Saturday, September 25, 2021

Via Them -- Elvira

 

Via Tricycle -- Understanding Equanimity: The Secret Ingredient In Mindfulness

 

Understanding Equanimity: The Secret Ingredient In Mindfulness
By Sharon Salzberg
In her online course “The Boundless Heart,” Sharon Salzberg explores how equanimity brings balance to the heart and stability to the mind. 
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Via Daily Dharma: Let Awakening Come to You


For the entrusting heart, you don’t work toward Buddha; you make yourself available to let Buddha work toward you. 

—Andrew Cooper, “Regret: A Love Story”

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Friday, September 24, 2021

Via Daily Dharma: Active Listening

Listening can be quiet and receptive, yet active and awake at the same time. In my experience, it is just this kind of mindfulness that can be there when hearing a Buddhist text.

—Sarah Shaw, “The Text Talks”

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Via Daily Dharma: The Core of Our Being

 

When we spend time in meditation and experience moments of peace and harmony, we come closer to the basic goodness that is the actual core of our being. 

—Lama Dudjom Dorjee, “Seclusion and Meditation”

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Thursday, September 23, 2021

His Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama

 “If you want others to be happy, practice compassion.
If you want to be happy, practice compassion.”


– His Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Via Tumblr // Om namah shivaya

 


Via Tumblr

 


Simone Tebet: 'Mulheres não são histéricas e sim exercem seu papel'

Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation // Words of Wisdom - September 22, 2021 💌

 
 

I invite you not to cling. I invite you to open to the next moment and allow it to have its own richness. Nothing will kill the glow faster than clinging.

I was with Aldous Huxley years ago, and I didn’t know him well, but when we were together there were just a few words he kept using: “Extraordinary,” “How curious,” and “How odd.” I realized that everything in life is extraordinary if I just want to look. It’s true there’s nothing new under the sun, and yet it’s all fresh. - Ram Dass

Via Daily Dharma: Discover an Ancient Secret Inbox



Gratitude, the simple and profound feeling of being thankful, is the foundation of all generosity.

—Sallie Tisdale, dharma teacher and author

Dear Daily Dharma reader, 

Every morning for the past 14 years, Tricycle has sent out the Daily Dharma newsletter to our growing community of subscribers. We share these little gems of wisdom in the hopes that they may serve as a source of inspiration, guidance, and reflection to carry throughout your day. 

With over 70,000 subscribers, the Daily Dharma has become one of Tricycle’s most popular offerings. We’ve been delighted to hear from our readers how much they love starting their day with these quotes. As one reader shared, “The Daily Dharma arriving in my inbox each morning reminds me how to live my life and be at peace." 

Tricycle is able to offer the Daily Dharma and other resources free of charge thanks to the generosity of readers like you. As a nonprofit organization, we depend on your support to continue our vital work and launch new initiatives. 

If you’ve enjoyed your Daily Dharma, please consider supporting this offering with a one-time gift or a recurring monthly donation. No donation is too small.

Thank you for being part of the Tricycle community. We look forward to continuing to share the Buddhist teachings and find new ways to serve our readers. 


With gratitude, 

The Tricycle Team 
  
  
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Happiness, joy, and bliss come from having an appreciation of other people’s work and at the same time being content with what we have and what we are.

—Phakchok Rinpoche, “Dealing With Your Jealous and Competitive Mind”

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Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Via White Crane Institute // Toward A Gay Ecological Perspective: the Gay Experience and Ecology

 

Today's Gay Wisdom
2017 -

In 1992 White Crane #15 looked at The Wild Man, Robert Bly and Gays, and included a spirited debate among Harry Hay, Mark Thompson, and Arthur Evans on the origins of the Faeries. J. Michael Clark issued a call to ecological reflection:

Toward A Gay Ecological Perspective: the Gay Experience and Ecology

One important theme in Gay liberation is the realization that we cannot wait for others to sanction our efforts in theology or spirituality. We must instead find our own prophetic voice and assume our own authority to speak in theology and spirituality. Ultimately, neither Gay men and Lesbians, nor Native Americans, nor the poor, nor any other oppressed people can afford to wait for an external conferral of authority to speak. Moreover, the shared nature of oppression means that as we create our own liberation, so also are we obliged to seek the liberation of other people, and of the Earth itself, from objectification, disvaluation and exploitation.

Gay spirituality and theology, borne out of our experience of oppression, can contribute something unique to ecological reflection. While we would not expect the so called deep ecologists and other straight male writers to include our particular perspective, it is surprising that the majority of feminist writers also do not include Gay/Lesbian oppression as part of their analysis of human and ecological oppression and exploitation. Even when women, African Americans, Native Americans and Third World [sic] peoples and their environments are acknowledged and examined, Gay men and Lesbians are consistently absent and invisible. The extension of rights to Blacks, to women, and in a limited extent to some endangered species and the environment, conveniently passes over certain groups which, therefore, remain disenfranchised — most Native Americans, the poor, the homeless, and Gay men and Lesbians. These groups of people are all too much of the biosphere as well as invisible, even to so-called liberals, and treated as disvalued and disposable.

According to deep ecology, human self-centeredness has led to environmental problems. According to feminism, masculine privilege and social structures have devalued and exploited both women and nature. A Gay perspective would insist that not only are women, nature and the Earth devalued, but our society, with its fear of diversity, disvalues anyone (Gays, Lesbians, Native Americans, the poor and homeless, etc.) and anything (the environment, the Earth) designated as “other.” What we see is not just a devaluing which leads to domination and exploitation, but a disvaluing which strips away all value leading to exclusion, to being disposable, to being acceptable for extinction. This insight is one unique contribution to ecology which Gay people can offer, Gay thinking must move beyond the issues of domination and exploitation to those of disvaluation, exclusion and expendability to radically celebrate diversity and the intrinsic value of all that is, the human, the biospheric, the geospheric. Gay people must work against the disvaluation and exclusion of self and world as disposable, worthless commodities in a society that disdains diversity and eliminates the unnecessary — that which has no utilitarian value.

As Gay men and Lesbians look out on our disposable society of planned obsolescence and throw-away consumerism, we cannot help but be aware of the growing trash heap, the over-burdened landfills, the industrially polluted water and the wastelands of deforestation. We are able to see out society throwing away our Earth, our home, because we are also aware of how often human beings themselves have been treated as disposable and expendable. Historically, African-Americans, Native Americans, the poor and the homeless, the physically and mentally challenged and virtually all Third World [sic] peoples have been treated as either expendable after use (in slavery or minimum wage work) or as totally useless.

In the history of our own community, never has our expendability been so evident as in the rising incidence of anti-Gay violence and in the AIDS health crisis. Our government continues to spend money in the pursuit of protocols and vaccines, while ouor politico-medical system drags its feet in regard to approving treatment protocols or to finding a cure. Gay men, IV-drug users, people of color, and Third World [sic] communities where AIDS rages heterosexually are still devalued and/or disvalued. Our expendability becomes an example of our society’s attitudes toward all the Eart. Hence, our Gay ecological perspective must adamantly oppose any disvaluation and exclusion that leads to dispensing with diversity and disposing of life. Neither Gay men and Lesbians, nor the biosphere, nor the geosphere, nor any of the great diversity which god/dess creates and delights in is expendable.

An ecological perspective will also address our own lives as Gay men and Lesbians. We must be held accountable whenever we accede to or cooperate with the forces of oppression, exploitation and expendability. We must challenge any Gay/Lesbian assimilation which mitigates our diversity. Gor Gay men in particular, we must also examine our socialization as men. We must discern how we as men have been conditioned to accept exploitation, disvaluation and expendability — worthlessness — in our lives. If the typical masculine socialization process of our society works against a compassionate, caring, empathy for nature, spiritual Gay men who escaped that socialization may be able to demonstrate, for all men, a male-embodied love and care for nature.

As we (re)confront the abuses that imperil the environment, we can begin to create a Gay ecology that discloses that our Gay and Lesbian existence is not only a mode of being-in-the-world, but also a way of being-with-the-world, as co-partners in the process of healing and liberation throughout the Earth. Granted, in some respects Gay men and Lesbians, as a larger community, may lag behind other groups in wrestling with ecological issues and environmental causes because our energies are so consumed with dealing with AIDS, homophobia and other forms of oppression. Even with our considerable in-house agenda, which absolutely must not be forsaken, groups such as the various faerie circles and Gays United Against Nuclear Arms have pursued ecological concerns, while individuals have worked within local neighborhood groups on similar issues. Developing a broader, ecological perspective can help us see the connection among all forms of oppression, exploitation and disvaluataion and can facilitate liaisons to confront all of these. Not through co-option, but through cooperation, working together to achieve liberation for all peoples and the Earth itself, will we find out own liberation achieved as well.

Michael Clark is the author of Beyond the Ghetto: Gay Theology in Ecological Perspective, Pilgrim Press 1993

Via Tricycle // Helpless, Not Hopeless

 


Helpless, Not Hopeless
By Kurt Spellmeyer
Only the experience of total helplessness made it possible for Siddhartha Gautama to become awakened. 
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Via Daily Dharma: Discover an Ancient Secret

 

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.

—Jan Chozen Bays, “Mindful Eating”

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Monday, September 20, 2021

Via L.A. Times

 


Via Sacramento Bee:

 


Via Daily Dharma: Bountiful Space

 

When we can step back and see everything, that’s when we start experiencing realization and enlightenment. We see the nature of everything because we have the flexibility and the adaptability; we can spread out.

—Interview with Lama Rod Owens by Nina Herzog, “A Love Song to My Anger”

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Sunday, September 19, 2021

Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation // Words of Wisdom - September 19, 2021 💌


 

Just because you are seeing divine light, experiencing waves of bliss, or conversing with Gods and Goddesses is no reason to not know your zip code. 

- Ram Dass -

Via Daily Dharma: Awaken To Joy

 

Awakening to your own joy can be as simple as taking delight in a gorgeous blooming flower, hearing the sound of your beloved’s voice, or noticing the way your favorite song soothes your heart.

—Amanda Gilbert, “How to Choose Joy”

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