The foolish are trapped by karma, while the wise are liberated through karma.

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.

Life
is profound if you’re awake to see it. It’s one thing to draw from
culture, it’s another thing to be drawn so deeply into the culture that
your true nature disappears. Wisdom is not merely something to be gained
with old age. One can be wise in every stage of one’s life. To manifest
wisdom means simply to step back and see—to reflect, inquire, be aware,
be disciplined, and be focused not once in a while, but all of the
time, moment to moment. This life is precious and fleeting. Pay
attention.
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When
we are able to fully appreciate the basic activities of eating and
drinking, we discover an ancient secret, the secret of how to become
content and at ease. The Zen teachings talk about the exquisite taste of
plain water. Have you ever been very, very thirsty? Maybe you were on a
long hike, or sick, or working without a break in the summer heat. When
you were finally able to drink, even plain water, you remember how
wonderful it was. Actually, each sip of liquid and each bite of food can
be that fresh and delicious, once we learn again just to be present.
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The Labor Government passed its Marriage Equality Same-Sex Bill in the Legislative Assembly with the help of Greens MLA Shane Rattenbury. The laws will allow an authorised celebrant to marry gay couples within the ACT, regardless of where they live. "I am proud to stand for equality. I am proud to stand for decency and I am proud to stand for respect," Mr Rattenbury told the Assembly today. "Perhaps most simply I am proud to stand in support of the notion that two people who love each other should be able to get married." Amendments were also passed to strengthen the laws against any challenge in the High Court. It is expected same-sex couples will be able to take advantage of the new laws before Christmas, after they give four weeks notice of their intent to marry.The federal government is expected to challenge the bill.
Federal Attorney-General George Brandis has warned the ACT that the laws will be subject to a High Court challenge. Earlier this month, Senator Brandis said he had received advice the bill was "invalid by reason of inconsistency" with the Commonwealth Marriage Act. Prime Minister Tony Abbott's sister and Sydney City Councillor, Christine Forster, has bought into the debate, calling for federal Liberal MPs to be allowed a conscience vote on the issue if legislation comes before the Parliament. Revealing that she and her partner have been engaged since March, Ms Forster said she hoped the new Liberal party room would regard the issue as a matter of conscience. "Marriage is about love, it's about people's feelings, it's a matter of the heart," she told Channel 9.
For the past five years, Jason Pickel has wanted to marry boyfriend Darren Black Bear. The two even planned a trip to Iowa, a state that recognizes same-sex marriage. But when the Supreme Court struck down the Defense of Marriage Act last June, Pickel had an idea. He called the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribe's courthouse and asked a simple question. "I was really expecting a big no,” said Pickel. “I thought we're on our way to Iowa, but I called the tribe and they said, 'Yeah come on down, it's twenty bucks.'" Twenty dollars for what no amount of money could buy in Oklahoma -- a marriage license made legal by the tribal code. Its requirements, both people be of Native American descent and live within the tribe's jurisdiction. Nowhere does it specify gender. “I do know at the end of the day the state offices won't recognize it, but they kind of have to,” said Pickel. That's because on sovereign Indian land, state laws don't apply, making Jason and Darren the first publicly married same-sex couple in Oklahoma, a milestone, he hopes is followed.Pickel's happiness is hampered by only one thing: "When we have equality in all 50 states and all U.S. territories, that is when we'll have true equality. That's when I will be truly, truly happy." (Tipped by JMG reader Brandy)
When
you sit down to meditate, you never know what’s going to come up. Some
days you’re hammered by relentless trivia; other days you’re caught in
storms of anger or grief or fear. What’s important is just to keep
coming back to the cushion, to keep opening the door to the possibility
of peace and insight.
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There’s
this idea that the dharma is like a special little flower that needs to
be very carefully planted. But I think it’s much more rhizomatous. It’s
completely graftable, and it can spread and take root in new places. I
like to believe that the dharma can take care of itself. It’s so much
more resilient and creative than we think.
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If
it is a remedy against affliction, it is Dharma; if not, it is not
Dharma. If it is at variance with all worldly people, it is Dharma; if
it is in accord with the worldly, it is not Dharma. If its trace is
positive, it is Dharma; if not, it is not Dharma.
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Gratitude
is a way of undercutting your ego—that is, it is a way of being
Buddhist. There is an awareness that we get now and then about what we
owe to others, and Shinran feels that that should become the
moving force of one’s life. That awakening, that awareness, transforms
your way of dealing with life, with people, and with all things.
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