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.
Sunday, May 22, 2022
Saturday, May 21, 2022
Via Gay Buddhist Fellowship - San Francsco|| New GBF talks
[GBF] new GBF talks
Enjoy 700+ free recorded dharma talks at www.gaybuddhist.org |
Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Effort: Restraining Unarisen Unhealthy States
Restraining Unarisen Unhealthy States
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One week from today: Abandoning Arisen Unhealthy States
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Questions? Visit the Dhamma Wheel orientation page.
Via Daily Dharma: Peaceful Mind, Peaceful Action
When our minds are peaceful, our bodily actions will be peaceful, and we will convey an ambiance of love, care, and mercy.
Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi, “Fostering Peace, Inside and Out”
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Friday, May 20, 2022
Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Living: Abstaining from Harming Living Beings
Undertaking the Commitment to Abstain from Harming Living Beings
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One week from today: Abstaining from Taking What is Not Given
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Questions? Visit the Dhamma Wheel orientation page.
Via Daily Dharma: Braving the Unknown
As
spiritual practitioners we need to have some curiosity about the
unknown. When unexplored territory frightens us, we need to ask
ourselves, “Where’s our sense of adventure?”
Elizabeth Mattis Namgyel, “Open Stillness”
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Thursday, May 19, 2022
Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Action: Reflecting upon Bodily Action
Reflecting Upon Bodily Action
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One week from today: Reflecting upon Verbal Action
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Questions? Visit the Dhamma Wheel orientation page.
Via Daily Dharma: Let Your Thoughts Come
All meditators have thoughts arising during their practice—it’s what you do with them that matters.
Bob Sharples, “Do the Thoughts Ever Stop?”
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Wednesday, May 18, 2022
Via Lion's Roar / Pico Iyer
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My Flight From the Real | ||
Pico
Iyer thought he would find what is truly real by going off to a
monastery, but he was really fleeing it. Dropping his spiritual
romaticism, he found it in ordinary life. |
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Via Lion's Roar
US president Joe Biden, White House extend warm wishes to Buddhists with second annual Vesak celebration |
On
Monday, a second annual Vesak celebration was held at the White House
honoring the birth, enlightenment, and death of the Buddha.
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Via Lama Rod Owens
Dear Friends,
As we move deeper into the spring, we are experiencing an awakening of the natural world into the vibrancy of summer.
We are also experiencing an awakening to the struggle of so many folks around us to be well, safe, and cared for.
We are still deep in the apocalypse, and while I am confident that we are moving in a direction of profound rebirth into a more compassionate and loving world, we still must do the work of meeting the intensity of the violence around us with an open heart that allows us to do the essential work of grieving and dreaming the world we most need to see.
I offer the following prayer that I have shared often on my platform to you for your practice. Prayer is an essential practice for me. I begin and end my day with prayer. May this prayer nourish and tend to your brokenheartedness.
Here is what my prayer sounds like right now:
I evoke all those beings and sources of refuge who have ever loved me to come sit with me because it is now that I feel most alone.
I evoke the Blessed Mother, the Sacred Father, Spirits of Light, the essence of wisdom, my teachers and elders, the communities who have always caught me when I have fallen, the ancestors who have never stopped holding me, all the elements, including the sacred earth, who help me to stand, silence which wraps me in the space to be with my heart. I call upon my own innate compassion.
To all those I have evoked, I offer my grief and what seems like my perpetual mourning in this body. I offer my fear, my numbness, and I offer my inability to dream beyond my shutting down. Most of all, I offer my fatigue. I am tired. Today precious earth, let me lie upon you and remind me of my body and my heart.
I want many things, but I need only one thing now- to give up what I cannot hold to you. I pray that I evolve past my belief that my pain is mine alone to carry.
To my sources of refuge who have been evoked, you have taught me over and over again that this is not the truth. You have taught me over and over again that it is not my pain but our pain. You remind me that my worship of isolation is not conducive to my liberation.
I want to be free, and so I offer what I struggle to hold to you right now, knowing that you are only here to share this heaviness with and to love me. I am afraid of the world. I am afraid of people. I am afraid of what I must do to survive in the world. Even these fears, I offer to my sources of refuge.
Today my precious sources of refuge, in your love, offer me rest. In your love, never abandon me. In your love, haunt all others who feel lonely and tired.
Please continue to haunt me in this life, in death, and into all my lives to come until one day I become a source of refuge for other beings.
Yet it is also my prayer to become a source of refuge for beings right now in this life. May I and all others in this realm and beyond be blessed forever.
I dedicate this labor to my descendants, who will one day lead me into my ancestorhood.
These are my prayers right now.
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Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Speech: Refraining from False Speech
Refraining from False Speech
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One week from today: Refraining from Malicious Speech
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Questions? Visit the Dhamma Wheel orientation page.
Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation // Words of Wisdom - May 18, 2022 💌
I think in relationships, you create an environment with your own work
on yourself, which you offer to another human being to use to grow in
the way they need to grow. Parents are environments for their children,
lovers are an environment for their partners.
You keep working – you become the soil – moist and soft and receptive so
the person can grow the way they need to grow, because how do you know
how they should grow?
- Ram Dass -
Via FB // Alexandre Kurth - Ciências
Via Daily Dharma: Not Fooling Ourselves
When we cultivate the practice of paying close attention to the way we talk to ourselves, we won’t fool ourselves too much.
Norman Fischer, “Beyond Language”
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Tuesday, May 17, 2022
Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Intention: Cultivating Lovingkindness
Cultivating Lovingkindness
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One week from today: Cultivating Compassion
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#DhammaWheel
Questions? Visit the Dhamma Wheel orientation page.
Via Daily Dharma: Let Loose and Dance
Letting
go of the small self opens the way to moving forward from a deep,
organismic sense of rightness. It is not just about having more space,
but how to dance in the space!
David Rome, “Focusing and Meditating”
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