wicked, and therefore man, too, since he is a child of nature, is exempt from this flaw. The only shameful act is uncleanliness, an inconsiderate breach of the compact between man and nature.
~ Thomas Hoover
There is a story that one of the Seven Sages, a man named Liu Ling (ca. 221-330), habitually received guests while completely naked. His response to adverse comment was to declare, "I take the whole universe as my house and my own room as my clothing. Why, then, do you enter here into my trousers."14
~ Thomas Hoover