A personal blog by a graying (mostly Anglo with light African-American roots) gay left leaning liberal progressive married college-educated Buddhist Baha'i BBC/NPR-listening Professor Emeritus now following the Dharma in Minas Gerais, Brasil.
Monday, November 5, 2012
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma:
Tricycle Daily Dharma November 5, 2012
Politics on the Path
One
way to read the injunction for Right Conduct, an essential part of the
Eightfold Path, is to see it as calling us—as citizens—to translate the
dharma into specific acts of social responsibility. In a democratic
republic, that surely means voting for those initiatives that we believe
will reduce suffering and violence, ignorance and hatred—and the very
divisions fueled by politics itself.
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- Charles Johnson, "Accepting the Invitation"
Sunday, November 4, 2012
Friday, November 2, 2012
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma:
Tricycle Daily Dharma November 2, 2012
Nothing Happens Without a Cause
Nothing
happens without a cause. Things are the way they are not because of
chance or the will of a deity but because people have acted in
particular ways and generated particular consequences. The world we
inhabit is the product of our actions, which are themselves reflections
of our minds.
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- Andrew Olendzki, "Medicine for the World"
Via Buddhism on Beliefnet:
Daily Buddhist Wisdom | |||
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Thursday, November 1, 2012
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma:
Tricycle Daily Dharma November 1, 2012
Learning from Relationships
You
do not learn non-attachment by disengaging and avoiding the intensity
of relationships, their joy and their pain. It is easy to disguise as
non-attachment what is not non-attachment at all, but your fear of
attachment. When you really care about someone and you are willing to
commit to that friendship, then you have fertile ground to learn about
both attachment and non-attachment.
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- Judy Lief, "Tying the Knot"
JMG HomoQuotable - Jeff Whitty
"I spent most of the day with no idea what was happening anywhere beyond a few blocks of my East Village apartment. I had no cellular service or old-fashioned battery-powered radio available. Only late in the day did I find scant wireless Internet access outside a hospital where people were crammed shoulder-to-shoulder. The wireless finally shut down, too, and my phone battery was running low. Rumors abounded on the street -- power would be on in a few hours, in three days, in a week. No clue on water, hot or cold. I peeked into underground parking garages in my complex: the cars appeared to be floating. Alongside many others I scoured shadowy delis with my flashlight, looking for water and food that could keep for unknown amounts of days. All of the battery-powered AM/FM radios had been bought up.
"I had no idea if the power outage was widespread to millions or just in the East Village. Nobody seemed to have a clear idea what was happening anywhere else. But throughout the day I felt a connection that reminded me of 9/11 and the summer night in 2003 when New York City went dark for 24 hours. New Yorkers are awesome. Nobody was an asshole. Nobody was sketchy. People helped each other and shared the misery together. I talked and joked with people in my building I'd only passed before with maybe a 'hello.' In the attached article you'll see a photo of a deli with its awning yanked down by the winds. I passed by it this morning and saw a lot of merchandise available within easy reach through a broken window. I passed by that deli again hours later and nobody had taken anything. New Yorkers." - Avenue Q playwright and Tony winner Jeff Whitty, writing on his Facebook page.
RELATED: Whitty's latest show, Bring It On: The Musical, is now playing at the St. James Theater.
Reposted from Joe
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Via Buddhism on Beliefnet:
Daily Buddhist Wisdom | |||
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Via JMG: Brad Pitt Donates $100K To Marriage
Brad Pitt has donated $100,000 to the Human Rights Campaign's marriage equality fund. They report via press release:
“Brad Pitt’s partnership with HRC in this closing week delivers vital resources into these campaigns and we’re proud to be working with him as we show that fundamental fairness will win at the ballot box,” said HRC President Chad Griffin. “With his commitment, Brad joins HRC in a tremendous coalition of religious leaders, business leaders, labor groups, civil rights organizations and everyday, fair-minded Americans supporting marriage for gay and lesbian couples.” “It's unbelievable to me that people's lives and relationships are literally being voted on in a matter of days,” said Pitt in an email today to HRC members and supporters. “If you're like me, you don't want to have to ask yourself on the day after the election, what else could I have done?”
Labels: Brad Pitt, HRC, straight allies
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma:
Tricycle Daily Dharma October 31, 2012
Accepting Uncertainty
Uncertainty,
when accepted, sheds a bright light on the power of intention. That is
what you can count on: not the outcome, but the motivation you bring,
the vision you hold, the compass setting you choose to follow.
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- Joanna Macy, "The Greatest Danger"
Monday, October 29, 2012
Via JMG: Supreme Court Sets The Date To Review Prop 8 And DOMA Cases: November 20th
Breaking news from AFER:
The U.S. Supreme Court has announced that it will consider whether to grant review in AFER’s federal constitutional challenge to California’s Proposition 8. The Justices will meet to discuss our case, along with several challenges to the so-called Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), at their private Conference scheduled for Tuesday, November 20. The Court is expected to either:AFER adds: "The Court is expected to release an Order List with its decisions on cases it has granted or denied review from its November 20 Conference by Monday, November 26."
- Grant review of our Prop. 8 challenge, at which point AFER’s legal team, led by distinguished attorneys Ted Olson and David Boies, will submit written briefs and present oral arguments by April 2013. A final decision on Prop. 8 and marriage equality is expected by June 2013.
- Deny review, making permanent the landmark federal appeals court ruling that found Prop. 8 UNCONSTITUTIONAL. Marriage equality will be restored in California.
Labels: AFER, DOMA, Proposition 8, Supreme Court
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma:
Tricycle Daily Dharma October 29, 2012
Loving Attention
When
we are fully present and able to pay attention in a sustained way to
our experience we can begin to see directly, uncolored by our ideas and
concepts. Placing our trust more in loving attention and less in
analyzing the story can allow space for a new way of holding the
question.
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- Narayan Liebenson Grady, "Questioning the Question"
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma:
Tricycle Daily Dharma October 28, 2012
Unfailing Altruism
The
practitioner’s mind is likened to a mountain that the winds can’t
shake; he’s neither tormented by the difficulties he may come across nor
elated by his successes. But that equanimity is neither apathy nor
indifference. It’s accompanied by inner jubilation, and by an openness
of mind expressed as unfailing altruism.
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- Matthieu Ricard, "One Blood, Two Lineages"
Saturday, October 27, 2012
Via JMG: GALLUP: Gays May Swing The Election
An interesting note from Gallup:
A new Gallup Report finds that 71% of LGBT Americans who are registered voters support President Obama for reelection, while 22% support Governor Mitt Romney. From June to September, non-LGBT registered voters preferred Romney to Obama by one percentage point, 47% to 46%. However, when LGBT voters are added to electorate, Obama moves slightly ahead of Romney (47% to 45%). These findings suggest that the highly Democratic vote of the LGBT population could be enough to swing a very close election toward Obama. The findings are based on more than 120,000 interviews of adults in the US, which represents the largest representative sample of LGBT men and women ever collected.
Labels: 2012 elections, Barack Obama, Gallup
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma:
Tricycle Daily Dharma October 27, 2012
Great Questioning, Great Awakening
The
most important part of the practice is for the question to remain alive
and for your whole body and mind to become a question. In Zen they say
that you have to ask with the pores of your skin and the marrow of your
bones. A Zen saying points out: Great questioning, great awakening;
little questioning, little awakening; no questioning, no awakening.
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- Martine Batchelor, "What is This?"
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