Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Via Daily Dharma: Your Body Is a Teacher

 

Meditating with the body as our guide, we come to feel that, perhaps for the first time in our lives, we are in the presence of a being, our own body, that is wise, loving, flawlessly reliable, and worthy of our deepest devotion.

—Reggie Ray, “Touching Enlightenment”

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Monday, August 16, 2021

Via Daily Dharma: Compassion Is Wisdom

Compassionate activity is the expression of the wisdom-mind of selflessness.

—Interview with Joseph Goldstein by Amy Gross, “How Amazing!”

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Via White Crane SInstitute // MURRAY EDELMAN, Ph.D.

 


Murray Edelman
1943 -

MURRAY EDELMAN, Ph.D., A mathematician statistician, founder and central figure of the Chicago Gay Liberation group was born on this date. Murray helped to bring the modern gay liberation movement to Chicago and did crucial work to develop a visible and militant LGBT activism during the early years of the movement in Chicago.

While a graduate student at the University of Chicago, he was instrumental in bringing the modern-day Gay Liberation movement to Chicago. As a founder and important figure of Chicago Gay Liberation, his work was central to developing a public, visible, and militant LGBT activism during the early years of the movement. In addition, he served for more than a decade as director of exit polling at Voter News Service, an organization employed by ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN and the Associated Press in national elections, where he was responsible for the groundbreaking effort to have gay, lesbian, and bisexual self-identification made part of electoral exit polling. His  friendship with philosopher-activist Arthur Evans resulted in Edelman providing Evans the monies with which to publish his seminal work, Witchcraft and the Gay Counterculture.

As a founder of the first Gay Liberation group in Chicago, which was initially based in Hyde Park, between 1969 and 1972 Edelman helped plan and participated in many early demonstrations and public activities, including pride rallies, media “zaps,” and public dances—the latter, in those years, a daring activity that risked police intervention. In a short span of years, CGL decisively shifted the norms of gay and lesbian life and activism by modeling visibility and coming-out and by acting on the proud principle that militancy in pursuit of justice is reasonable and right.

Perhaps his most significant contribution took place in 1971, when Edelman disrupted a taping of “The Howard Miller Show,” a local Chicago television talk show. Miller’s guest was the deeply homophobic, but best-selling, Dr. David R. Reuben, author of Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Sex (But Were Afraid To Ask), which had made headlines across the country. Edelman challenged Reuben’s homophobia, and the “zap” became a major local news story in the press and on television. It helped to make “gay lib” a legitimate topic of coverage at a time when few mainstream outlets recognized LGBT issues in any way. The action also helped to put Chicago on the national gay liberation map after The Advocate covered it prominently.

More recently, in the 1990s, as a key director of the polling operations of Voter News Service, Edelman ensured that GLB self-identifiers would be included routinely in exit polls. By facilitating studies of GLB voting behavior, this move has enhanced the leverage and bargaining power of LGBT communities and political organizations. While his role in this has remained largely hidden from the general public, its contribution to our communities’ visibility and political clout has been profound.

For helping to bring the modern Gay Liberation movement to Chicago and working to develop a visible and often militant political activism during the early years of the movement in Chicago as well as enhancing LGBT political visibility in recent years, Edelman has been selected for induction into the Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame.

Sunday, August 15, 2021

Via Thich Nhat Hanh Quote Collective / FB

 


We have to learn to live our life as a human being deeply. We need to live each breath deeply so that we have peace, joy and freedom as we breathe. - Thich Nhat Hanh.
 

Via FB: In Order to...

 


Via Daily Dharma: Acting in Harmony

 

When we are in harmony with the way everything proceeds from everything else, we cannot act wrongly.

—Ram Dass, “Karmuppance”

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Via Tricycle: Mr. Hu and the Temple

 


Mr. Hu and the Temple
Directed by Yan Ting Yuen
A Chinese businessman perseveres through many trials and tribulations on the path to realizing his dream of building a Buddhist temple in the Netherlands. 
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Via Daily Dharma: Respond With Love

The Buddha’s injunction that we extend compassion to ourselves requires that after recognizing our suffering, we respond to it with love. This takes courage and commitment. It means not looking away, not seeking distractions when offered the opportunity to be present for our own pain.

—Beth Roth, “Family Dharma: Leaning into Suffering”

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Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation // Words of Wisdom - August 15, 2021 💌

 
 

"The only thing that ever dies is the model you have in your mind of who you think you are. That’s what dies." - Ram Dass

Thursday, August 12, 2021

Via Daily Dharma: Nipping the Buds of Negative Emotions

 

We create anger by a series of thoughts that result in a particular emotional and physiological state. Anger doesn’t just happen to us. If we’re able to catch an angry thought as it’s budding, we can let it go.

—John Daido Loori Roshi, “Between Two Mountains”

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Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation // Words of Wisdom - August 11, 2021 💌

 

 

"We’re all distracted by phenomena, everything that’s going on all the time.  

Mindfulness is one of the practices for slowing down our lives, for finding a way inside, for concentrating self-awareness. It can help us to quiet down and find our way into who we are.    

Finding our true self is a lifelong search. It’s not called practice for nothing. You actually have to tread on the path to get somewhere. Not that there’s anywhere to go, it’s just about becoming more here, being more present in this moment.    

Once we begin to explore our own psyche and mind and heart, we begin to appreciate that everybody else is in the same situation. We’re not so different. Each of us is an individual awareness living with our particular karma or family situation or what we do, our cultural milieu. Awareness itself is something that we all share. It’s what makes us human and divine.    

When you take away the content or the objects of awareness, thinking about the weather or what you’re going to do today, and just stay with the awareness, awareness is the same. That sense of interconnectedness happens as a corollary to mindfulness practice or any kind of meditation practice because awareness is a universal experience.    

Interconnected consciousness is real. How we come to that experience happens through many different avenues for different people. When we realize our consciousness exists beyond our mind and senses, then we can go about finding our true nature as the Zen Buddhists would put it.    

Different traditions call the reality of consciousness so many different things, from soul to pure mind, Buddha mind, but once we accept that reality, it makes sense to embark on a practice that includes developing awareness. That is the first step, having a new perspective outside the constant I, me, mine of the ego. Once there is a movement beyond that very self-centered point in time and space, then there is opportunity for real change." 

 - Ram Dass -

Via Daily Dharma: Dharma Is the Mind

 The Dharma is the mind, not merely the brain, or the human spirit... It is vast and fathomless, pure and clear, altogether empty, and charged with possibilities. It is the unknown, the unnameable, from which and as which all beings come forth.


—Robert Aitken, “The Nature of the Precepts”

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Tuesday, August 10, 2021

Via L.A.Times

 


Via Tricycle // Then & Now

 


Then & Now
By Joan Duncan Oliver
All things are impermanent—including opinions. Tricycle’s contributors take a moment to consider how their views have, or have not, changed since the early days of the magazine. 
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Via Daily Dharma: What Is Yoga?


The word yoga refers to the integration of body, breath, and mind, and to the dissolution of the sense of separation between the “self” as subject and the “other” as object. Whenever this state manifests—whether one is sitting, walking, cutting carrots, or changing diapers—there is yoga.

—Frank Jude Boccio, “Breath and the Body”

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