Friday, April 4, 2025

Via The Tricycle Community \\ Three Teachings on Karma

 


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April 3, 2025

Understanding Our Agency
 
Karma, the principle of cause and effect, predates Buddhism. But as the engine that propels samsara—the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth—karma is a critical insight into the Buddhist worldview. Causes and conditions do not preclude agency, however. In fact, just the opposite. By investigating our causes and conditions, our intentions and actions, we can create wholesome ones that will diminish future suffering.

Apprehending this agency can provide relief and also motivation. As Joseph Goldstein writes:

The great inspiration of the Buddha’s teaching is that we must each take ultimate responsibility for the quality of our lives. Given certain volitional actions, certain results will follow. When we understand that our lives are the unfolding of karmic law that we are the heirs to our own deeds, then there grows in us a deepening sense of responsibility for how we live, the choices we make, and the actions we undertake.

Recognizing karma can also help us cultivate compassion, as we perceive the causes and conditions that may have led to suffering or unwise choices.

This week’s Three Teachings reviews the crucial principle of cause and effect, how to recognize it, and why, when fully understood, it’s so fulfilling. 
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Reflections on the Law of Karma
By Joseph Goldstein

In an overview of what karma is, and isn’t, meditation teacher Joseph Goldstein highlights the fulfillment available from looking closely at our intentions through mindfulness and investigation.
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Composting Our Karma
By Barbara Rhodes


“Rather than feeling hindered by our karma, we can attend to it,” writes Zen master Barbara Rhodes. “As we learn our lessons, we become more and more aware. We learn to openly question, and we learn to listen.”
Read more »

Don’t Get Stuck in Neutral
By Tulku Thondup


We must work at transforming the mind and loosening the grasp of attachment, wrote Tulku Thondup, recognized as the reincarnation of Khenpo Konchog Dronme. “We shouldn’t fritter away our lives by engaging only in neutral karmas. Instead, we should exert ourselves in virtuous karmas such as prayer and service.”
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Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Living: Abstaining from Misbehaving Among Sensual Pleasures

 


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RIGHT LIVING
Undertaking the Commitment to Abstain from Misbehaving Among Sensual Pleasures 
Sensual misconduct is unhealthy. Refraining from sensual misconduct is healthy. (MN 9) Abandoning sensual misconduct, one abstains from misbehaving among sensual pleasures. (MN 41) One practices thus: “Others may engage in sensual misconduct, but I will abstain from sensual misconduct.” (MN 8)

Communities are of two kinds: those to be cultivated and those not to be cultivated. Such communities as cause, in one who cultivates them, unhealthy states to increase and healthy states to diminish, such communities are not to be cultivated. But such communities as cause, in one who cultivates them, unhealthy states to diminish and healthy states to increase, such communities are to be cultivated. (MN 114)
Reflection
Collective relationships are as important to examine as personal relationships. Just as the kinds of friends we keep affect our own development so also the communities we are part of make a difference in what qualities are supported in us. It is so easy to fall into sensual misconduct; we are being encouraged here to attend carefully to the larger social forces with which we regularly interact. It makes a difference in who we become.

Daily Practice
Reflect upon the various communities you inhabit and assess truthfully whether they are healthy or unhealthy groups. The criteria are pretty straightforward: Do healthy states of mind increase or decrease when you hang out with this crowd? Do unhealthy states increase or decrease? It is important to ensure that the relationships we cultivate are helping us grow in a positive direction and that we are not being led astray by our peers.

Tomorrow: Developing Unarisen Healthy States
One week from today: Abstaining from Intoxication

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Questions?
Visit the Dhamma Wheel orientation page.



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Via Daily Dharma: To See the World Anew

 

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To See the World Anew

The world is dynamic and changing; therein lies its freshness. But our ideas about it tend to grow static and calcified, even our ideas about the most important things: who we are, how things are, why the world is the way it is.

Henry Shukman, “The Unfamiliar Familiar”


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Things as They Can Be
By Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Explore why awakening can’t be mediated by perceptions.
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White Crane Institute Exploring Gay Wisdom & Culture since 1989
 

This Day in Gay History

April 04

 

Noteworthy
The Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.
1968 -

MARTIN LUTHER KING was assassinated by a white Christian terrorist at a motel in Memphis, Tennessee on this date 56 years ago.


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Gay Wisdom for Daily Living from White Crane Institute

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Exploring Gay Wisdom & Culture since 1989!
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