Keep Your Citta Healthy
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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.
Keep Your Citta Healthy
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The Zen Way of Recovery - Laura Burges
In her signature humorous fashion, Ryuko Laura Burges shares wisdom from her latest book: “The Zen Way of Recovery: An Illuminated Path Out of the Darkness of Addiction.”
Listen in as she reveals her insights on:
What does the Third Noble Truth really promise when it speaks of “an end to dukkha?” Does it mean an end to unpleasant experiences?
In this rich talk, Donald Rothberg shares that the end of dukkha actually means the cessation of our reactivity to unpleasant experiences. He relates the analogy of “the second arrow” to our reactivity (both clinging and aversion) rather than the typical translation of “suffering.”
He introduces 10 guidelines for working with reactivity.
Pure Land Buddhism and Devotional Poetry - John Del Bagno
John discusses Pure Land Buddhism and reads his poems devoted to Amitābha Buddha.
He describes Pure Land Buddhism as an alternative to self-powered practice, which often engages the willful, striving aspects of our ego. Pureland relies instead on an ‘other power’ to bring us to enlightenment: Amitābha Buddha. This is accomplished through the habit of reciting the Buddha-name, believed to make the attainment of Buddhahood possible in only one lifetime.
Enjoy!
Tom Bruein
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“For there is something in us that knows, that knows the harmony, the
flow, the total participation in the universe that a tree and a river
and snow are all part of. And we know that when we transcend our
separateness, the illusion of separateness, our intellect, that reality,
we flow. There’s a place that yearns for that, and we look for methods.
And we know that when we’re in the middle of a trip – cooking a
bouillabaisse, knitting an Afghan, whatever that trip is – we can get
moments of that flow.”
- Ram Dass -
From the recent Here & Now Podcast episode recorded in 1976, "The Awakening of the Soul"
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2022 - This is the AUTUMNAL EQUINOX in the Northern Hemisphere and the Vernal Equinox in the Southern Hemisphere. An equinox in astronomy is the moment in time (not the whole day, that is called "the equilux") when the center of the Sun can be observed to be directly above the Earth’s equator, occurring around March 20 and September 23 each year. Today this moment is 9:03 p.m. on the East Coast. The September equinox marks the first day of Mehr or Libra in the Iranian calendar. It is one of the Iranian festivals called Jashne Mihragan, or the festival of sharing or love in Zoroastrianism. The September equinox was "New Year’s Day" in the French Republican Calendar, which was in use from 1793 to 1805. The French First Republic was proclaimed and the French monarchy was abolished on September 21, 1792, making the following day the equinox day that year, the first day of the "Republican Era" in France. The start of every year was to be determined by astronomical calculation, (that is: following the real Sun and not the mean Sun as all other calendars). A folk tale claims that only on the March (Vernal) equinox day (some may add the September equinox day or may explicitly not), one can balance an egg on its point. However one can balance an egg on its point any day of the year if one has the patience. For more on egg balancing: http://urbanlegends.about.com/ Although the word "equinox" implies equal length of day and night, as is noted elsewhere, this is not true. For most locations on earth, there are two distinct identifiable days per year when the length of day and night are closest to being equal. Those days are commonly referred to as the "equiluxes" to distinguish them from the equinoxes. Equinoxes are points in time, but equiluxes are days. By convention, equiluxes are the days where sunrise and sunset are closest to being exactly 12 hours apart. This way, you can refer to a single date as being the equilux, when, in reality, it spans sunset on one day to sunset the next, or sunrise on one to sunrise the next | ||
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