Saturday, May 14, 2016

Via Daily Dharma / May 14, 2016: We Are of the Earth

Humility: the word contains the same root as the word humus, which refers to soil, earth, the ground. It is also linked to the word human, for we are earthlings, we are creatures whose feet touch the ground.

—Noelle Oxenhandler, "Glass of Water, Bare Feet"

Friday, May 13, 2016

Via JMG: European Union Denounces Anti-LGBT US Laws

EUslam

From the European Union:
The recently adopted laws including in the states of Mississippi, North Carolina and Tennessee, which discriminate against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons in the United States contravene the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which the US is a State party, and which states that the law shall prohibit any discrimination and guarantee to all persons equal and effective protection.
As a consequence, cultural, traditional or religious values cannot be invoked to justify any form of discrimination, including discrimination against LGBTI persons. These laws should be reconsidered as soon as possible.
The European Union reaffirms its commitment to the equality and dignity of all human beings irrespective of their sexual orientation and gender identity. We will continue to work to end all forms of discrimination and to counter attempts to embed or enhance discrimination wherever it occurs around the world.”
 Read the original and more here

Via She's Magic & Midnight Lace: Atticuspoetry

 

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Via Sri Prem Baba: Flor do dia / Flor del dia / Flower of the Day – 12/05/2016

“Não adianta rezar se você não coloca os ensinamentos em prática. Esse é o significado mais profundo da honestidade da qual tenho falado tanto. Deus não te salva se você não se salva. Isso quer dizer que você precisa fazer a sua parte. Você salva a si próprio através da integridade e da honestidade, ou seja, é o amor que nasce da verdade que te salva.”

“No sirverezar si no colocas las enseñanzas en práctica. Este es el significado más profundo de la honestidad de la cualtanto vengo hablando. Dios no te salva si tú no tesalvas. Esto significa que precisas hacer tu parte. Te salvas a ti mismo a través de la integridad y de la honestidad, es decir, es el amor que nace de la verdad que te salva.”

"There is no use in praying if you do not put the teachings into practice. This is the deepest meaning of honesty. God will not save us if we do not save ourselves. In other words, we need to do our part as well. We are saved through integrity and honesty. Love that is born out of truth is what saves us."

Via Daily Dharma / May 12, 2016: We Lift One Another

What if we administer the medicine of the dhamma to one another, each lifting the other up and showing compassion for one another’s suffering? Even those we do not particularly like or understand; even those who are “of no use” to us; even, dare I say, with our own hand?

—Andrew Olendzki, "Medicine for the World"

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Via Love Is Love #HumanRights #RespectDiversity / FB:


Via Sri Prem Baba: Flor do dia - Flor del día - Flower of the day 11/05/2016

"O processo que chamo de ‘ABC da Espiritualidade’ se divide em duas esferas. A primeira diz respeito à como quebrar as barreiras que nos separam de nós mesmos. Trata-se de um trabalho de cura e transformação do eu inferior. A outra esfera diz respeito a tomar consciência dos conteúdos inconscientes que sabotam nossa felicidade dentro dos relacionamentos. Nela, trabalhamos para derrubar as barreiras que nos separam do outro. É nessa esfera que descobrimos os mistérios da sexualidade e o papel dela dentro da vida humana. Navegamos nos ensinamentos do tantra com o objetivo de fazer com que a energia sexual se mova em direção ao amor - e o amor em direção à liberdade."

"There are two spheres of the process we call the ABC’s of Spirituality. The first sphere relates to how we can break the barriers that keep us separate from ourselves. It is a work of healing and transforming the lower self. The second sphere involves becoming aware of the unconscious contents that sabotage our own happiness within relationships. In this sphere, we work on breaking down the barriers that separate us from others. This is where we discover the mysteries of sexuality and its role in human life. We navigate through the teachings of Tantra in order to direct our sexual energy towards love, ultimately directing this love towards freedom."

“El proceso que llamo “ABC de la Espiritualidad” se divide en dos esferas. La primera trata de cómo romper las barreras que nos separan de nosotros mismos. Es un trabajo de cura y transformación del yo inferior. La otra esfera se refiere a tomar consciencia de los contenidos inconscientes que sabotean nuestra felicidad dentro de las relaciones. En ella, trabajamos para derrumbar las barreras que nos separan del otro. Es en esa esfera que descubrimos los misterios de la sexualidad y su papel dentro de la vida humana. Navegamos en las enseñanzas del tantra con el objetivo de hacer que la energía sexual se mueva en dirección al amor, y el amor en dirección a la libertad.”

Via Daily Dharma / May 11, 2016: Everything Is Miraculous

When you’re at home and everything is familiar, it’s hard to remember how miraculous everything is. When you go to a new place, everything freshens up.

—Susan Moon, "The Old Woman of Pagazzano"

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Via Muffy Bolding / FB: ALL HAIL RICKY GERVAIS


#this
#shittalker
#truthteller
#churchescansuckit
#payupbuttercup







Via Lion's Roar: Queer Eye, Right View


minal 
Minal Hajratwala.

The queer eye sees what it’s not supposed to: alluring curve of hip or neck on the wrong type of body, band of colored light in a thundercloud, rain bowing like a bodhisattva’s back.

Likewise, the Dhammapada tells us that the wise see with the inner eye. This secret eye is how we grasp the wheel of dharma, which turns and turns despite whatever sensation we might have of being stuck. (Say, in the closet.)

The Venerable Ajahn Chah urged us to observe nature and the cycles of nature: “Having arisen, all things change and die.” Don’t get lost in moods, in attachments and aversions.
Supreme Court this, homophobia that.

As LGBTIQ people we have become skilled at nonattachment. We uproot our clinging to familial acceptance, to hometowns too small to hold our view of the multiverse, to gender assignments at birth, to the well-worn paths of compulsory marriage.

But if queerness becomes mainstream, what will happen to queer sanghas, to the queer eye itself? No fear; the dharma points the way. Ajahn Chah again: “Different people establish different conventions about what’s right and what’s wrong, but the Buddha took suffering as his guideline.”
We must turn our collective queer eye to where the suffering is.

In June 1969, a group fought back against the police outside the Stonewall Inn in New York City. At that moment, a queer rights movement was born, as Sylvia Rivera, Storme DeLarverie, and others declared “enough” and demanded the opening of eyes.

On the forty-sixth anniversary of Stonewall, same-sex marriage—an agenda set and fought for by a largely white gay American movement—scored a major victory. Some of us celebrated at the White House. At the same moment, transgender and immigration activist Jennicet Gutiérrez, inside the White House, honored her Stonewall ancestors by protesting trans deportations. Amid a hissing crowd of mostly white respectable gays, she demanded that we open our eyes to a part of our community whose suffering remains deep and unresolved.

As the dharma eye teaches us, we cannot cling to a fixed path. A movement that ossifies will change and die. Will we attach ourselves to the politics of respectability, or will we shed it as we’ve learned to shed the genders, faiths, and expectations we were born into? Will we seek approval from the eight worldly winds, or will we honor the wild, messy truths that we apprehend with our innermost gaze?

Read the original here and much much more

Sukiyaki ("Ue wo Muite Arukō" (上を向いて歩こう?, "I Look Up As I Walk")

The other night I was listening to KCRW and a relatively groovy new Japanese song came on. At this ever advancing age, it doesn't take much, so I was transported back in time... to my 9th birthday, on the ranch in Yreka. 

It was a time, when the adults would gladly let us roam freely, and we spend hours making dams in the creek, only coming back when my grandmother rang a big old bell retrieved from an old school house somewhere.


I know someone had made a cake, and there were presents. But 9 year old boys don't remember much of that, but I do remember one thing... I got a small transistor radio. It was made with – plastic – and was bright blue. Anybody who knows me, and has suffered my visits know that I listen to the radio... its a sickness, especially wit the invention of the internet, headphones and my IPad. And so there I was listening to KCRW, listening to a Japanese song and I remembered my first musical obsession – you know the kind, you listen to a song a million and 1/2 times and still need to hear it more.


The song was a hit being played everywhere: Sukiyaki- sung by Kyu Sakamoto. This was a hit, in a way few others had been, as it was sung in Japanese. It was also in the era when Japanese food was just becoming in”, tho not sushi yet. But you always went out and “had”sukiyaki, I wasn't ever a picky eater – only rejecting out right liver and onions and the worst of all, and still to this day... lima beans. 
Grandma was kind and never ever made them when I was there, tho my parents did for some unreasonable reason... I am sure it was passive aggression. As a new grandparent, who survived raising an amazing son, I know there were moments when you thought “this is good for you”. Even when it wasn't for either of us. It wasn't until marrying a Brazilian that I learned that beans were not from a can and sweet, and were actually ok.


But I digress...


In those days – Grandma had a party line, you could listen to the county station all day. My uncle, a ham radio operator, showed me early on that as soon as the sun went down you could listen to the whole world. It was AM only... but amazing... so there was Sukiyaki played on KGO, or KGW, and the best... XERB, the huge powerful station, so powerful and so full of itself it broadcast just across the border from México, thousands of miles away, by a cool guy named Wolfman Jack....


Later on, after my next radio, I began to keep a log – and would write down the call letters and names of the stations I got, and where they from from... with notes, like "it must be in Canada, its French". Little did I know that my budding research career began with a small little radio.


It was my first love with technology – like I said it was blue plastic, plastic being something new and exotic. No one thought about the consequences at the time, in those days you went to the beach and all you found were sea shells. And of course it was “Made in Japan”. I can still smell the plastic, as I slept with it under my pillow, tuned low... and I listened to music and news, and conversations in different accents...


After my birthday, we went back home to San Jose, and I was enrolled in swimming lessons.” liked water, and being a chubby kid, I really had little to know concern as a 9 year old kid about what I looked like, but there was one thing... that scared the shit out of me... the deep end.


Tho the water was clear, and so chlorinated it made your teeth white, that feeling of eternity you get when you look under water towards the far end and see no end was terrifying. Of course the swim instructor had to get us to the deep end, I know now that that was the point, so we wouldn't drown if you were on the Andre Doria, so you could paddle around and save people, but I being a sissy boy, would have none of it.


All I could do was survive, thru shear panic. And so I did. I can swim, and I don't mind clear water no mater how deep as long as I can see the bottom, but looking out into infinity when snorkeling still gives me the heebie-jeebies.


But I digress.


The radio, which went with me everywhere. Was sitting on the back seat, when we went to swim lessons. When we came back it wasn't. In those days you parked the car – in this case a light blue and white Chevy four door, with the windows rolled down. No AC, so things got really hot, and besides it was the summer of 1963... crime hadn't been invented yet, along with seat belts, or signs in parking lots reminding people to keep your valuables locked. I know the parents locked the doors of the house when we left, but I also remember them being unlocked most of the time. Like I said, crime hadn't been invented yet, even in suburban California.


So when we came back from traumatic swim lessons, it was gone.


I was devastated, and being a card carrying sissy boy cried for days. Not sure what happened, I don't remember a new radio, I remember next starting 3rd grade, and being madly in love with Miss Riggs. I remember t the day JFK was shot, as I was at the water fountain, I was a hyper active kid and always sharpening my pencil and getting a drink, when the principal came over the loudspeaker and told us that the president was dead, and that school was out... I remember Miss Riggs bursting into tears and we all were silent, and how we all walked down Foxworthy Avenue a couple of hundred kids in silence...


Yet still there was Sukiyaki... even tho the rest of week was devoted to JFK's funeral and all the mess around Lee Harvey Oswald. There was that song...


So, during this goofy time here in Brasil, I guess it was soothing to find it online and load it into my ITunes thingy.


I leave you here with it, in hopes it too takes you back, to that time before crime...


Via Sri Prem Baba: Flor do dia / Flor del dia / Flower of the Day – 10/05/2016

“Tudo o que vivemos nesse mundo é para que possamos manifestar o amor puro. Todo o sofrimento que experimentamos é para que possamos reaprender a amar. O amor puro é o maior poder nessa Terra. Ele é o solvente universal para todos os males. O mundo inteiro pode estar balançando, mas estando firmado no amor, você não cai.”

“Todo lo que vivimos en este mundo es para que podamos manifestar el amor puro. Todo el sufrimiento que experimentamos es para que podamos reaprender a amar. El amor puro es el mayor poder en esta Tierra. Él es el solvente universal para todos los males. El mundo entero puede estar sacudiéndose, pero estando afirmado en el amor, tú no caes.”

“Everything we experience here in this world is helping us be able to manifest pure love. All the suffering we experience is re-teaching us how to love. Pure love is the greatest power on this planet. It is the cure for all evil. The whole world may shake and tremble, but if we are steadfast in love, then we won’t ever fall.”

Via Daily Dharma / May 10, 2016: Seeking Wholeness

All of our lives are about going toward wholeness, completeness. To me, being a Buddhist is about living as complete a life as possible.

—Rev. Karuna Dharma, "What Does Being a Buddhist Mean to You?"

Monday, May 9, 2016

Via FB:

 
 
Buddha was not a Buddhist. Jesus was not a Christian. Muhammad was not a Muslim. Krishna was not a Hindu. Rumi was not a Sufi mystic. They were #teachers who taught love. #Love was their religion.

Via Thich Nhat Hanh - Pema Chödrön - Dalai Lama / FB:

 
 
Some people are consumed with thoughts and memories from their past. Their mourning, regretting, rehashing, and begrudging doom them to life imprisonment in their painful past.

- Thich Nhat Hanh

Graham Hancock - The War on Consciousness BANNED TED TALK





Publicado em 15 de mar de 2013
Re-uploaded as TED have decided to censor Graham and remove this video from the TEDx youtube channel. Follow this link for TED's statement on the matter and Graham's response: http://blog.ted.com/2013/03/14/open-f...

If anyone would like to prepare a transcript or caption file in any language so non-English speakers can enjoy this talk, please do so and I will be happy to upload it. Just PM me. Or the video is embedded on the Amara project website, so you can add subtitles there at: http://tinyurl.com/co6d39c

GRAHAM HANCOCK is the author of the major international bestsellers The Sign and The Seal, Fingerprints of the Gods, and Heaven's Mirror. His books have sold more than five million copies worldwide and have been translated into 27 languages. His public lectures, radio and TV appearances, including two major TV series for Channel 4 in the UK and The Learning Channel in the US - Quest For The Lost Civilisation and Flooded Kingdoms of the Ice Age - have put his ideas before audiences of tens of millions. He has become recognised as an unconventional thinker who raises controversial questions about humanity's past.

Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, Hancock's early years were spent in India, where his father worked as a surgeon. Later he went to school and university in the northern English city of Durham and graduated from Durham University in 1973 with First Class Honours in Sociology. He went on to pursue a career in quality journalism, writing for many of Britain's leading newspapers including The Times, The Sunday Times, The Independent, and The Guardian. He was co-editor of New Internationalist magazine from 1976-1979 and East Africa correspondent of The Economist from 1981-1983.

In the early 1980's Hancock's writing began to move consistently in the direction of books. His first book (Journey Through Pakistan, with photographers Mohamed Amin and Duncan Willetts) was published in 1981. It was followed by Under Ethiopian Skies (1983), co-authored with Richard Pankhurst and photographed by Duncan Willets , Ethiopia: The Challenge of Hunger (1984), and AIDS: The Deadly Epidemic (1986) co-authored with Enver Carim. In 1987 Hancock began work on his widely-acclaimed critique of foreign aid, Lords of Poverty, which was published in 1989. African Ark (with photographers Angela Fisher and Carol Beckwith) was published in 1990.

Hancock's breakthrough to bestseller status came in 1992 with the publication of The Sign and The Seal, his epic investigation into the mystique and whereabouts today of the lost Ark of the Covenant. 'Hancock has invented a new genre,' commented The Guardian, 'an intellectual whodunit by a do-it-yourself sleuth.' Fingerprints of the Gods, published in 1995 confirmed Hancock's growing reputation. Described as 'one of the intellectual landmarks of the decade' by the Literary Review, this book has now sold more than three million copies and continues to be in demand all around the world. Subsequent works such as Keeper Of Genesis (The Message of the Sphinx in the US) with co-author Robert Bauval, and Heaven's Mirror, with photographer Santha Faiia, have also been Number 1 bestsellers, the latter accompanied by Hancock's three-part television series Quest For the Lost Civilisation.

In 2002 Hancock published Underworld: Flooded Kingdoms of the Ice Age to great critical acclaim, and hosted the accompanying major TV series. This was the culmination of years of research and on-hand dives at ancient underwater ruins. Arguing that many of the clues to the origin of civilization lay underwater, on coastal regions once above water but flooded at the end of the last Ice age, Underworld offered tangible archaeological evidence that myths and legends of ancient floods were not to be dismissed out of hand.

Graham's next venture Talisman: Sacred Cities, Secret Faith, co-authored by Robert Bauval, was published in 2004. This work, a decade in preparation, returns to the themes last dealt with in Keeper Of Genesis, seeking further evidence for the continuation of a secret astronomical cult into modern times. It is a roller-coaster intellectual journey through the back streets and rat runs of history to uncover the traces in architecture and monuments of a secret religion that has shaped the world.

In 2005 Graham published Supernatural: Meetings with The Ancient Teachers of Mankind, an investigation of shamanism and the origins of religion. This controversial book suggests that experiences in altered states of consciousness have played a fundamental role in the evolution of human culture, and that other realities - indeed parallel worlds - surround us all the time but are not normally accessible to our senses.

http://www.grahamhancock.com

These videos are released under a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND license, so they can be freely shared and reposted. (from http://www.ted.com/pages/about)
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Via Sri Prem Baba: Flor do dia / Flor del dia / Flower of the Day – 09/05/2016

“Podemos dizer que o trabalho do ABC da Espiritualidade é um instrumento que te ajuda a tomar consciência daquilo que está escondido, o que possibilita que deixemos de ser vítimas da inconsciência. Porque enquanto não nos tornarmos conscientes das partes de nós mesmos que sabotam a nossa própria felicidade, seremos conduzidos por elas. Se o seu veículo for conduzido por um motorista que você não conhece e que tem más intenções em relação a você, é possível que você seja sequestrado. Então, tomar consciência de quem está conduzindo o seu veículo é o primeiro passo para que você possa voltar a ser o condutor. Trata-se de um processo de empoderamento de si mesmo.”

“Podemos decir que el trabajo del ABC de la Espiritualidad es un instrumento que te ayuda a tomar consciencia de aquello que está escondido, lo que posibilita que dejemos de ser víctimas de la inconsciencia. Porque mientras no seamos conscientes de las partes de nosotros mismos que sabotean nuestra propia felicidad, seremos conducidos por ellas. Si tu vehículo es conducido por un chofer que no conoces y que tiene malas intenciones contigo, es posible que seas secuestrado. Entonces, tomar conciencia de quién está conduciendo tu vehículo, es el primer paso para que puedas volver a ser el conductor. Se trata de un proceso de empoderamiento de ti mismo.”

“The process we call the ABC’s of Spirituality is a tool that helps us become aware of what is hidden within us. It helps us to stop being victims of our own unconsciousness. As long as we are still unconscious of the parts within us that continue to sabotage our happiness, we continue being controlled by them. If our vehicle is being driven by an unknown driver who has bad intentions towards us, they may be kidnapping us. The first step is becoming aware of who in us is driving our vehicle so that we can regain control of the driver’s seat. This is a process of self-empowerment.”

Via Daily Dharma / May 9, 2016: Practice Is Not Painless

We all get sick, lose people we love, and each of us will die. Our practice is not to try to get rid of this pain, which would be impossible. Rather, it is to avoid constricting around our pain, or blaming ourselves or others for it, or lashing out when we feel attacked.

—Donald Rothberg, "Present Moment, Urgent Moment"

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Via Ram Dass:

May 8, 2016

If we accept that the ends of our actions often prove unknowable, we’re also freer to be focused on the process of our work as it’s happening. We can be attentive to situations as they occur. What lies before us is it. Helping is right here. Not having to know so badly, not wandering off looking, we’re more able to be present, freer simply to be.

We needn’t be troubled or worn down, then, by paradox and ambiguity. The mystery of helping can be our ally, our teacher, an environment for wonder and discovery. If we enter into it openly, our actions fall into perspective, a larger pattern we can trust. At rest in the Witness, meanwhile, we greet the outcome of our action with equanimity.

Here is a final shift in perspective which can help release us from burnout: We do what we can.