Monk in the World guest post: Asther Bascuna-Creo

This week in our Monk in the World guest post series we have two beautiful poems from fellow monk and artist Asther Bascuna-Creo who lives in Australia. Read on for her wisdom about silence and the contemplative path:


Silence


And in her middle years

she discovers silence.


Not the kind you find

In a remote abbey nor

on a grand cathedral,

Not the type you seek

in silent retreats

nor in places of meditation.


But the sitting down

in the kitchen bench type

The standing in front

of the stovetop type

The folding the week’s washing type

While dinner sizzles over fire

While the washing piles up high

While kids with sticky hands

Ask the day’s hundredth ‘why.’


And this silence overcomes all noise

And this silence surpasses all haste

And this silence provides her peace

A peace that passeth all understanding.


—Asther Bascuna-Creo


What does it mean to be an artist and monk in the world?


What does it mean for me to be an artist

and a monk in the world?

It means to not reject the existence of darkness

To not mask the images of injustice

To not turn back from pictures of poverty.


But to depict beauty

To discover the hope beyond despair

To advocate simplicity in the midst of excess

To capture silence in the midst of noise

To bring rest amidst hurry

To inspire peace among chaos

And in the face of the bleakness of winter

To announce the coming of spring.


—Asther Bascuna-Creo



Asther CreoI live in Melbourne, Australia with my husband and three children. I received my primary to secondary education in a school offering the Benedictine tradition, and so have always felt a personal connection with St Benedict. For the past couple of years, as my husband was undergoing his own formation as a candidate for the permanent diaconate in the Archdiocese of Melbourne, I have been going through my own personal rediscovery of St Benedict's teachings. I am a writer and a communications professional working in the academic sector.


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Published on March 20, 2014 00:00
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