Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Flower of the Day: 08/13/14

“It takes steadiness to accomplish what your heart determines. This can be extremely challenging because, when you truly surrender yourself, the heart begins to purify you. Love works towards having love and only love be expressed through you. Love is enough unto itself. It purifies you until you become a pure channel of love.”
 
Sri Prem Baba

Via Daily Dharma


Faith in Buddhism | August 13, 2014

It is a great turning point in our spiritual lives when we go from an intellectual appreciation of a path to the heartfelt confidence that says, ‘Yes, it is possible to awaken. I can, too.’ A tremendous joy accompanies this confidence. When we place our hearts upon the practice, the teachings come alive. That turning point, which transforms an abstract concept of a spiritual path into our own personal path, is faith.
 
Sharon Salzberg, “How Important is Faith?”
 

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

The Life of Buddha (BBC Documentary) + Eng Sub (HQ)


BBC - THE BUDDHA'S LIFE (dublado em português)


Via JMG: Gallup: Gays Are Less Religious


 
A just released Gallup poll reveals the unshocking fact that LGBT Americans tend to be less religious than the rest of the nation.
Americans who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender are significantly less likely than non-LGBT Americans to be highly religious, and significantly more likely to be classified as not religious. The same percentage of each group is moderately religious. These results are based on more than 104,000 Gallup Daily tracking interviews conducted between Jan. 2 and July 31, 2014, including 3,242 adults who identified themselves as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender. Gallup classifies Americans as "very religious" if they say religion is an important part of their daily lives and that they attend religious services every week or almost every week. That group constituted 41% of all U.S. adults between January and July 2014. "Nonreligious" Americans (30% of U.S. adults) are those who say religion is not an important part of their daily lives and that they seldom or never attend religious services. The remaining group, 29% of Americans, are classified as "moderately religious." These people say religion is important in their lives but that they do not attend services regularly, or that religion is not important but that they still attend services. LGBT and non-LGBT individuals differ on both dimensions that make up the religiosity classification. About a quarter of LGBT individuals attend religious services regularly, contrasted with 42% of non-LGBT individuals.
More graphs and analysis are at the link.


Reposted from Joe Jervis

Via JMG: ISRAEL: "Law Of Return" Citizenship Granted To Non-Jewish Gay Spouses


Via the Times Of Israel:
In a ground-breaking interpretation of the Law of Return, the Interior Ministry decided to permit non-Jewish same-sex marriage partners of Jews living abroad to immigrate to Israel and be granted Israeli citizenship, the ministry announced on Tuesday. According to the Law of Return, any Jew has the right to apply for, and be granted, Israeli citizenship. The right is extended under the law to the applicant’s partner by marriage as well. The right, however, was previously reserved only for heterosexual couples. “The gates of Israel will from now on be open to any Jew and his family, without discrimination based on his way of life,” Interior Minister Gideon Sa’ar said in a statement. In Israel itself, marriage services for Jews are controlled by the state rabbinate, which does not perform same-sex marriages; nor is there any option of civil marriage for Jews.
More from Shalom Life:
[Minister] Sa'ar said that his decision came as a result of the issue being raised in many recent immigration applications to the Interior Ministry. In the statement marking his decision, he wrote that "the point of the Law of Return is an ingathering of the Jewish people from exile, and the purpose of the 1970 amendment was to enable the family of a Jewish person to come to Israel as an equal to him, in order to encourage immigration." He continued. "I do not see any reason to distinguish between Jews who had a heterosexual marriage and Jews who had a same-sex marriage abroad, according to the law. Both meet the requirements of the Law of Return, from the perspective of 'and the sons have returned.'"


Reposted from Joe Jervis

Via JMG: CALIFORNIA: Gay Man Sues After Doctor Lists Him As "Chronically" Homosexual


A Los Angeles gay man has filed a lawsuit after discovering that his medical records list him as having the "chronic problem" of homosexuality.

Matthew Moore, 46, who is openly gay, said he was shocked to see his sexual orientation still described as a chronic condition more than a year after he complained about the use of the archaic medical classification. "It was infuriating. It was painful," he said of his decision to sue. "It was another attempt by this doctor and this medical group to impose their agenda of discrimination and hate onto a gay patient." As reported in September by NBC4, Moore discovered the description in his medical records after undergoing a routine physical in April 2013 by Dr. Elaine Jones of the Torrance Health Association. Moore wrote a letter complaining about the designation to the Torrance Memorial Health Association and received a prompt apology:
"We would like to unequivocally state that the Torrance Memorial Physician Network does not view homosexuality as a disease or a chronic condition, and we do not endorse or approve of the use of Code 302.0 as a diagnosis for homosexuality," Torrance Health Association Senior Director Heidi Assigal wrote to Moore. The association also issued a media statement saying the designation had been used as a result of "human error" and claiming that "upon notification by the patient the record was corrected." Moore said he let the issue go, thinking the problem had been solved. But when he obtained a copy of his medical records in May, he said he was stunned to see that while the 302.0 code had been removed, "homosexual behavior" was still listed under "chronic problems."
Moore is suing both his former physician and Torrence Memorial. Referring to the incidence of suicide among LGBT youth, Moore told the local NBC affiliate, "I don’t want any gay, lesbian, transgender or bisexual ever to hear from a doctor that their normal and healthy sexuality is anything other than that." (Tipped by JMG reader Jerald)


Reposted from Joe Jervis

Via Baisden Live / FB:


Flower of the Day: 08/12/14

“The main sadhana, spiritual practice, is anchoring one’s awareness into the present moment. This is the principal teaching. But if you carry pain in your system, then it’s not as easy to practice this sadhana, because this pain means that you are bound to your past.”

Sri Prem Baba

Via Daily Dharma


The Antidote is Right Here | August 12, 2014

Liberation does not come when you conquer your ego, silence it, or through repression and denial get it to behave 'properly.' Liberation comes when we release our attachment to the habitual conditioned nature and structure of our temporary egos. 
 
- Jun Po Denis Kelly Roshi, “Liberation”
 

Monday, August 11, 2014

Via Daily Dharma


No One Special to Be | August 11, 2014

When we bring awareness to our cherished self-images, such as our need to be special, they begin to lose their power over us. No longer puffing ourselves up or trying to stand out means we’re coming closer to living like a white bird in the snow. That is, we no longer feel the inner compulsion to see ourselves or be seen in a particular way—there is no ulterior agenda. 
 
- Ezra Bayda, “No One Special to Be” 
 

Flower of the Day: 08/11/14

“Just like sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch, self-observation is a sense that we have, but it is stunted. It is necessary to work towards developing this sense by observing everything that passes through the mind without judging, classifying or labeling. You must renew yourself at every instance: make yourself completely present every moment. In this way, your consciousness will slowly expand.”

Sri Prem Baba

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Via Daily Dharma


Sitting with Anger | August 10, 2014

Like a forest fire, anger tends to burn up its own support. If we jump down into the middle of such a fire, we will have little chance of putting it out, but if we create a clearing around the edges, the fire can burn itself out. This is the role of meditation: creating a clearing around the margins of anger.
 
- Mark Epstein, “I’ve Been Meditating for Ten Years, and I’m Still Angry. What’s the Matter with Me?”
 

Flower of the Day: 08/10/14

“I have encouraged you to face life's challenges as opportunities for growth. Regardless of the challenge, there is always something to learn. The more a negative situation repeats itself, the greater is the lesson that it has to offer, and the greater is your inability to deal with what must be learned.”
 
Sri Prem Baba

Via FB; Paulo Coelho


Saturday, August 9, 2014

Via Blue Nation Review / FB:


Via Daily Dharma


Return to Nirvana | August 9, 2014

Nirvana is a reaching-point, a goal. But nirvana is also the home to which we are returning. We use the words 'original state of mind' to denote both our home and our destination.

- Sokei-an, “Return to Your Original State”

Flower of the Day: 08/09/14

“Love can be more deadly than death itself. Pure love is a great threat because it is born from the truth, and the truth represents the end of deceit.”

Sri Prem Baba

Friday, August 8, 2014

Matt Alber - House on Fire - Live


Via Daily Dharma


Challenge How We Cling | August 8, 2014

When Buddhism says, 'It's an illusion, it's empty,' I think back to when Ignatius said, 'Your self—that's your problem. You have to conquer self, kill the self.' It's that tradition, both in Christianity and in Buddhism, in which we are challenged to let go of what is so comfortable and what we cling to as who we are, if we're going to open ourselves to reality and truth.
 
-Jerry Brown, “Politics and Prayer”
 

Flower of the Day: 08/08/14

“A lot of light is arriving on this planet, but our bodies are not yet fully attuned to these new frequencies of light. So it is possible that you may enter situations that are a result of this dissonance, but that still serve to move the energy that is stuck in your system. When this happens, be careful not to frighten yourself because that opens a hole that you can be swallowed by. In this case, you enter a spiritual emergency, which some may call an existential crisis, madness, or panic.”
 
Sri Prem Baba

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Flower of the Day: 08/07/14

“Surrender is only possible if there is trust, and trust is a blossoming. One can remain cowering at the edge of the abyss of love for months, years, or many lives, too afraid to jump. One may be hearing love’s call asking one to jump, but it’s not possible to determine when one will be ready for this to happen.”

Sri Prem Baba

Via Daily Dharma


The Long Road to Sitting Still | August 7, 2014

The Buddha, perhaps, taking the Middle Way and always reminding us that even our destination is unfixed and perhaps illusory, is every walker’s special friend. Those who journey with him know that they may not come to knowledge so much as a deepened sense of their own ignorance.
 
- Pico Iyer, “The Long Road to Sitting Still”
 

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Via Occupy Democrats / FB:


Via Unify / FB:


Via Daily Dharma


The Natural Order of Things | August 6, 2014

While we live, we are able to live. When it's time to die, we are able to die. This is the natural order of things, and to the extent that we align ourselves with this, we experience peace even in the midst of distress.  
 
- Meikyo Robert Rosenbaum, "Breathless"
 

The Secret of our Century - Baha'u'llah


Flower of the Day: 08/06/14

“The main aspect of the spiritual journey is creating union. Every river flows towards the ocean, and the ocean never refuses a river. But, for the river to approach the ocean, it must have the strength to overcome all of the challenges along the journey. This strength is gained through the union of various rivers, because one river alone easily disappears.”
 
Sri Prem Baba

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Via A Revolt - Digital Anarchy / FB:


Via Daily Dharma


Bliss is a By-Product | August 5, 2014

There may be bliss with awakening, because it is actually a by-product of awakening, but it is not awakening itself. As long as we are chasing the byproducts of awakening, we will miss the real thing. 
 
- Adyashanti, "Bliss is a By-Product"
 

Flower of the Day: 08/05/14

“Identifying the negative aspects of the personality is like opening up a window to brighten a dark room. When you open it, the darkness disappears, but you see that the room is dirty. The light comes in to illuminate your perception, but it’s not enough to remove all of the impurities. If the floor is very dirty, then it might have to be cleaned several times. You keep cleaning until it is very clean. The same thing happens with the heart.”
Sri Prem Baba

Monday, August 4, 2014

Flower of the Day - 08/04/14

“Desire and ambition generate unrest. All anxiety and the compulsion to do are symptoms of desire and ambition. One only frees oneself of a symptom by eliminating the cause, which is only eliminated by understanding the cause. Self-investigation generates this comprehension. By investigating the causes, one will discover that one is obsessed with success. But I ask you: what is success for you? Is it reaching a certain level in your life? And once you reach this level, what do you do? You want more. This is the nature of desire.”
Sri Prem Baba

Via Daily Dharma


Self Disappears | August 4, 2014

When we are freed from the reactive patterns sprung from the boundaries we live by—good and bad; love and hate—we are not the self we were before. And when the boundaries themselves dissolve, self as we understand it disappears.
 
- Anne C. Klein, “The Four Immeasurables”
 

Sunday, August 3, 2014

Via Bilerico: Nepal Regressing Dangerously on LGBT Rights


Sunil Babu Pant, the first openly gay politician in the mountainous south Asian nation of Nepal and the head of the country's only LGBT rights group, is warning that the country is at risk of a dangerous backslide on LGBT rights inspired by similar reversals in India, Russia, and some African nations.

In an op-ed for the Nepali Times, Pant writes:
The Law Ministry, under the NC's Narhari Acharya, is trying to enact punitive laws that re-criminalise LGBT relationships, completely overturning previous Supreme Court decisions. After the first Constituent Assembly was dissolved in 2012, there is not a single person from the third gender community in the bureaucracy, ministry, parliament or any other decision-making level...
This new draft provision of civil and criminal codes prepared by the Law Ministry not only defines homosexuality, but also oral and anal sex among heterosexuals, as 'unnatural' acts. The definition of rape is narrowed only to women. The notion that only men can be rapists and only women can be victims comes from a deep-rooted patriarchal mindset. These notions seem to be inspired by conservative reversals in India, some western and African countries...
All Nepalis who believe in equality and tolerance must raise their voices. The right to justice of all marginalised peoples is under threat from a regressive state. They are going to be excluded, margninalised, discriminated against, criminalised and demonized.
Pant tells Gay Star News that the Law Ministry is preparing to push the measures through parliament after an attempt to do so in 2011 failed. The proposed laws would punish gay sex with three years' imprisonment, which is a tougher penalty than the one-year jail sentence attached to gay sex before it was decriminalized in 2007.

"We are really concerned about this attempt of taking Nepal back to draconian era after so much progress we made. Unbelievable that the government is going all against the Supreme Court decisions on LGBTI rights and other minority and marginalized people's rights in Nepal," he said.

Read more at http://www.bilerico.com/2014/08/nepal_regressing_dangerously_on_lgbt_rights.php#DGFS5pAOB6jYbLeu.99

Marriages In California Reach Near Record High w/ Legalization Of Same-Sex Marriages

 

Looks like same-sex marriage is actually saving the institution of marriage in California! Marriage had been on the decline in the state and now it's on the rise with the legalization of same-sex marriage. 

The Sacramento Bee reports:

It was looking like another tough year for the California wedding industry. Through June of 2013, the number of new marriages statewide had fallen by almost 4,000, or 3 percent, from 2012.

Then the Supreme Court overturned Proposition 8 and allowed gay marriages in California.

After that decision, from July to December, the number of weddings grew by 27,000, or almost 25 percent, compared to the same period in 2012.

In Sacramento County, the number of weddings increased by 1,150, or 27 percent, during the last six months of 2013 compared to 2012.

Total weddings statewide for 2013 eclipsed all recent years except 2008 - the last prior time that gays were allowed to marry.

NOM's crying in a corner somewhere.


Via FB:


Via Daily Dharma


Willing to Look | August 3, 2014

If we are willing to look long enough in the mirror of zazen [seated meditation], past seeing ourselves as objects, we have the potential to see that we are nature itself—we are born and will die, just as the trees, flowers, and animals in the wild do.
 
- Zenju Earthlyn Manuel, “The Hidden Lamp”
 

Flower of the Day: 08/03/14

“The greatest addiction of the human being may be to dream. This addiction is something truly mysterious, since it is an energy that steals away one’s awareness, but there is pleasure in this. One feels pleasure in dreaming, so one wants to continue to dream. But there comes a time when one finds oneself at a crossroads, because one is walking the path of enlightenment, and the only way to continue on this journey is to stop dreaming.”
 
Sri Prem Baba

Saturday, August 2, 2014

New Civil Marriage Map




Via Occupy Democrats / FB:


Via JMG: HOUSTON: Activists Say Valid Petition Signatures Fall Short Of Number Needed To Place LGBT Rights Repeal On Ballot


From the Houston Chronicle:
City of Houston officials plan to announce Monday whether a petition submitted by opponents of the city's new nondiscrimination ordinance contains enough valid signatures to force a vote on repealing the measure this November. Opponents claimed to have gathered and verified 31,000 names, but City Attorney David Feldman said Friday many of the more than 5,000 pages fall short of legal requirements set out in the city charter. The final tally likely will be closer than many expected to the minimum threshold of 17,269 signatures, Feldman said. "There's an issue there with respect to the validity of pages," Feldman said. "But right now I don't know what the final count is." Feldman provided no numbers, but said his staff had found many invalid pages, most notably because some of the circulators who collected stacks of signatures were not qualified Houston voters, as required by law. In such cases, all the signatures the circulator gathered would be void, Feldman said. Many names on valid pages also did not belong to registered Houston voters, Feldman said, and some signatures were gathered before June 3, when the ordinance was published and the petition drive could begin.
From JMG reader Mike Craig of Out & Equal Houston:
When the Houston Area Pastors Council turned in 7 boxes of petitions to the City on July 3rd, they boasted of gathering more than 31,000 valid signatures. An independent group of concerned citizens has spent the last three weeks independently reviewing each page of that repeal petition in an effort to provide additional accountability to the referendum process. This was a grass-roots effort involving more than 100 volunteers who communicated via social media and participated in a crowd-sourced effort that uncovered fatal flaws with what was turned in. Having finished this exhaustive review, the HERO Petition Review Working Group concluded that the petitioners did not, in fact, turn in enough valid signatures in order to place this issue on the ballot.

The petition rules are really quite simple:
- Petitions must be properly notarized.
- Petitions must have been signed & notarized between June 3rd and July 3rd.
- Petition signers must be registered City of Houston voters.
- Petition circulators must be identifiable and registered City of Houston voters.
- Petition circulators must have signed the petition, not just the notary affirmation, sometime between June 3rd and July 3rd.

Based on these simple criteria, this independent review showed only 16,499 valid signatures were turned in. Additional scrutiny can only lower that number further. A full report detailing these findings has been provided to the City Secretary, City Attorney and Mayor. While it is our hope that the City’s own determination will come to a similar conclusion, we understand that it is ultimately the legal & statutory responsibility of the City Secretary and we will abide by that office’s findings. Should the city come to the same conclusion that our group did, we fully expect the anti-HERO organizers to sue -- and likely drag us to court as well. If the city does certify the petition effort, I believe that it will be by a razor thin margin -- and as I've said before, HERO supporters will work to make sure that this effort is defeated at the ballot box if and when it gets there.
Houston voters rejected similar LGBT rights bills in 1985 and 2001, but local activists are confident that they will prevail should the issue be forced to a public vote for a third time.

Reposted from Joe Jervis

Flower of the Day: 08/02/14

“At a certain moment, one’s ability to forgive and love will need to be illuminated. For this to take place, one must renounce the game of accusations, because accusations are what keep our hearts closed. If one’s heart is closed, investigate this, and you will find that there is an accusation.”
 
Sri Prem Baba

Via Daily Dharma


The Vow Behind Generosity | August 2, 2014

Every act of generosity reminds us of the possibility that we might actually live the bodhisattva's vow, the vow to engage in everyday life as though the well-being of others is just as important as our own.
 
- Dale S. Wright, "The Bodhisattva's Gift"
 

Friday, August 1, 2014

[Ensinamentos Budistas 326]


SF Gay Men's Chorus Celebrates the End of Prop 8


A violência invisível - Monja Coen Roshi


Publicado em 05/05/2013
 
Palestra do ciclo "A Banalização do Mal, Ensaios Sobre Fenômenos Líquidos" da Escola Paulista de Psicanálise. Realizada no auditório da Livraria Martins Fontes de São Paulo. Neste encontro a Monja Coen Roshi, missionária da Tradição Zen Sotoshu do Japão, abordou o tema: "A violência invisível".






Flower of the Day: 08/01/14

“At some point, one tires of walking in the circles of ignorance, because one becomes aware that one’s actions generate more and more suffering each time. One sees oneself stuck in the same place, and feels a sincere willingness to go beyond this place and to free oneself of all lies and self-deceit. So one says: ‘I want to know what my responsibility is in this game. Why do I keep repeating the same negative situations? Why am I always falling in the same hole?’ At this moment, one commits oneself to the truth, as much as it may hurt one’s vanity.”
 
Sri Prem Baba

Walt Disney - Ferdinand The Bull - 1938


Via Daily Dharma


Ignorance is King | August 1, 2014

Ignorance is like the king, and clinging attachment and hostility are his ministers. To rid ourselves of the king's minions we must get rid of the king. And so it is of greatest importance to identify ignorance properly.
 
- Geshe Sonam Rinchen, "Like a Pig In..." 

Via Blue Nation Review / FB: