Saturday, January 7, 2017

Via Daily Dharma / The Heart Holds Two Truths

Take refuge in the dharma when you’re hurting; gain perspective; expand your capacity for empathy; uncover the biases you carry within yourself; and also see all arisings as empty. And then, see with complexity, and hold both conventional and ultimate truths in your heart.

—Jay Michaelson, "Retreat or Fight? Both are Right."

Via Daily Dharma / Not-blaming

When you check your own mind properly, you stop blaming others for your problems. You recognize that your mistaken actions come from your own defiled, deluded mind.

—Lama Thubten Yeshe, "Your Mind is Your Religion"

Via Daily Dharma / Embrace Each Error

Anyone has the right to be a Buddhist, no matter. There is no need to be afraid of having faults, because knowing we have them can help us to improve.

—Master Sheng-Yen, "How to Be Faultless"

Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Via Ram Dass


There is no drama any manifestation can present that denies the truth of the fact that behind the drama, here we are; no matter how poignant, captivating, dramatic, bittersweet it may be. Our work is to not get snared in anybody else’s or our own drama; be it police, or the person who’s suffering.

Can you accept total suffering, take on the karma of another human being, and yet not be attached to the melodrama of suffering? If a person is suffering, the only thing you can do for them is to find the place in them which is behind suffering. It’s all you can do. It’s all that’s available.



Via Sri Prem Baba


Via Daily Dharma / Everyone Is Welcome

Anyone has the right to be a Buddhist, no matter what they believe.

—Robert Thurman, "Reincarnation: A Debate"

Monday, January 2, 2017

Via Sri Preem Baba


Via Daily Dharma - 02/02/16

The Buddha taught that freedom is going beyond conditions. For me, the people who have been through the harshest conditions—and survived—have the greatest potential to transform the madness of their lives.

—Vinny Ferraro, "The Heartful Dodger"

Sunday, January 1, 2017

Via Daily Dharma / December 31, 2016: Cherishing Existence

This is who and what we are: constellations of matter, vulnerable, impermanent, and—for moments? for lifetimes?—illumined by the miracle of awareness. Whether fleeting or eternal, it’s a miracle that we must never take for granted.

—Noelle Oxenhandler, "Awake and Demented"

Via FB

"Trump courted evangelicals and promised to appoint judges to overturn the historic Obergefell ruling on marriage equality (and he has publicly opposed marriage equality since 2000). Even if you believe he wouldn’t do that, why would you give even conditional support to a man who has given hope to the people who detest you and wish you harm?"
- Michelangelo Signorile

Via Ram Dass


At a certain point, you realize that you see only the projections of your own mind. The play of phenomena is a projection of the spirit. The projections are your karma, your curriculum for this incarnation. Everything that’s happening to you is a teaching designed to burn out your stuff, your attachments. Your humanity and all your desires are not some kind of error. They’re integral parts of the journey.

Via Sri Prem Baba


Via Daily Dharma / January 1, 2017: A New Year’s Resolution

I intend to cultivate equanimity and balance—not to panic when things appear to be off track, and not to relax when everything seems to be going smoothly. I intend to cultivate awareness and presence and not focus too hard on the outcome—paying more attention to the process and developing understanding and sympathy for myself and others.

Friday, December 30, 2016

The Biggest LGBT Advances of 2016


Via Sri Prem Baba


Via Daily Dharma / December 30, 2016: Leading the Charge

Individually, we might feel that global problems are beyond our capacity to solve. What I have noticed, though... is that if one or two people take the lead in making even small changes, it energizes the whole community.

—Joseph Goldstein, "Facing the Heat"

Thursday, December 29, 2016

Via Daily Dharma / December 29, 2016: The Binding Thread

A string of beads has a thread running through all the beads, keeping them together. What we need is a thread too—of sanity and stability. Because when you have a thread, even though each bead is separate, they hang together.

—Sogyal Rinpoche, "The Stability of Ease"