Thursday, July 17, 2025

Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Action: Reflecting upon Verbal Action

 

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RIGHT ACTION
Reflecting Upon Verbal Action
However the seed is planted, in that way the fruit is gathered. Good things come from doing good deeds, bad things come from doing bad deeds. (SN 11.10) What is the purpose of a mirror? For the purpose of reflection. So too verbal action is to be done with repeated reflection. (MN 61)

When you have done an action with speech, reflect upon that same verbal action thus: “Has this action I have done with speech led to both my own affliction and the affliction of another?” If, upon reflection, you know that it has, then tell someone you trust about it and undertake a commitment not to do it again. If you know it has not, then be content and feel happy about it. (MN 61)
Reflection
We can use our powers of memory and observation to learn and grow along the path toward greater clarity and self-understanding. We want to do good deeds so that good things will come from that, and one way to do this is to reflect on the impact of our speech on others. If we notice ourselves saying things that cause affliction in ourselves or others, it is beneficial to admit this and learn from it what not to say in the future.
Daily Practice
As with your physical actions, pay attention to the effects of your verbal actions on other people. Just after you have spoken, notice if what you have said might have hurt someone’s feelings or if it has been insensitive or disrespectful in some unintended way. These days more than ever, we cannot always trust our deeply conditioned habit patterns of speech and need to actively reflect on the effects of our verbal actions.
Tomorrow: Abstaining from Taking What is Not Given
One week from today: Reflecting upon Mental Action

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Via Daily Dharma: You Are a Buddha

 

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You Are a Buddha

Just get rid of ignorance and delusions, and you will know that you are a Buddha and that you are already complete as you are. If you awaken to this, you will burst out laughing at how much effort you spent in order for you to become yourself.

Daehaeng, “The Path to Awakening”


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His Holiness, in Pictures
Photos by Manuel Bauer, Captions by Christian Schmidt
In his forthcoming book, Swiss photographer Manuel Bauer shows us an intimate and rarely seen side of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama.
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Wednesday, July 16, 2025

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ViaRam Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation \\ Words of Wisdom - July 16, 2025 💠

 


We see people through the veil of the fear-driven paranoia that comes from getting trapped in one’s separateness; and when we break out of that, we experience compassion that is not pity and not kindness; but compassion borne of identifying with the people around you.
 
- Ram Dass

Via Daily Dharma: What Is Happiness

 

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What Is Happiness

The search for happiness is not about looking at life through rose-colored glasses or blinding oneself to the pain and imperfections of the world. Nor is happiness a state of exaltation to be perpetuated at all costs; it is the purging of mental toxins such as hatred and obsession that literally poison the mind.

Matthieu Ricard, “A Way of Being”


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A Few Words About Silence
By Larry Rosenberg
In an excerpt from his forthcoming book, IMS teacher Larry Rosenberg expounds on how to bring more stillness into our everyday lives.
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Forever a Student
Sarah Ruhl in conversation with James Shaheen
In this episode of Tricycle TalksTricycle’s editor-in-chief, James Shaheen sits down with playwright Sarah Ruhl to discuss the teachers and tasks that have helped her learn how to listen, what it means to look at grief sideways, whether devotion is teachable, and why she aspires to always be a student.
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Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Speech: Refraining from Malicious Speech

 

RIGHT SPEECH
Refraining from Malicious Speech
Malicious speech is unhealthy. Refraining from malicious speech is healthy. (MN 9) Abandoning malicious speech, one refrains from malicious speech. One does not repeat there what one has heard here to the detriment of these, or repeat here what one has heard there to the detriment of those. One unites those who are divided, is a promoter of friendships, and speaks words that promote concord. (DN 1) One practices thus: “Others may speak maliciously, but I shall abstain from malicious speech.” (MN 8)

Disputes occur when a person is deceitful and fraudulent. Such a person dwells disrespectful and undeferential towards others, causing harm and unhappiness for many. If you see any such root of a dispute either in yourself or externally, you should strive to abandon it. And if you do not see any such root of dispute either in yourself or externally, you should practice in such a way that it does not erupt in the future. (MN 104)
Reflection
Arguments and disputes do not come from external circumstances, but from the internal qualities of people’s minds. When there is a competing interest, for example, it might be negotiated peacefully and fairly, or it might escalate into a hateful argument and even become violent. The difference lies in what kind of internal mental and emotional states are brought to the table by both participants. We can influence how this unfolds. 
Daily Practice
Take special care to refrain from being deceitful or fraudulent in all of your dealings with other people. And when other people are exhibiting these qualities, try hard not to be provoked into doing the same. These practices in daily life require a regular habit of being tuned in to the workings of your own mind and being sensitive to the extent your own experience is impacted by the mental and emotional qualities of others.
Tomorrow: Reflecting upon Verbal Action
One week from today: Refraining from Harsh Speech

Share your thoughts and join the conversation on social media
#DhammaWheel

Questions?
 Visit the Dhamma Wheel orientation page.
Tricycle is a nonprofit and relies on your support to keep its wheels turning.
© 2025 Tricycle Foundation
89 5th Ave, New York, NY 10003

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Via PBS News -- Brazil’s Bolsonaro describes coup plot trial as a ‘witch hunt’ as prosecutors call for guilty verdict


 

Dra Yang Project - Plegaria a Amitaba (HD)

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Via Tricycle \\ From the Academy : Sutras

 

JULY 2025
From the Academy
Welcome to From the Academy, a monthly newsletter for Premium subscribers offering a scholarly take on topics in Buddhist thought and practice. Each issue highlights a key theme and offers additional resources for in-depth exploration. This month, we look at how sutras serve as both sacred speech and sites of tension.
Sutras
A Sanskrit manuscript of the Lotus Sutra in South Turkestan Brahmi script.
What Is a Sutra?

In South Asian religious traditions, a sutra is a concise formulation of philosophical or moral teachings. In Buddhism, the term sutra (Skt.: sūtra; Pali: sutta, lit. “thread”) specifically refers to discourses that present the direct utterances of Shakyamuni or other buddhas, bodhisattvas, or enlightened disciples. While all sutras are scriptures, not all scriptures are sutras. Their authority depends less on historical authorship than on being recognized as aligning with the Buddhist understanding of reality and as buddhavacana, the “word of the Buddha,” a category that often depends on how a given community defines authentic Buddhist practice.

Authenticity and Ambiguity

Sutras challenge modern notions of authorship. The earliest texts were orally transmitted for centuries before being written down around the 1st century CE, as the story goes. Although there is considerable uncertainty about the language the Buddha spoke, all existing early sutras are, to some extent, translations. Mahayana sutras emerged soon after, often through visions or rediscovery, and yet many communities still accepted them as buddhavacana. Disputes over which texts qualified helped shape canons and define sectarian boundaries.

Language itself has long been treated with ambivalence in Buddhist thought. The Harvard professor Ryuichi Abé observes that Buddhist traditions rely on sacred words even as they question whether words can truly express truth. Language conveys the dharma but can also distort it. The Buddha initially hesitated to teach, fearing misunderstanding, but he chose speech over silence. Nagarjuna’s doctrine of two truths captures this tension: Conventional language must point beyond itself. Sutras are built on this paradox—revered as expressions of ultimate truth, and yet aware of language’s limits. This led many teachers, especially those in Chan lineages, to rhetorically reject scriptural reliance while drawing from the sutras on their path to realization.


Too Many Scriptures

The sheer number and diversity of sutras and other scriptures steered many traditions to narrow their focus. Chinese schools, such as Tiantai and Huayan, developed doctrinal systems around just one or two key texts. Pure Land traditions centered on a few Sukhāvatī sutras. Nichiren Buddhism went further, asserting that chanting the Lotus Sutra’s title was itself sufficient for liberation. These developments reflected the recognition that no individual or school could fully encompass the immensity of the teachings in the Buddhist canons. Some modern movements have even created new scriptures in vernacular languages, setting aside classical sutras as inaccessible or less relevant to modern concerns.
A contemporary scripture recitation machine that chants mantras, dharinis, names of buddhas, sutras, and several core Mahayana texts.
Beyond Reading

Sutras have long been more than texts for study: They’ve been chanted, memorized, copied, enshrined, and even consumed. Copying by hand or possessing a sutra was—and still is—believed to generate merit or offer protection. In the Dunhuang cave library, numerous copies of Pure Land sutras attest to their ritual use. Sutras have been worn as amulets, put inside statues, carried on pilgrimages, installed in temples, inscribed in prayer wheels, and now played on chanting devices. In these performative contexts, a sutra’s presence outweighs its meaning.

Why Sutras Still Matter

In today’s media-saturated world of dharma talks and curated teachings, sutras are often encountered secondhand, if at all. But for much of Buddhist history, they were a significant source of inspiration and inquiry. As author Karen Armstrong reminds us, scripture is not literal history or systematic philosophy but sacred art—a performative and interpretive medium meant to transform. Rather than passive consumption, traditional models emphasized recitation, listening, reflection, and meditation. But the easiest way to understand what a sutra is? Read one.
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