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.
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
Via Ram Dass: Ram Dass and Allen Ginsberg in Conversation
Hello, friends:
Ram Dass and Allen Ginsberg in Conversation
Video #2 in a three-part series
Sounds True
Via Sri Prem Baba: Flor do dia - Flor del día- Flower of the day - 06/09/2016
“Quero propor uma pequena tarefa: avalie com sinceridade como você está
na esfera dos relacionamentos. Se você está com alguém, veja por que
está nessa relação. O que te mantém nela? E se você não está com alguém,
se pergunte por que você está sozinho. É uma escolha da sua alma ou
você está com medo de se relacionar? Não tenha medo de fazer essas
perguntas. Somente a mentira pode cair - a verdade nunca cai. Se a sua escolha
é baseada no amor e na liberdade - se você está se expandindo na luz e
crescendo dentro do programa da sua alma, ótimo. Zele por isso. Mas, se
você está onde está por outras razões, tenha coragem de encarar a
verdade, porque ela te liberta.”
“Quiero proponer una pequeña tarea: evalúasinceramente cómo estás en la
esfera de las relaciones. Si estás con alguien, mira por qué estás en
esa relación. ¿Quées lo que te mantiene en ella? Y si no estás con
alguien, pregúntate por qué estás solo. ¿Es una elección de tu alma o
tienes miedo de relacionarte? No tengas miedo de hacer estas preguntas.
Solamente la mentira puede caerse - la verdad nunca se cae. Si tu
elección se basa en el amor y en la libertad - si te estásexpandiendoen
la luz y creciendo dentro del programa de tu alma, muy bien.Cuida bien
de ello. Pero si estásdónde estás por otras razones, ten coraje de
encarar la verdad, porque ella te libera.”
“I would like to propose a small exercise: sincerely evaluate where you are in the realm of relationships. If you are with someone, take a look at why you are with them. What keeps you in this relationship? If you are not with someone, ask yourself why you are alone. Is it a choice you have made from your soul or are you frightened of being in a relationship? Don’t be afraid to ask yourself these questions. The only thing that will fall away will be lies. The truth will never collapse. If your choice is based in love and freedom, if you are expanding in the light and growing along with the program of your soul, then that’s wonderful. Continue to nurture it. However, if you are in this relationship for other reasons, have the courage to face the truth, because it will set you free.”
“I would like to propose a small exercise: sincerely evaluate where you are in the realm of relationships. If you are with someone, take a look at why you are with them. What keeps you in this relationship? If you are not with someone, ask yourself why you are alone. Is it a choice you have made from your soul or are you frightened of being in a relationship? Don’t be afraid to ask yourself these questions. The only thing that will fall away will be lies. The truth will never collapse. If your choice is based in love and freedom, if you are expanding in the light and growing along with the program of your soul, then that’s wonderful. Continue to nurture it. However, if you are in this relationship for other reasons, have the courage to face the truth, because it will set you free.”
Via Daily Dharma / September 6, 2016: Consciousness, Divided
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Consciousness is the division of an otherwise seamless Whole, which transcends space and time, into space and time—that is, into here and there, then and now.
—Steve Hagen, "Time and Now"
Monday, September 5, 2016
Via Daily Dharma / September 5, 2016: The Vulnerable Pronoun
We are sentient creatures easily threatened. Things harm Me. Events bruise and batter Me. The Me is our fearful Self. Me is the pronoun cast in this vulnerable role.
—James Austin, "I-Me-Mine"
—James Austin, "I-Me-Mine"
Via Tricycle / September 5, 2016: Lean In to Learning
The
school year has begun! Whether you’re a student, a parent, or a Ph.D.
candidate, lunches are packed alongside the notebooks and pens, and our
minds, refreshed from the summer, are primed for learning. This week at Tricycle we take the opportunity to learn about race in America and the optimism of the buddhadharma from scholar and writer Charles Johnson. In “Black Coffee Buddhism," poet and literary activist E. Ethelbert Miller asks the National Book Award-winning novelist the questions that “a person in a crowd might be thinking about,” and Johnson’s timely, generous answers offer hope for the next generation of thinkers. When asked what advice he’d share with his grandson, Johnson answers, “I want him to understand that the best position for him to take in regard to objects and others and himself is that of epistemological humility and egoless listening.” What better advice could a student ask for? For centuries, Buddhist women worldwide have been denied access to a full Buddhist education, and thus the full promise of the Buddha’s teaching. In “Buddhism’s Glass Ceiling,” Tricycle’s editor-at-large, Mary Talbot, takes stock of this issue, which has endured from the time of the Buddha to the present day. As Ayya Medhanandi, a nun in the Theravada tradition, puts it, “The Buddha gave the full training to those who were hell-bent on nirvana. Why shouldn’t we receive it?” (For more on Buddhist women achieving what some deemed impossible, check out this month’s Film Club feature, Daughters of Everest.) The right to an education—one education that encompasses the spiritual, intellectual, social, and emotional life—should be a universal right for people of all ages. In that spirit, the first week of dharma teacher Vinny Ferraro’s Dharma Talk, “Starting a Practice of Lovingkindness,” is open to the public, so feel free to share it with your friends and loved ones this week. Tune in to learn about the first two of the four immeasurables: lovingkindness and compassion. No matter your age, it’s always a good idea to invest in your dharma education. |
Sunday, September 4, 2016
Via Ram Dass
September 4, 2016
Grace is something that an individual can see about their own suffering and then use it to their advantage. It is not something that can be a rationalization for allowing another human being to suffer. And you have to listen to the level at which another person is suffering. And when somebody is hungry you give them food. As my guru said, "God comes to the hungry person in the form of food." You give them food and then when they’ve had their belly filled then they may be interested in questions about God. Even though you know from, say, Buddhist training, or whatever spiritual training you have had, that the root cause of suffering is ignorance about the nature of dharma. To give somebody a dharma lecture when they are hungry is just inappropriate methodology in terms of ending suffering...
Via Sri Prem Baba: Flor do dia - Flor del día- Flower of the day - 04/09/2016
“É preciso ter firmeza para evitar que as forças contrárias ao amor
destruam as coisas boas que conseguimos construir na nossa vida. Nossas
escolhas precisam vir do coração, que é o Divino em nós, e não do ego
obcecado pelo poder e viciado em machucar e destruir. Será que não
estamos suficientemente cansados do sofrimento? Precisamos nos
comprometer com a Luz, o que significa trabalhar para criar união,
prosperidade, construção, paz e alegria, na mente e no coração.”
“Es necesariotenerfirmeza para evitar que las fuerzas contrarias al
amor destruyan las cosas buenas que pudimos construir en nuestra vida.
Nuestras eleccionesprecisan venir del corazón, que es lo Divino en
nosotros, y no del ego obsesionado con el poder y adicto a lastimar y
destruir. ¿Será que no estamos lo suficientemente cansados del
sufrimiento? Necesitamos comprometernos con la Luz, que significa
trabajar para crear unión, prosperidad, construcción, paz y alegría en
la mente y en el corazón.”
"Firmness is necessary so that we don't let the opposing forces to love destroy all the good things we have built in our lives. Our choices need to come from our hearts, which is the Divine in us, and not our egos that are obsessed by power and addicted to causing pain and destruction. Have we not had enough of suffering? We need to commit ourselves to the light, working in order to create union, prosperity, construction, peace, and happiness in our minds and in our hearts."
"Firmness is necessary so that we don't let the opposing forces to love destroy all the good things we have built in our lives. Our choices need to come from our hearts, which is the Divine in us, and not our egos that are obsessed by power and addicted to causing pain and destruction. Have we not had enough of suffering? We need to commit ourselves to the light, working in order to create union, prosperity, construction, peace, and happiness in our minds and in our hearts."
Via Daily Dharma / September 4, 2016: The River of Ourselves
Practicing Buddhism is about discovering ourselves to be in a great, flowing river of continuities.
—Joan Halifax, "Giving Birth to Ancestors"
—Joan Halifax, "Giving Birth to Ancestors"
Saturday, September 3, 2016
Via Daily Dharma / September 3, 2016: Inherent Compassion
Compassion is not something that we can “do” or “create”; it already exists in each and every one of us.
—Andy Puddicombe, "10 Tips for Living More Mindfully"
—Andy Puddicombe, "10 Tips for Living More Mindfully"
Friday, September 2, 2016
Via bipartisanreport: Before European Christians Forced Gender Roles, Native Americans Acknowledged 5 Genders
By Pearson McKinney
In fact, people who had both female and male characteristics were
viewed as gifted by nature, and therefore, able to see both sides of
everything. According to Indian Country Today,
all native communities acknowledged the following gender roles:
“Female, male, Two Spirit female, Two Spirit male and Transgendered.”
“Each tribe has their own specific term, but there was a need for a universal term that the general population could understand. The Navajo refer to Two Spirits as Nádleehí (one who is transformed), among the Lakota is Winkté (indicative of a male who has a compulsion to behave as a female), Niizh Manidoowag (two spirit) in Ojibwe, Hemaneh (half man, half woman) in Cheyenne, to name a few. As the purpose of “Two Spirit” is to be used as a universal term in the English language, it is not always translatable with the same meaning in Native languages. For example, in the Iroquois Cherokee language, there is no way to translate the term, but the Cherokee do have gender variance terms for ‘women who feel like men’ and vice versa.”The “Two Spirit” culture of Native Americans was one of the first things that Europeans worked to destroy and cover up. According to people like American artist George Catlin, the Two Spirit tradition had to be eradicated before it could go into history books. Catlin said the tradition:
“..Must be extinguished before it can be more fully recorded.”However, it wasn’t only white Europeans that tried to hide any trace of native gender bending. According to Indian Country Today, “Spanish Catholic monks destroyed most of the Aztec codices to eradicate traditional Native beliefs and history, including those that told of the Two Spirit tradition.” Throughout these efforts by Christians, Native Americans were forced to dress and act according to newly designated gender roles.
One of the most celebrated Two Spirits in recorded history was a Lakota warrior aptly named Finds Them And Kills Them. Osh-Tisch was born a male and married a female, but adorned himself in women’s clothing and lived daily life as a female. On June 17 1876, Finds Them And Kills Them gained his reputation when he rescued a fellow tribesman during the Battle of Rosebud Creek. An act of fearless bravery. Below is a picture of Osh-Tisch and his wife.
In Native American cultures, people were valued for their contributions to the tribe, rather than for masculinity or femininity. Parents did not assign gender roles to children either, and even children’s clothing tended to be gender neutral. There were no ideas or ideals about how a person should love; it was simply a natural act that occurred without judgement or hesitation.
Without a negative stigma attached to being a Two Spirit, there were no inner-tribal incidents of retaliation or violence toward the chosen people simply due to the fact that individuals identified as the opposite or both genders.
“The Two Spirit people in pre-contact Native America were highly revered and families that included them were considered lucky. Indians believed that a person who was able to see the world through the eyes of both genders at the same time was a gift from The Creator.”Religious influences soon brought serious prejudice against “gender diversity,” and so this forced once openly alternative or androgynous people to one of two choices. They could either live in hiding, and in fear of being found out, or they could end their lives. Many of whom did just that.
Imagine a world where people allowed others to live freely as the people nature intended them to be..without harm..without persecution..without shame. Imagine a world where we are truly free.
Make the jump here to read the orginal and more
Via Sri Prem Baba: Flor do dia - Flor del día- Flower of the day - 02/09/2016
“A submissão é uma distorção da virtude da amorosidade. Trata-se de uma
máscara, de um fingir ser. O submisso finge ser humilde e amoroso para
conseguir aquilo que quer, mas basta cutucá-lo um pouco para ver o que
está por trás da sua máscara: o orgulho e a ira.”
“La sumisión es una distorsión de la virtud de la amorosidad. Se trata de una máscara, unfingir ser. El sumiso finge ser humilde y amoroso para conseguir aquello que quiere, pero basta provocarlo un poco para ver lo que hay detrás de la máscara:orgullo e ira.”
“La sumisión es una distorsión de la virtud de la amorosidad. Se trata de una máscara, unfingir ser. El sumiso finge ser humilde y amoroso para conseguir aquello que quiere, pero basta provocarlo un poco para ver lo que hay detrás de la máscara:orgullo e ira.”
"Submission is a distortion of the virtue of being loving. It acts as a
mask, pretending to be something it is not. The submissive one pretends
to be humble and loving in order to get something it wants. All that is
needed is just a little nudge and it is easy to see that behind this
mask lies pride and anger."
Via Daily Dharma / September 2, 2016: Rethinking Freedom
We
haven’t thought about the idea of freedom enough. It needs to be
internalized as an inner freedom from “demand” itself: the kind of
freedom that comes when you’re free from those compulsions to have and
to own and to be someone.
—James Hillman, "Brief Teachings Fall 2016"
—James Hillman, "Brief Teachings Fall 2016"
Thursday, September 1, 2016
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