Cultivating
skillful effort, we learn to distinguish the “right” amount of effort.
Not too little. Not too much. Just right. In tune. When we find the
right pitch, our practice flourishes.
—Peter Doobinin, “Skillful Effort”
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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.
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Via Daily Dharma: Cultivating Skillful Effort
Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation // Words of Wisdom - October 21, 2020 💌
You’ve got to be very quiet to hear your unique dharma, your unique way of expression:
Somebody comes along, and their primary goal in life is to regain the rights of Indigenous peoples.
Someone else comes along and they want to awaken people to environmental degradation.
Someone else comes along and they want to stand up to the incredible oppression of women.
It isn’t a question of which thing is worse, or which is more worthwhile. Each person has to hear what their part is and how their compassion can express itself.
I am doing this gig. This is my part. It’s no better than your part; it’s just my part. I honor everybody’s part. I just have to keep listening continually to hear what my part is.
- Ram Dass -
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
Via Tricycle // Our Suffering and Our Suffrage
By Sharon Salzberg
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Via Daily Dharma: Life’s Caring Energy
A
sacred embodied presence may be available to us if only we are open to
it. This can happen in the meditation hall, in moments of crisis, on the
sidewalk of our hometown, anywhere at all. The energy of compassionate
caring exists in our world and can be present to us.
—Sandy Boucher, “Meeting the Friend She Always Knew”
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Monday, October 19, 2020
Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation // Words of Wisdom - October 18, 2020 💌
For a long time, I thought the truth meant only words, but it doesn’t. Some truths are communicated in silence. You have to figure out when to use words and when to use silence, because the absolute truth is silent.
- Ram Dass -
Via Daily Dharma: Discerning What Is True
When
all is said and done, mindfulness is really about wisdom, about
discerning what is really, really, really, true from what is mere
appearance, or what you’re attached to because you want it to be true.
—Jon Kabat-Zinn in conversation with Daniel Goleman and Richard Davidson, “The Untold Story of America’s Mindfulness Movement”
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Sunday, October 18, 2020
Via Tricycle // For the Moment
Via FB// WHEN I AM AMONG THE TREES
Via Daily Dharma: Moving Out of Loneliness
If
we can experience being lonely, and see our thoughts about being
lonely, then we can move out of the gap. Practice is that movement, over
and over again.
—Charlotte Joko Beck, “Attention Means Attention”
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The
Buddha pointed out that the seeds of liberative understanding and
clarity, of kindness and compassion, lie within each of us. And the path
to their fruition lies in our commitment.
—Christina Feldman, “Doing, Being, and the Great In-Between”
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Friday, October 16, 2020
Via Tricycle // heart sutra fragment 3
By mushim
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Via Daily Dharma: Walking into Serenity
How
does one come to a confident and positive view that is not naive, given
the state of the world? By walking through one’s own anger and despair
and emerging into serenity.
—James Thornton, “Radical Confidence”
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To
realize the pervasiveness of how people suffer, while at the same time
having an open and relaxed heart, evokes empathy and compassion for
others.
—Gil Fronsdal, “Why I Walk Two Paths”
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