Sunday, March 15, 2026

Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation /// Words of Wisdom - March 15, 2026 🏔️

 


“I began to see that it was possible to have your cake and eat it too. That you can use the ego without necessarily identifying with it, and that you could remain in the spaciousness that surrounds without being dissociative and pushing away. What I was beginning to notice is that I was pushing away the physical plane and I had to go back into it.”
 
- Ram Dass

Source: Ram Dass Here & Now - Ep. 114 – Honor Our Incarnation
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Via The Tricycle Community /// From the Academy: Tantra

 

MARCH 2026
From the Academy
Welcome to From the Academy, a monthly newsletter for Premium subscribers offering a scholarly take on topics in Buddhist thought and practice. Each issue highlights a key theme and points to further readings and videos for exploration, developed in collaboration with Tricycle’s resident Ho Family Foundation Buddhism Public Scholar.
Tantra
An image of Dainichi Nyorai (Mahavairocana), the cosmic buddha at the center of Japanese esoteric Buddhism. The untrained eye would not call this “tantric,” but his cult is rooted in some of the earliest Buddhist tantras transmitted from India to East Asia. Unknown maker (ca. 1150–1200), Heian period. | RISD Museum / public domain

In a recent Tricycle podcast, scholar and Shingon Buddhist priest Richard Payne discusses his new book, Tantra Across the Buddhist Cosmopolis, which challenges a common assumption: that tantra occupies Buddhism’s margins. Often associated with secrecy and esoteric transmission, tantric forms are, in fact, widespread. Even where tantra’s imprint is minimized or ignored, most schools of Buddhism have been touched by tantric thought and ritual.

Plus: Don't miss an upcoming Premium event with Payne to learn more about tantra and his new book. Sign up for free here.
A Pan-Asian Footprint

Tantra did not originate with Buddhism. It developed within the broader Indian ritual landscape, drawing on Vedic traditions and taking a distinctive form in Shaiva and Vaishnava communities. Buddhist tantric scriptures began to appear around the mid-7th century. The Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang (602–664) walked thousands of miles across Asia during this time, recording ritual practices in India that later scholars identify as proto-tantric. These were similar to Mahayana rituals but differed significantly from the more elaborate tantric systems of later centuries.

Buddhist tantras range from the early kriya and yoga texts, which focus on purity and ritual efficacy, to the later mahayoga and yogini scriptures, which employ deliberately transgressive sexual and violent imagery. Developing alongside Indian political culture—where the mandala served as a model of divine sovereignty—these traditions eventually spread throughout Buddhist Asia. New commentaries and ritual liturgies continued to emerge in response to changing historical and cultural contexts.
So What Is Tantra?

Given its diversity, tantra has long resisted easy definition. The term—derived from the Sanskrit root meaning to extend or to weave—refers to scriptures that present embodied ritual and contemplative techniques as the path to awakening. Where earlier renunciant traditions often treated worldly life as an obstacle, tantric systems reframed the body, desire, and ritual action as potential vehicles for liberation. In deity yoga, for example, the practitioner transforms the phenomenal world from within by assuming the deity’s body, speech, and mind. 

For its adherents, tantric practice represents Buddhism’s most direct path to enlightenment. Others, however, have viewed it as a corruption of the Buddha’s original teachings, and in some regions its influence has been intentionally downplayed or obscured. Assessments of tantra have often depended on whether one stood inside the tradition or outside it.
The sexual imagery of tantric art symbolizes the union of wisdom and compassion, though early European observers interpreted such images as evidence of decadence or moral corruption. Chakrasamvara with Vajravarahi (ca. 1450–1500), Sakya Order, Central Tibet. | The Vincent Astor Foundation and the Zimmerman Family Gifts, the Met / public domain.
Through a Western Lens

European observers who first encountered tantric images—often sexual or wrathful—cast them as demonic, sometimes using that characterization to justify colonial rule. Tibetan Buddhism was polemically framed as a deviant form of Roman Catholicism, its saints described as wayward missionaries. Later scholars positioned tantra as a degenerate foil for what they defined as “true” Buddhism, grounded in meditation and rational philosophy. 

These distortions proved durable, shaping perceptions of tantra well into the 20th century. In popular culture, tantra is still frequently reduced to sex. While sexual imagery and rites do appear in certain tantric traditions, detractors often emphasize them out of traditional proportion. Such readings reveal more about Western anxieties and assumptions than about tantric Buddhism.
Closer Than You Think

Archaeological discoveries and newly uncovered manuscripts continue to demonstrate tantra’s historical reach across the Asian Buddhist world. Many tantric schools remain vibrant, from Newar Buddhism in Nepal to Shingon and Tendai in Japan, and others—especially Tibetan traditions—have spread far beyond their homelands. As these lineages enter new cultural spheres, some elements are preserved, while others are adapted. 

Richard Payne’s work underscores how wide-ranging tantra has been; it cannot be captured by a single text or defining principle. Its ritual technologies and yogic principles became embedded in major Buddhist lineages across Asia. Because Buddhism, writ large, was shaped by tantra, even those who don’t consider themselves tantric may find that its legacy likely runs through their own practice. To understand tantra, it must be seen in context—and the same is true of Buddhism itself.
Additional Material
  • Kate Crosby, “Why Does Traditional Theravada Meditation Look Like Tantra?” Video lecture, Mangalam Research Center, 2019. Crosby argues that premodern forms of Theravada meditation incorporated tantric practices that were later marginalized by reform movements that privileged textual study and insight meditation.
     
  • Jacob Dalton, “The Goodman Lectures: Tibetan Tantra at Dunhuang.” Video lecture, Khyentse Foundation, 2021. Dalton examines tantric ritual manuals from the Dunhuang manuscript cache—some of the earliest Tibetan-language Buddhist texts—and explains what they reveal about the formative years of tantra in Tibetan Buddhism.
     
  • David B. Gray, “Tantra and the Tantric Traditions of Buddhism and Hinduism,” in the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion, 2016. Gray surveys the historical emergence of tantric traditions in Hindu and Buddhist contexts, clarifies common misconceptions, and traces their ritual, doctrinal, and transregional impact in Asia.
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Via White Crane Institute //// FRED C. MARTINEZ

 

White Crane InstituteExploring Gay Wisdom & Culture since 1989
 
This Day in Gay History

March 15

Fred C. Martinez, Nadleehi
1985 -

One of our martyrs, our many martyrs, FRED C. MARTINEZ was born on this date.  Martinez was a 16-year-old Navajo boy who thought of himself as female. Another term for Martinez among indigenous peoples is nadleehi or "two-spirit."  His friends adored him. Had he been born a woman, one of his teacher's said, he'd have been the most popular girl in town.

They also feared what a violent world might have in store for someone like Fred C. Martinez Jr.  Martinez died on June 16, 2001 at the hands of a man who beat him to death because he was different.  He was beaten to death by one Shaun Murphy who bragged about the killing.  Murphy was later sentenced to 40 years in prison for murdering Martinez. Martinez's mother spoke about her son a few days after his murder: No one could say it better:

"I am his mother and now I want to make sure the truth is told about Fred by people who loved him. With more and more talk about his death, the police looking into his murder, and the details of my son's personal life in the media, it is time to speak the truth about Fred's life. The most important thing I can say is that I loved Fred. I loved my son exactly for who he was, for his courage in being honest and gentle and friendly. It is sad that he had to face pain in his daily life and in school.

"What I wanted for my son was for him to be accepted and loved, just like I accepted and loved him.  Fred was always proud to be Navajo. Fred did not struggle with who he was, but he was hurt because of the people who had problems with my son expressing himself honestly. I hope that the police and the District Attorney will talk about this and bring justice for the death of my son. I am grateful to Fred's friends for accepting him the way he was and remembering him for who he was.  Fred's family loved and cared deeply for all of who he was. We firmly believe that Fred's murder was a hate crime. Because he was different his life was taken from him, and we will never know the person Fred would have become."

An excellent documentary film was made about this called Two Spirit Directed by Lydia Nibley. Also Known As: Two Spirits: Sexuality, Gender, and the Murder of Fred Martinez a trailer  can be seen and a DVD is available for sale here: http://twospirits.org


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Gay Wisdom for Daily Living from White Crane Institute

"With the increasing commodification of gay news, views, and culture by powerful corporate interests, having a strong independent voice in our community is all the more important. White Crane is one of the last brave standouts in this bland new world... a triumph over the looming mediocrity of the mainstream Gay world." - Mark Thompson

Exploring Gay Wisdom & Culture since 1989!
www.whitecraneinstitute.org

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Via Daily Dharma: The Practice of Reflection

 

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The Practice of Reflection

We must each begin the practice of reflection—deciding what is right and living that truth. Then we can sit on our cushions in our dharma halls, deliberating “enlightenment” with a spacious heart and a clear conscience.

Venerable Pannavati, “How Do I Contribute to War?”


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