Saturday, October 10, 2020

Via LionsRoar: You Have the Buddha in You: An Interview with Thich Nhat Hanh


In this exclusive interview, Thich Nhat Hanh reveals details about his family, sheds light on a little-known Buddhist master, and explains how—if you have mindful ears and mindful eyes—the Buddha is always teaching.

thich nhat hanh

Photo by Duc.

Throughout my retreat at Blue Cliff Monastery, I was curious about the quaint little brown house, which the monastics referred to as Thay’s hut. Finally, on the last day, I was invited inside and saw a cozy room brightened with fresh orchids, an image of the Buddha touching the earth, and a candlestick filled with white tapers and decorated with birds.

Thay was seated at a rustic table, low to the ground, and I was ushered to a cushion beside him. During our interview, he revealed personal details about his family, uncovered the remarkable history of a little-known Buddhist master, and explained how—if you have mindful ears and mindful eyes—the Buddha is always teaching. Partway through our conversation, Jo Confino of the British newspaper The Guardian joined us, and the conversation turned to how meditation practice can benefit business leaders, organizations, and society.

As you read the interview, please keep in mind that there is one thing that didn’t make it onto the page, and that is Thich Nhat Hanh’s frequent, joyful smile.

What is the role of a teacher in spiritual practice?

A friend can be a teacher, a fellow practitioner can be a teacher, and you yourself can be a teacher. A teacher is anyone who helps you practice and find more freedom—even freedom from your teacher.

You have to be intelligent and not be dependent on your teacher. If you follow him or her with blind faith, it’s not good. There is no perfect teacher. You can learn the good things from him or her, and you can also help your teacher to be better. Very soon there will be a teacher within you, and you can follow that teacher.

So a good teacher is someone who helps you not depend on him or her all your life. That is why the Buddha said before he died, “Go back to yourself. Take refuge in the island within you.”

You are not lost when your teacher is no longer in human form, because your teacher is always alive in you and in his disciples. When I practice calligraphy, sometimes I invite my late teacher to join me, so as teacher and disciple we do it together. Breathing in, half the circle. Breathing out, the other half. When I smile, my teacher smiles.

I invite all teachers of the past to do a circle with me, and I know that my hand is not my hand. My hand is also my father’s hand and my mother’s hand. Sometimes I invite all my friends to do it with me, because they are me also.

Will you tell me a little about your father?

My father was an officer in the royal army. At that time in Vietnam, the king and his government were controlled by the French, so my father’s main job was to go and search for areas where poor people could resettle. He liked to do that. From time to time, I would go with my mother and visit him, far away in the mountains.

My father bought a bell and some sutras and tried to recite them. He wanted to practice Buddhism, but he was very busy and did not succeed. I feel good because I do it for him.

I can do this because we all are the continuation of our fathers, our mothers, our ancestors. This is true. When you do walking meditation, they walk with you. If you take peaceful, happy steps, they also do. You do not have a separate self, so you can practice for all your ancestors. If you encounter the dharma and experience transformation and healing, all of your ancestors profit from your practice. So my father and mother in me are very happy.

This week, you mentioned that your mother had a miscarriage before she had you. You said that as a child you thought the baby she lost was you, and that she miscarried because you weren’t ready to be born yet. I was wondering what your opinion of that lost baby is now. Does a baby who dies before it’s born continue in any way?

The baby has no separate self. The self of the baby is made of the mother, the father, and other elements. So these elements will come together again, and the next baby is neitviether exactly the same nor a different one.

If you suffer from losing a baby, it’s because you are caught in the notion of self. It’s the insight of no-self that can liberate us from grief. You have no-self and that tiny baby has no-self. It’s like when you try to build a sandcastle. If conditions are not good, the sandcastle will collapse. You can build the castle again, but you cannot say this is another castle, because it’s made from the same materials. Nothing is lost.

Can you tell me a little about Zen in Vietnam? Does it have a particular flavor or character that distinguishes it from the Zen practiced in other countries?

There was a Buddhist teacher in the first half of the third century who was born in Vietnam and became a teacher of meditation. His name was Tang Hoi. He was a historical person, not like Bodhidharma, who is traditionally credited with bringing Zen to China in the sixth century. A lot of things have been imagined or invented about Bodhidharma’s life, but Tang Hoi left behind his writings, which are still preserved.

Our Zen is a continuation of what Tang Hoi taught. In Vietnam, there is a tendency to always go back to the original scriptures. When Master Tang Hoi taught meditation, he mostly used the sutras of original Buddhism but taught them with the spirit of Mahayana Buddhism. So in Vietnam, we profit from this. We never fly too high and lose the roots.

Meditation practice in Vietnam is also very engaged in society. We have had kings who practiced meditation and invited teachers to come to their palace. They always had a meditation hall in the palace and made good use of the teachings and practice in their political life. One king in the thirteenth century abdicated in favor of his son and became a Buddhist monk. He took care of the spiritual aspect of the nation and his son took care of the political aspect. He travelled to the Hindu kingdom of Champa in central Vietnam and made peace. He walked the country barefoot and taught people how to practice the five precepts and abandon superstitious practice.

So in Vietnamese Buddhism, politics and spirituality support each other. Spirituality is not cut off from the world. Meditation is not a place where you hide yourself.

Why is it important for Buddhism to evolve?

Society has changed. Young people have a lot of suffering, a lot of doubt. If you want them to ponder the sound of one hand clapping or ask them if a dog has buddhanature, they cannot stand it. If you continue to teach like that, you lose people. Buddhism has become marginal in Korea and Japan because that is what they are doing.

Throughout the history of Buddhism, teachers tried to offer the teachings in such a way as to respond to the needs of their time. If they invented silent illumination, if they invented koans, it was because at that time those things worked. But when these things do not work anymore, why cling to them?

Our practice has to respond to the suffering of modern people. That’s why teachings on communication and reconciliation are important. These teachings are easier for people to understand, even children. But that does not mean these teachings do not have a strong Buddhist base. Their foundation is in no-self, impermanence, interbeing.

We have to be intelligent followers of the Buddha. We have to make good use of the teachings. We have to present the teachings and the practice in such a way that people can make use of them and transform themselves.

As I said, Vietnamese Buddhism is very close to original Buddhism, but we make good use of the spirit of Mahayana. There are a lot of wonderful things in Mahayana Buddhism. For instance, in original Buddhism the Buddha’s body is the nirmanakaya, his human form. But in Mahayana, the Buddha’s real body is the dharmakaya, the body of ultimate truth, and that body never dies.

So if you know how to listen mindfully, the Buddha never stops teaching. The Earth is a beautiful expression of his teachings. The wind, flowers, and trees continue to teach impermanence and no-self. That is the body of the Buddha—the body of truth that never dies. So if you have mindful eyes and ears, you continue to see the Buddha. This corresponds to the notion that the kingdom of God is available in the here and the now. We could even help Christians change the notion of the kingdom of God. God can be the dharmakaya, the true body of the Buddha.

Some people say that once someone reaches enlightenment, they no longer produce karma. What do you think of that?

Karma is action. When you produce a thought, that’s karma, either good or bad. When you say something, that’s karma. When you do something, that’s karma.

When you are enlightened, your karma can only be good karma. You have no discrimination, no anger, and no fear, so what you think, what you say, and what you do can only bring good results. The end of samsara means the end of negative things. Why would we wish good things to stop? We want good things to continue. Our practice is to have the good things continue for a long time. That’s good karma.

If you look at the Buddha, you see he is still operating. He’s teaching, he’s doing, because his disciples are his continuation. So the Buddha is still producing karma—good karma! So you cannot say that the Buddha, because he is enlightened, has stopped producing karma. That’s not true.

In Buddhism, the Buddha, the community of practitioners, and the teachings are known as the three jewels. How do we relate to them?

The three jewels are inside of you. You have the Buddha in you. It is your capacity to wake up, to understand, to love. If someone has plenty of these things, he or she is a Buddha, and we want to have as many buddhas as possible.

You have the dharma in you. There must be a method to produce compassion, understanding, and freedom, and that is the dharma. The dharma in you may be weak or strong, according to your practice.

Then, in order to produce the powerful energy of enlightenment, compassion, understanding, you need a sangha, a community. You build a sangha and together you help each other nourish the Buddha and the dharma in you.

The three jewels are very concrete. They are not objects of belief. You cannot deny the existence of the three jewels. They are not something outside of you. They are inside of you. The Buddha is not on a cloud. The Buddha is awakening, understanding, and compassion, and you have buddhanature. Practice helps buddhanature grow and that protects you. That is your refuge. It’s very scientific.

There is a Buddhism of devotion, in which people think of the three jewels as outside of themselves, as being above them or beyond them. That belief helps them. But there is a deep Buddhism—a Buddhism of practice—where you can generate the energy of the Buddha for yourself and for your community. There is a tendency to lose deep Buddhism for devotion Buddhism, so we should try to help the Buddhism of practice last. Otherwise, Buddhism becomes a religion like other religions, which are about relying on a superior power to save us.

As part of your North American tour, you’re going to meet with the CEOs of some leading technology companies. What do you think of business leaders and employees learning meditation?

We don’t have to worry whether meditation is being misused to make money. Meditation can only do good. It doesn’t just help you calm your own suffering. It also gives you more insight into yourself and the world. If your business is causing environmental problems and you practice meditation, you may have ideas about how to conduct your business in such a way that you will harm nature less. When you experience the wisdom brought about by meditation, then naturally you want to conduct your business in a way that will make the world suffer less.

So don’t worry about whether meditation is serving a wrong cause. It can change a wrong cause to a good cause.

How do you view competition in business, politics, and our personal lives?

Many of us believe that you can only be happy when you leave other people behind, when you are number one. But you don’t need to be number one to be happy. [Laughs] I don’t want to be number one.

We have to reconsider our idea of happiness. Even if you are successful in making more money, you still suffer. Maybe your competitor doesn’t make as much money as you do, but they are happier. So do you choose to be happy or to have the other kind of success?

To be happy is the real success. When you are happy, you don’t need to compete anymore. You compete because you are not happy. The practice of meditation can help you suffer less and be happy.

In our society, it feels like everything’s speeding up and people are feeling overwhelmed.

The problem is that people believe that happiness is in the future. But if you stop speeding and running, you can find happiness right in the here and the now. There is no true happiness without peace. If you continue to run, how can you have peace? We are running away from ourselves, our families, and nature. That is our society today. We are afraid of going home and taking care of ourselves. We do not have the time to take care of our beloved ones. And we do not allow Mother Earth to heal us.

We lose ourselves in our little devices. But companies could use their intelligence and goodwill to create instruments that help us go home to ourselves and heal ourselves. Suppose I could wear something that would detect when there’s too much adrenaline in my blood. It would produce the sound of a bell, which would help me stop and breathe in and out. That would help me. It would remind me: You have a strong emotion. Stop doing what you are doing, embrace your emotion, and find out where it has come from. That kind of electronic device would help me go home to myself rather than lose myself. So we don’t have to reject or throw away all devices. Rather, we can make good use of them.

I myself have a “Now watch.” When I look for the hour, it always says “Now.” I can put this watch to my ear and breathe in and out, according to the sound. Usually I take four seconds for an in-breath and six seconds for an out-breath. I stop thinking and just enjoy my breathing. So I make good use of a very simple device. But they can also make more sophisticated things to help me practice.

How do we find a positive purpose for our lives?

Everyone wishes to do good, because all of us have buddhanature. When you have found a way to do good, you are at peace with yourself and happiness becomes possible. But you have to use your own intelligence to find a way. The good way, the right way, is the opposite of the bad way. The bad way has been bringing you suffering. Instead of wrong view, you want right view. Instead of wrong thinking, you want right thinking—thinking with compassion and understanding.

When you look at the path that is not noble, you can see the other path. So looking into suffering, you see the way of happiness. That’s the teaching of the four noble truths. You don’t need to be a Buddhist to understand them. You just need to take the time to look into your own suffering and happiness.

What is the key to happiness?

A student may think that he cannot be satisfied until he gets his diploma. But when he gets the diploma, he is only happy for a few days before he says, “I need to get a job and a house.” So, nothing can satisfy a person if he is always running.

Stopping and learning to be happy in the present moment is the key. We call this aimlessness. It is enlightenment. So a student can be very happy even if he has not got his diploma. There are always conditions for happiness in the present, but maybe you don’t know how to enjoy them. You don’t recognize them and you look for happiness in the future.

Buddhism is the teaching of waking up. Our society needs a collective awakening in order to save ourselves from our crises. So the practice is that awakening should take place in every step, everywhere. If you have awakening, you know that you have a path of happiness. You stop suffering, and you can help many other people do the same.

Thich Nhat Hanh Collector's Edition Ad

Via LionsRoar: Smokey the Bear Sutra

 

Smokey the Bear Sutra
By Gary Snyder
In this 1969 sutra, the celebrated American poet contemplates our sacred responsibility to protect all of life on Earth.
Read more »

Via Daily Dharma: Live with Genuine Intention

 The wisdom and insight cultivated from meditation allow us to see things as they are and act in the most skillful way. All situations, no matter how similar, are fluid and require their own genuine responses.

—Brent R. Oliver, “I Take Refuge in the Humor”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Friday, October 9, 2020

Via Daily Dharma: Receiving Life’s Wisdom

 We [can] realize the nature of our true selves as we really are, with our imperfections and so on, and at the same time we [can] understand that we are the recipients of this immeasurable wisdom and compassion of life that sustains us and embraces us at all times.

—Interview with Reverend Patricia Kanaya Usuki by Jeff Wilson, “The Great Compassion”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Thursday, October 8, 2020

Via Tricycle // Buddhist teacher Larry Ward’s new book invites us to heal from the karma of racism

 

America’s Racial Karma


America’s Racial Karma
Photo by Jovelle Tamayo

The existence—and persistence—of racism can be baffling. Our society sees the suffering of historically disadvantaged people and treats them with scorn rather than compassion. Buddhism would explain that our current situation is the result of karma. But what does that mean? Contrary to popular depictions, the Buddhist notion of karma is not a tit-for-tat system of crime and punishment where people suffer for their past sins. Karma is a theory of action and consequence that describes how good deeds generate good results and more good deeds in a positive feedback loop, while bad deeds do the opposite. Through the lens of Buddhist karma, we may be able to understand how racism and the pain it causes are perpetuated.

Make the jump here to read the full article and more

Via Daily Dharma: Create Space for All Things

When we take the one seat on our meditation cushion we become our own monastery. We create the compassionate space that allows for the arising of all things: sorrows, loneliness, shame, desire, regret, frustration, happiness.

—Jack Kornfield, “Take the One Seat”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

#ProudBoys Santos Sérgio e Baco

 

 
Hoje, 7 de outubro, a Igreja celebra a festa dos Santos Sérgio e Baco.
 
Embora esse fato seja evitado pelos católicos conservadores, há teses e indícios históricos de que os dois eram gays e formavam um casal. Viveram no século IV e eram oficiais do Exército Romano. Sendo descobertos como cristãos homossexuais, foram martirizados juntos, 
no ano de 310, na Síria.
Que os Santos Sérgio e Baco, vítimas da homofobia, roguem por nós!
 
Today, October 7, the Church celebrates the feast of Saints Sérgio and Bacchus.
 
Although this fact is avoided by conservative Catholics, there are theses and historical indications that the two were gay and formed a couple. They lived in the 4th century and were officers of the Roman Army. Being discovered as homosexual Christians, they were martyred together,
in the year 310, in Syria.
 
May the Saints Sérgio and Bacchus, victims of homophobia, pray for us!


Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Via Plum Village UK // FB


 


“Each thought, each action in the sunlight of awareness becomes sacred. In this light, no boundary exists between the sacred and the profane.” ~Thich Nhat Hanh

 


Via Daily Dharma: Self Acceptance Comes First

 Only after the ground of self-compassion has been established can the wisdom born of self-analysis and critical discernment deepen our process of healing.

—Miles Neale, “How to Heal After Your Teacher Crosses the Line”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation // Words of Wisdom - October 7, 2020 💌

 

What is happening in this country at this moment is that a lot of people are having an intuitive sense of something else happening. In a way, the world views that are represented by the extreme nationalism of this country are being de-juiced very slowly by the intuitive hearts of the people. That's not just true in this country, it's true in the world. And television has helped it and travel has helped it and mobility, all these things have helped.

It's as if there is a kind of consciousness growing that is ahead of the structures and myths that we are still living out. And we are part of an edge of that process, just by the nature of why we would gather here for this reason. How you manifest in your jobs, in your marriages, in your suffering, in your politics, in your marketplace, in your voting... all of that is part of the way the
individual human hearts start to transform the process. 

- Ram Dass -

Via FB

 

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

Via Tricycle

 Liberating Impermanence
By Kurt Spellmeyer

The Buddha taught that all things are impermanent—including the dharma itself. A Zen priest asks: How can we evolve the teachings while honoring their timeless wisdom? 
Read more »

Via Daily Dharma: Focus on Joy

 Even though it may seem counterintuitive, when you’re suffering, if you can focus on another person’s joy, you can share it, and that makes you feel better.

—Rick Heller, “Sympathetic Joy”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Monday, October 5, 2020

#ProudBoys

 


Proud Boys: Far-right group becomes LGBT trend online

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-54380656  

 

Twitter users take over Proud Boys hashtag with photos of LGBTQ love

 https://www.cbsnews.com/news/proud-boys-twitter-hashtag-photos-lgbtq-love/

 

LGBT Twitter users tease far-right group by taking over Proud Boys hashtag 

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/oct/05/proud-boys-hashtag-lgbt-twitter-users

 

The Proud Boys were emboldened by Trump’s words. Then, LGBTQ couples reclaimed the group’s hashtag.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2020/10/05/proudboys-twitter-lgbtq-takei/

 

The Proud Boys hashtag has been brilliantly hijacked by the gay community

https://www.dazeddigital.com/life-culture/article/50657/1/the-proud-boys-hashtag-has-been-hijacked-by-the-gay-community

 

Proud Boys hashtag gets hijacked by LGBT+ community to drown out the racism with queer love

https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2020/10/04/proud-boys-hashtag-hijacked-lgbt-community-donald-trump-hate-group-queer-love/

 

Gay men have taken over the Proud Boys Twitter hashtag

https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/04/us/proud-boys-twitter-hashtag-gay-men-trnd/index.html

 

Proud Boys hashtag reclaimed by gay couples celebrating their relationships

https://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/519553-proud-boys-hashtag-reclaimed-by-gay-couples-celebrating-their

 

Gay men take over Proud Boys hashtag on Twitter 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/other/gay-men-take-over-proud-boys-hashtag-on-twitter/ar-BB19GQoj


Via Daily Dharma: Transforming Others

 Ordinary people just want life to be smooth, without problems. But Buddhist practitioners have a different attitude. They are ready to endure many difficulties if they are in the service of transforming others.

—Master Sheng-Yen, “The Wanderer”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Thich Nhat Hanh

 



Via FB

 


Sunday, October 4, 2020

Via On the Media - WYNC : God Bless


( Diana Vargas / Unsplash )

President Trump has once more tried to cast himself as an ally of the Christian right — this time, by nominating Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court. This week, On the Media explains how the religious right goes beyond white evangelicals and the persistent allure of persecution narratives in Christianity. Plus, we examine the overlooked religious left. And, we explore how the image of Jesus as a white man was popularized in the 20th century, and why it matters. 

1. Andrew Whitehead [@ndrewwhitehead], professor of sociology at Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis, explains how Christian nationalism holds the religious right together. Listen.

2. Candida Moss [@candidamoss], professor of theology and religion at the University of Birmingham in the U.K., on how false claims of persecution date back centuries, to the early Christian church. Listen.

3. Jack Jenkins [@jackmjenkins], national reporter at Religion News Service, explains why the religious left is harder to define, and its influence more difficult to measure, than its right-wing counterpart. Listen.

4. OTM reporter Eloise Blondiau [@eloiseblondiau] examines how "White Jesus" came to America, how the image became ubiquitous, and why it matters. Listen.

 

Music from this week's show:

Ave Maria — Pascal Jean and Jean Brenders
Amazing Grace — Robert D. Sands, Jr.
I Got a Right to Sing the Blues — Billy Kyle
What’s That Sound? — Michael Andrews
Wade in the Water — Charlie Haden and Hank Jones
For the Creator — Hildegard von Bingen
Walking by Flashlight — Maria Schneider (The Thompson Fields)


Make the Jump Here to listen to the full podcast and more

47 Famous Gay Couples You May Or May Not Know Are Together In 2020

The Kingdom of Shambhala (Joanna Macy)

Joanna Macy - The Shambhala Warrior Prophecy | Deep Ecology

Joanna Macy: A Wiser, Braver World — Awakened Action, Upaya Zen Center

Via One Earth Sangha // A Great Unveiling

 

The Buddha Akshobhya

 make the jump here to read the article

Via Daily Dharma: Make Meaning from Chores

 If I view [everyday chores] as tasks to rush through on the way to something more important, they become a crushing waste of time. But from the perspective of Buddhist teachings, each of these activities is a golden moment, an opportunity for full awakening.

—Anne Cushman, “Clearing Clutter”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

TOTALLY UNDER CONTROL - Official Trailer

Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation // Words of Wisdom - October 4, 2020 💌

 

One day in India, on my second stay, Maharaji said to me, "You don't have to change anybody; you just have to love them." In relationships, when the other person doesn't fit into your model of how heaven would be, you don't have to play God. You just have to love individual differences and appreciate them the way they are because love is the most powerful medicine. 

- Ram Dass -

Saturday, October 3, 2020

Via One Arth Sangha // Entering the Bardo


 Joanna Macy has previously spoken about “four R’s” of the Deep Adaptation movement: the four core values of resilience, relinquishment, restoration, and reconciliation that can help us find the seeds of new beginnings in the breakdown of industrial growth society. In this article, she continues to document the Great Unraveling, likening it to entering the bardo—the frightening transitional state of consciousness between death and re-birth so vividly portrayed in Tibetan Buddhism. The worsening wildfires, hurricanes, COVID outbreaks, and police violence certainly evoke the intensity and uncertainty of the bardo. But as always, she faces, and encourages us to face, our “cruel social and ecological realities” with courage and an unflinching gaze, while continuing to work towards the Great Turning to a life-sustaining civilization.

Joanna further explored these themes in a talk during Upaya Zen Center’s daylong program in June. Thanks to Upaya’s generosity, we share a video of this talk at the end of this article.

 

We are in a space without a map. With the likelihood of economic collapse and climate catastrophe looming, it feels like we are on shifting ground, where old habits and old scenarios no longer apply. In Tibetan Buddhism, such a space or gap between known worlds is called a bardo. It is frightening. It is also a place of potential transformation.

As you enter the bardo, there facing you is the Buddha Akshobhya. His element is Water. He is holding a mirror, for his gift is Mirror Wisdom, reflecting everything just as it is. And the teaching of Akshobhya’s mirror is this: Do not look away. Do not avert your gaze. Do not turn aside. This teaching clearly calls for radical attention and total acceptance.

 This article was originally published by Emergence Magazine and is republished here with permission.

 Make the Jump Here to read the full article

 

 

Via Daily Dharma: Creating Enlightenment

 “Enlightenment” isn’t a permanent state but the dynamic back-and-forth that we create with our intrinsic wisdom.

—Kurt Spellmeyer, “Liberating Impermanence”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Friday, October 2, 2020

Via Daily Dharma: Use Compassion to Protect Yourself

 Use compassion, not anger, to motivate you to protect yourself, and [have] compassion toward the person who’s giving you the trouble. Compassion rather than hate is what helps.

— Gelek Rinpoche, “What to Do When the Anger Gets Hot”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Thursday, October 1, 2020

Via Lama Rod

 


October
Preparing Ourselves

Hello Everyone.

The world is unsteady and chaotic.

We are moving into an election that may very well determine the wellbeing of our lives and the lives of future generations. Many of us are being confronted with the reality of death and change in a way we thought we never would.

In the face of all this, resiliency is such an important skill to develop right now. Resiliency requires preparation. Resiliency is about how well we are able to meet the challenges of our lives with a sense of openness and curiosity that helps us to regain our balance.

Balance means understanding how to return back to a sense of being grounded in order to meet challenges directly.

Recently it was the Equinox. 

Symbolically, a time which calls for our relationship with the the earth to be deepened, as we are invited to descend into the deeper healing properties held by the earth. It’s a time to nurture our systems, privileging the comfort of our bodies, as night becomes longer and temperatures drop here in the Northern lands.

Community is like a body, it feels, it responds. 

It lives and grows.
Which is why it requires care.


I have included a selection of dates coming up this month...it's a full month for me, so for a full picture of practice dates and events, head over to my website, so we can practice together and take care of ourselves as we prepare and cultivate our collective resiliency.

Peace,
Lama Rod

Lamarodowens@gmail.com

+

October

Oct 5th
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Oct 9th - Oct 11th
Click HERE to register


Nov 1st
Click HERE to register

Love, Fear, and Resiliency as the World Falls Apart w/ Lama Rod Owens

#condemnwhitesupremacychallenge

Hello! My name is Daniel Clark Orey and I condemn white supremacy.

I condemn ANYONE who thinks that just because they are white, makes them better than any other race.
 
I do not believe in a master race, nor do I believe that black and brown people are less important than I am.
 
I also believe all people should be treated with equality and fairness. 
 
I WILL NOT CONDONE or STAY SILENT when I see a person wronged, simply because they are of another race. I vow not to use my vote to help, condone, or normalize white supremacy.
 

Via Adyashanti

 “In my experience it matters not whether we are gathered in person, or remotely through the medium of technology, for our collective presence acts as a catalyst for insight that transcends time, space, and location.”  

- Adyashanti -

Via Daily Dharma: Practicing Empathy

 All things, we learn, are ourselves. Thus, practice necessarily leads to empathy.

—Charles Johnson, “A Sangha by Another Name”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Via Daily Dharma: Expanding Your Heart

 Instead of boxing in our hearts, loving only me, me, me—the smallest box—we must try to slowly expand that box till we’re able to love all humanity, all sentient beings.

—Interview with Nawang Khechog by Mark Matousek, “Elevated Music”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Via White Crane Institute // ARI SHAPIRO

 


Journalist Ari Shapiro
1978 -

ARI SHAPIRO is an American radio journalist who was born on this date. In September 2015, Shapiro became one of four rotating hosts on National Public Radio's flagship drive-time program All Things Considered. He previously served as White House correspondent and international correspondent based in London for NPR.

Shapiro began his NPR career as an intern to legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg in January 2001. Following that assignment, he worked as an editorial assistant and an assistant editor on Morning Edition. After working as a regional reporter for NPR in Atlanta and Miami and five years as NPR's Justice Correspondent, Shapiro began covering the White House in 2010. In 2014, he became NPR's correspondent in London. In July 2015 NPR announced that Shapiro and Kelly McEvers would join Audie Cornish and Robert Siegel as hosts of NPR's All Things Considered program

Shapiro's work has been recognized with journalism awards, including the American Bar Association's Silver Gavel Award, the Daniel Shorr Journalism Prize, a laurel from the Columbia Journalism Review, and the American Judges Association's American Gavel Award. Shapiro was the first NPR reporter to be promoted to correspondent before age 30. 

In February 2004, Shapiro and longtime boyfriend Michael Gottlieb were married at San Francisco City Hall. Gottlieb is a lawyer who worked at the White House counsel’s office from 2013-2015.

Since 2009, Shapiro has been a regular guest singer with the band Pink Martini. He appears on four of the band’s albums, singing in several languages. He made his live debut with the band at the Hollywood Bowl. He has performed live with them frequently since then, including at such venues as Carnegie Hall and the Beacon Theater in New York City, the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, the Olympia in Paris, Kew Gardens in London, and the Lycabettus Theatre in Athens.

In May 2010, the pop-culture magazine Paper included Shapiro in an annual list of "Beautiful People," saying he "must have a clone. No one man could have so many talents and be in so many places at once."

In December 2010, MSNBC's entertainment website BLTWY placed Shapiro 26th on its "power list" of "35 people under 35 who changed DC in 2010," calling him "one of NPR's fastest rising stars."

In 2016 and 2008, LGBT-themed magazine Out included Shapiro in the "Out 100", a list of "the year’s most interesting, influential, and newsworthy LGBT people." Shapiro was also included on a list of openly gay media professionals in The Advocate's "Forty under 40" issue of June/July 2009.

In February 2004, Shapiro and longtime boyfriend Michael Gottlieb were married at San Francisco City Hall. Gottlieb is a lawyer who worked at the White House counsel's office from 2013 to 2015.

Via White Crane Institute // This Day in Gay History: RUMI

 This Day in Gay History

September 30

Born
Jalal Al-Din Muhammad Rumi
1207 -

JALAL AL-DIN MUHAMMAD RUMI, Persian mystic and poet born (d. 1273) also known as Mawlānā Jalāl-ad-Dīn Muhammad Balkhī, but most famously known to the English-speaking world simply as RUMI.

Rumi was a 13th century Persian (Tajik) Muslim poet, jurist and theologian. His name literally translates as "Majesty of Religion", Jalal means "majesty" and Din means "religion." Rumi is a descriptive name meaning "the Roman" since he died in Anatolia which was part of the Byzantine Empire two centuries before.

Rumi was born in Balkh (in present-day Afghanistan), then a city of Greater Khorasan in Persia and died in Konya (in present-day Turkey). His birthplace and native language/local dialogue indicates a Persian (Tajik) heritage. His poetry is in Persian and his works are widely read in Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and in translation especially in Turkey, Azerbaijan, the US, and South Asia. He lived most of his life in, and produced his works under, the Sejuk Empire. Rumi's importance is considered to transcend national and ethnic borders. Throughout the centuries he has had a significant influence on Persian as well as Urdu and Turkish literature. His poems have been widely translated into many of the world's languages in various formats. After Rumi's death, his followers founded the Meylevi Order, better known as the "Whirling Dervishes," who believe in performing their worship in the form of dance and music ceremony called the sema.

It was his meeting with the dervish Shams-e Tabrizi on November 15th 1244 that changed his life completely. Shams had traveled throughout the Middle East searching and praying for someone who could "endure my company." A voice came, "What will you give in return?" "My head!" "The one you seek is Jalal al-Din of Konya." On the night of December 5, 1248, as Rumi and Shams were talking, Shams was called to the back door. He went out, never to be seen again. It is believed that he was murdered with the connivance of Rumi's son, 'Ala' ud-Din; if so, Shams indeed gave his head for the privilege of mystical friendship.

Rumi's love and his bereavement for the death of Shams found their expression in an outpouring of music, dance and lyric poems, Divan-e Shams-e Tabrizi. He himself went out searching for Shams and journeyed again to Damascus. There, he realized:

Why should I seek? I am the same as

He. His essence speaks through me.

I have been looking for myself!

For more than ten years after meeting Shams, Mawlana had been spontaneously composing ghazals, and these had been collected in the Divan-i Kabir. Rumi found another companion in Salaḥ ud-Din-e Zarkub, the goldsmith. After Salaḥ ud-Din's death, Rumi's scribe and favorite student Hussam-e Chelebi assumed the role. One day, the two of them were wandering through the Meram vineyards outside of Konya when Hussam described an idea he had to Rumi: "If you were to write a book like the Ilāhīnāma of Sanai or the Mantiq ut-Tayr of 'Attar it would become the companion of many troubadours. They would fill their hearts from your work and compose music to accompany it."

Rumi smiled and took out a piece of paper on which were written the opening eighteen lines of his Masnavi, beginning with:

Listen to the reed and the tale it tells,

How it sings of separation...

Hussam implored Rumi to write more. Rumi spent the next twelve years of his life in Anatolia dictating the six volumes of this masterwork, the Masnavi to Hussam. In December 1273, Rumi fell ill; he predicted his own death and composed the well-known ghazal, which begins with the verse:

How doest thou know what sort of king I have within me as companion?

Do not cast thy glance upon my golden face, for I have iron legs.

He died on December 17, 1273 in Konya; Rumi was laid to rest beside his father, and a splendid shrine, the Yesil Turbe "Green Tomb" (original name:قبه لخزراء), was erected over his tomb. His epitaph reads:

"When we are dead, seek not our tomb in the earth, but find it in the hearts of men."

Via INDY 100 // Homophobic people have a higher chance of being gay, according to science

 

Picture: ISTOCK / SVETIKD

Today marks 50 years since the decriminalisation of homosexuality in England and Wales.

On 27 July 1967 the Sexual Offences Act was changed and legalised sex in private between two men.

Despite this being a huge milestone for the LGBT community we still have an enormous way to go when it comes to true equality. 

Make the jump here to read the full article and more

Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation // Words of Wisdom - September 30, 2020 💌

When the faith is strong enough, it is sufficient just to be. It’s a journey towards simplicity, towards quietness, towards a kind of joy that is not in time. It’s a journey that has taken us from primary identification with our body and our psyche, on to an identification with God, and ultimately beyond identification.

 - Ram Dass -

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Via Tricycle // Shin Buddhism: A Path of Gratitude

 Shin Buddhism: A Path of Gratitude
By Rev. Dr. Kenji Akahoshi

When we shift our mind from the desire for spiritual progress to an appreciation of the gifts we’ve already received, our practice is transformed. 

Via Daily Dharma: Moving Beyond a Habitual Mind

 Any spiritual path should provide us with an understanding that gradually leads us beyond habitual, reactive mind so that we can engage in our life with intelligence and openness.

—Elizabeth Mattis Namgyel, “Open Stillness”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Tina Turner - Lotus Sutra / Purity of Mind (2H Meditation)

Namaste: Devi Prayer, Hindu, Spiritual music, gentle, calming, peaceful ...

Craig Pruess & Ananda Vdovic - Devi Prayer (40 Min Meditation)

Devi Prayer - Hymn to the Divine Mother

Via Daily Dharma: The Gifts of Being Present

Presence has no measurable product except positive feelings, feelings of support, intimacy, and happiness. When we stop being busy and productive and switch to just being still and aware, we ourselves will also feel support, intimacy, and happiness, even if no one else is around.

—Jan Chozen Bays, “The Gift of Waiting”

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Ram Dass


We are all just walking each other Home

- Ram Dass -